Dr. Poonam Singh, MD

Dr. Amar Singh, MD

Harbin Clinic

Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD

Can you smell a rose?

How do you smell?

A smell begins when a molecule -- say, from a flower -- stimulates the olfactory nerve cells, part of the olfactory cranial nerve, found high up in the nose. These nerve cells then send information to the brain, which identifies the specific smell.

Why you lose the sense of smell?

There are over 100 reasons why people can lose their sense of smell. However, most people lose it from sinusitis, after viral infections, traumas, or tumors. It can often be of idiopathic (unknown) origin. When you catch a severe cold, your nose stuffs up; you can't smell anything, and food tastes funny. Fortunately, most people regain their sense of smell once the cold runs its course. But for others, the complete (anosmia) or partial (hyposmia) loss of the sense of smell is permanent.

Cranial nerves control how things work in our head and neck -- such as the nerves that allow us to speak by using our vocal cords, control our facial motion, hear and smell. A variety of viruses can attack the cranial nerves related to smell or the mucosal tissue surrounding those nerves. Common coronavirus infections by rhinoviruses and influenza viruses lead to colds and upper respiratory illnesses. COVID-19 is one type of disease caused by a coronavirus (SARS-CoV2). They cause inflammation in and around the nerves, which cannot function properly. This leads to the loss or dysfunction of smell. It can happen to anyone: young and old, healthy, and sick.

Smell loss can be one of the earliest signs of a COVID-19 infection. It can sometimes be the only sign. Or it can present after other symptoms. Although it may not affect every patient with COVID-19, loss of smell and taste is associated with the disease. In some countries, including France, they've used this as a triage mechanism. People need to know that altered smell can be due to the COVID-19 disease process, so they aren't going about their lives like normal and spreading the virus.

The pandemic also might impact how we treat patients with olfactory dysfunction in general. When someone has a viral-induced inflammation of the nerve, they are sometimes treated with steroids to decrease the inflammation. But treating all COVID-19 patients with steroids might be a bad idea because of its effect on the inflammatory processes in their heart and lungs.

For those who lose the ability to smell after trauma, postviral infection, or when we don't know why it happened, olfactory training can be used, a straightforward protocol that patients can do at home. The patients smell several essential oils ( rose, eucalyptus, clove, and lemon) in a structured way twice a day, every day, over a long time. The oils stimulate different types of olfactory receptor cells in the nose. It is useful in 30 to 50 percent of patients. Researchers are trying to find out if both stem cells and neurostimulation can work. The olfactory nerve has an inherent ability to regenerate. Researchers are taking advantage of this fact and switch on those regenerative cells.

Dr. Amar Singh, MD and Dr. Poonam Singh, MD

Bottomline

  • The treatment depends on the reason for the loss and may include surgery or medications.

  • If you lose your sense of smell and it isn't coming back after all the other symptoms have gone away, seek care as soon as possible. If you wait too long, your options dwindle. Interventions, including olfactory training and medications, are more effective when you get early treatment.

  • If you lose your sense of smell or taste during this pandemic and don't have any other symptoms, contact your doctor. The doctor can decide whether you require COVID-19 testing and self-isolation to avoid being a vector of the virus in your family or community.

Some interesting facts

Humans possess around 12 million olfactory receptor cells that can detect approximately 10,000 odors.  Dogs, on the other hand, have anything from 100 to 200 million-plus receptor cells, depending on the breed.  The bloodhound is thought to have more receptor cells than any other dog (as many as 300 million) and can detect 40,000 different odors! The higher concentration of an odor, the stronger the signal sent by the receptor cells to the olfactory bulb.

References:

https://bit.ly/37NIAQ5

Published 12/11/2020


About Us

Dr. Amar Singh, MD, and Dr. Poonam Singh, MD, are board-certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine and American Board of Obesity Medicine. They specialize in preventing, treating, and reversing chronic diseases using an evidence-based holistic approach. They are specifically interested in weight management, hormone re-balancing, and longevity. The American College of Physicians has recognized them as Fellows, FACP,  for their excellence and contributions made to both medicine and the broader community. They enjoy teaching, volunteering, and advocating for their patients. Their mission is to share simple, effective, and proven strategies that lead to meaningful, sustainable, and long-lasting well-being.

Read More
Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD

Twelve things doctors wish patients knew about flu shots

During the 2019–2020 flu season, the flu (Influenza) caused an estimated 18 million medical visits in the United States. Getting a flu vaccine (Influenza vaccine) can help to reduce the burden on doctors and nurses as they fight COVID-19. Last season, flu vaccines prevented 3.7 million medical visits.

 The vaccine doesn’t give you the flu

While the flu shot is made of pieces of the virus, the nasal spray is a whole virus, but it’s an inactivated form of the virus so that neither kind can give you the flu. It’s not uncommon for people to have a low-grade fever or feel a little run down for a couple of days after receiving their vaccine. That’s just their immune system responding to the vaccine and doing exactly what it is supposed to do. Patients will sometimes coincidentally come down with the flu shortly after receiving the vaccination, but that’s just a quirk of timing. It takes the vaccine a couple of weeks to generate a full immune response, so you don’t have your maximum protection until a couple of weeks after you get your shot.

Getting flu shot more critical than ever

People have not necessarily been getting their preventive medical services during the pandemic. We want to highlight the importance of continuing to get preventive services in general, and the flu vaccine is an excellent example of that. Every year, influenza causes hundreds of thousands of hospitalizations and tens of thousands of deaths in the United States. We're very concerned about it compounding the hospital capacity problems that we may see if we get more surges in the numbers of patients with COVID 19. Additionally, it is possible to get influenza and COVID 19 simultaneously, and then you have that double whammy in terms of two significant respiratory illnesses. The flu vaccine is really to get protection against that scenario.

Can reduce flu risk by up to 60%

We typically don't know the vaccine’s effectiveness until we get into flu season, and we can see what types of viruses end up circulating in the population. The flu vaccine is adjusted every year to align with what is predicted to be the most likely strains circulating. It typically falls somewhere between 40% and 60% effectiveness. In recent years, we have commonly seen them reporting closer to 60% for common flu strains, which is excellent. Some protection is better than none.

Get it as soon as possible

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices generally recommends getting the flu vaccine in September or October. Ideally, you can start to get your vaccine before the end of October, but if you don’t squeeze it in, get it any time ideally, before January is what’s best. But we’ll tell people throughout the flu season, if you haven’t gotten the vaccine yet, it’s still okay to get it, and you’re likely to benefit.

Everyone should get it, especially seniors

There are a couple of reasons why someone might not be able to get the flu vaccine—that’s relatively rare. A real allergy to it might be the most common reason, but generally speaking, you should definitely get the flu vaccine if you are older than six months. Our seniors, for sure, are a higher-risk population. They have slightly different vaccine options that are designed to protect them a little bit more. Because they are also clearly one of those high-risk populations for COVID 19, it is even more vital for them to defend themselves against the flu.

There are nasal sprays too

The sprays are only approved for ages 2 through 49. There are some medical conditions or reasons why you may not be able to get the spray, or it may not be the best choice for you, but most people can take that option if they are anxious about getting the shot. We will say If it means you end up getting a flu vaccine, and you'd instead choose a nasal spray, get that nasal spray. It is typically pretty comparable to the shot in terms of effectiveness.

Dr. Amar Singh, MD and Dr. Poonam Singh, MD.

Egg allergy is not an excuse

Despite the common notion, people with egg allergies can take age-appropriate flu vaccines. 

Please do it for yourself and others

There are benefits to us as individuals: We're less likely to get the flu. Even if we do develop the flu, we're less likely to be hospitalized, and it tends to be less severe if you get the vaccine. It is also about protecting others—your family, friends, community members. With each day seeing tens of thousands of new coronavirus cases in the U.S., the impending flu season raises fears of a “twindemic” of COVID-19 and influenza that could sicken tens of millions of Americans and further strain the nation’s health system resources.

Save time

Getting a flu vaccine can prevent you from getting sick with the flu. People who get the flu are usually sick for about a week. Staying healthy means you can be there for your loved ones who depend on you, and you don’t miss work.

Reduce the severity of illness

You may still get the flu if you get a flu vaccine, but you won’t get as sick. Flu vaccines have been shown in several studies to reduce the severity of illness in people who get vaccinated but still get sick.

Protect people with diabetes and heart disease

People with certain chronic conditions are at high risk of getting very sick from the flu, including being hospitalized or dying. Getting a flu vaccine reduces the risk of giving the flu to people with asthma, diabetes, heart disease, cancer, HIV/AIDS, and sickle cell anemia.

Bottomline

Influenza vaccine is not optional; it is a lifesaver. Please get immunized.

References:

https://www.cdc.gov/

https://bit.ly/3lZa0Yj

Published 12/9/2020


About Us

Dr. Amar Singh, MD, and Dr. Poonam Singh, MD, are board-certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine and American Board of Obesity Medicine. They specialize in preventing, treating, and reversing chronic diseases using an evidence-based holistic approach. They are specifically interested in weight management, hormone re-balancing, and longevity. The American College of Physicians has recognized them as Fellows, FACP,  for their excellence and contributions made to both medicine and the broader community. They enjoy teaching, volunteering, and advocating for their patients. Their mission is to share simple, effective, and proven strategies that lead to meaningful, sustainable, and long-lasting well-being.

Read More
Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD

How To Protect Your Vision From A Silent Enemy

Light is made up of electromagnetic particles that travel in waves, emit energy, and range in length and strength. The shorter the wavelength, the higher the energy. Different wavelength categories are - gamma rays, x-rays, ultraviolet rays, visible light, infrared light, and radio waves.  Together these wavelengths make up the electromagnetic spectrum. However, the human eye is sensitive to only one part of this spectrum -  visible light, that part of the electromagnetic spectrum seen as colors: violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange, and red.  Blue light has a very short wavelength, which produces a higher amount of energy. Studies suggest that, over time, exposure to the blue end of the light spectrum could cause significant long-term damage to your eyes.

What is blue light?

Blue light is everywhere. As sunlight travels through the atmosphere, the shorter, high-energy blue wavelengths collide with the air molecules causing blue light to scatter around, giving the sky its blue color. Exposure to blue light during daytime hours helps maintain a healthy circadian rhythm, the natural sleep-wake cycle. Dr. Charles Czeisler has demonstrated that daylight keeps a person's internal clock synchronized with the environment. Too much exposure to blue light late at night can disrupt the sleep-wake cycle, causing problems sleeping and daytime tiredness. However, under exposure to sunlight in children adversely affects eyes and vision’s growth and development. Few studies show a deficiency in blue light exposure could contribute to the recent increase in nearsightedness. 

Blue light helps boost

  • alertness

  • memory and cognitive function

  • reaction times

  • elevate moods

  • the feeling of well being. 

With the evolution in digital screen technology, devices use LED backlight technology to enhance screen brightness and clarity. These LEDs emit powerful blue light waves. Blue light waves are among the shortest, highest-energy wavelengths in the visible light spectrum. Because they are shorter, these "Blue" or High Energy Visible (HEV) wavelengths flicker more easily than longer, weaker wavelengths. Flickering creates a glare that can reduce visual contrast and affect sharpness and clarity. This flickering and glaring may be one reason for digital eye strain, headaches, physical and mental fatigue caused by many hours sitting in front of a computer screen or other electronic device.  

Our eyes' natural filters do not entirely protect against blue light rays from the sun, let alone the blue light emanating from these devices or fluorescent-light tubes. Prolonged exposure to blue light may cause retinal damage and contribute to age-related macular degeneration, leading to loss of vision.

Some studies suggest a link between exposure to light at night, such as working the night shift, to diabetes, heart disease, and obesity. That's not proof that nighttime light exposure causes these conditions, nor is it clear why it could be bad for us. A Harvard study shed a little bit of light on the possible connection to diabetes and possibly obesity. The researchers put ten people on a schedule that gradually shifted the timing of their circadian rhythms. Their blood sugar levels increased, pushing them into a prediabetic state, and leptin levels (satiety hormone) went down.

Melatonin is a hormone that the brain produces in response to darkness, helping with circadian rhythms and sleep. Exposure to light, even dim light, suppresses the secretion of melatonin, disrupting sleep. Light at night is why so many people don't get enough sleep, and researchers have linked short sleep to increased risk for depression and diabetes, and cardiovascular problems. While the light of any kind can suppress melatonin secretion, blue light at night does so more powerfully. Harvard researchers and their colleagues experimented comparing the effects of 6.5 hours of exposure to blue light to exposure to green light of comparable brightness. The blue light suppresses melatonin for about twice as long as the green light and shifted circadian rhythms by twice as much (3 hours vs. 1.5 hours).

Dr Amar Singh, MD and Dr Poonam Singh, MD

Protect yourself from blue light

There are a few ways to decrease exposure to blue light:

  • Use dim red lights for night lights. Swap out fluorescent/LED night lights in bedrooms and bathrooms for dim red lights, which have the least effect on melatonin and circadian rhythms.

  • Avoid looking at bright screens beginning two to three hours before bed.

  • If you work a night shift or use many electronic devices at night, consider wearing blue-blocking glasses or installing an app that filters the blue/green wavelength at night.

  • Expose yourself to lots of bright light during the day, which will boost your ability to sleep at night, as well as your mood and alertness during daylight.

  • Computer glasses with yellow-tinted lenses that block blue light can help ease computer digital eye strain by increasing contrast. Wear computer glasses while on a device for two or more hours.

  • Anti-reflective lenses reduce glare and increase contrast and block blue light from the sun and digital devices.

  • Clean Your Screen. A dust-free, smudge-free screen helps reduce glare.

  • Adjust screen brightness, change background color from bright white to cool gray. 

  • Take frequent breaks and move away from the screen. 

  • Those who smoke are up to 4 times more likely to go blind in old age. If you are a smoker, kick the habit to preserve your vision.

  • Remind yourself to blink more often. Staring at a digital screen can affect the number of times you blink, causing eyes to dry. Use artificial tears when your eyes feel dry.

  • Eliminate screens in bedrooms overnight. (You might need to buy an alarm clock).

  • Avoid device multi-tasking, especially while trying to learn or work from home. Jumping between screens and apps makes work take longer. Turn off notifications for all but the essential apps. Use your phone. Don’t let it use you.

Dr Amar Singh, MD and Dr Poonam Singh, MD


60% of people spend more than 6 hours a day in front of a digital device. The ‘virtual’ life during the current pandemic can leave us with screen fatigue and craving human connection. I’ve realized with clarity in these dark, anxious times that so many of our problems with technology don’t emanate from digital screens. Instead, it is from the disruption and alienation that creeps into our relationships with ourselves and others as we allow our experiences and challenging emotions to be mediated, numbed out, blurred by digital media. The phone is like a fentanyl lollipop; yes, it’s possible to abuse, but our pain, and the massive pain of the world driving us to it, is arguably the real problem. The antidote is reconnecting to our bodies and our feelings, with the assistance of loved ones who make it safe to do that.

References:

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21600300/

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25535358/

Published 11/28/2020


About Us

Dr. Amar Singh, MD, and Dr. Poonam Singh, MD, are board-certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine and American Board of Obesity Medicine. They specialize in preventing, treating, and reversing chronic diseases using an evidence-based holistic approach. They are specifically interested in weight management, hormone re-balancing, and longevity. The American College of Physicians has recognized them as Fellows, FACP,  for their excellence and contributions made to both medicine and the broader community. They enjoy teaching, volunteering, and advocating for their patients. Their mission is to share simple, effective, and proven strategies that lead to meaningful, sustainable, and long-lasting well-being.

Read More
Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD

Getting Back To Gratitude

Expressing thanks may be one of the simplest ways to feel better. Giving thanks can make you happier. It's time to give thanks for all that we have! Now that the final harvest has long passed, we settle into the cooler autumn weather, and slowly turn inward for a long winter ahead. But first we must celebrate our abundance and have gratitude for everything in our lives! 

The Thanksgiving holiday began, as the name implied, when the colonists gave thanks for their survival and a good harvest. So perhaps November is an excellent time to review the mental health benefits of gratitude and consider some advice about cultivating this state of mind. Maybe the most straightforward and effortless habit for living a happier life is to take one or a few minutes every day to focus on what is already here and that you can be grateful for in your life.

Gratitude has been conceptualized as an emotion, an attitude, a moral virtue, a habit, a personality trait, or a coping response. The word gratitude is derived from the Latin word gratia, which means grace, graciousness, or gratefulness (depending on the context). In some ways, gratitude encompasses all of these meanings. Gratitude is a thankful appreciation for what an individual receives, whether tangible or intangible. With gratitude, people acknowledge the goodness in their lives. In the process, people usually recognize that the source of that goodness lies at least partially outside themselves. As a result, gratitude helps people connect to something larger than themselves as individuals — whether to other people, nature, or a higher power.

In positive psychology research, gratitude is strongly and consistently associated with greater happiness. Gratitude helps people feel more positive emotions, relish good experiences, improve their health, deal with adversity, and build strong relationships.

People feel and express gratitude in multiple ways. They can apply it to the past (retrieving positive memories and being thankful for elements of childhood or past blessings), the present (not taking good fortune for granted as it comes), and the future (maintaining a hopeful and optimistic attitude). Regardless of someone’s inherent or current level of gratitude, it's a quality that individuals can successfully cultivate further.

Dr. Amar Singh, MD and Dr. Poonam Singh, MD

Research on gratitude

Dr. Robert A. Emmons of the University of California, Davis, and Dr. Michael E. McCullough of the University of Miami, have researched gratitude. In one study, they asked all participants to write a few sentences each week, focusing on particular topics. One group wrote about things they were grateful for that had occurred during the week. A second group wrote about daily irritations or something that had displeased them. The third wrote about events that had affected them (with no emphasis on them being positive or negative). After ten weeks, those who wrote about gratitude were more optimistic and felt better about their lives. Surprisingly, they also exercised more and had fewer visits to physicians than those who focused on sources of aggravation.

Dr. Martin E. P. Seligman, a psychologist at the University of Pennsylvania, tested the impact of various positive psychology interventions on 411 people, each compared with a control assignment of writing about early memories. When their week's task was to write and personally deliver a letter of gratitude to someone who had never been adequately thanked for their kindness, participants immediately exhibited a huge increase in happiness scores. This impact was more significant than that from any other intervention, with benefits lasting for a month.

Of course, studies such as this one cannot prove cause and effect. But most of the studies published on this topic support an association between gratitude and an individual's well-being.

Other studies have looked at how gratitude can improve relationships. For example, a study of couples found that individuals who took time to express gratitude for their partner felt more positive toward the other person and felt more comfortable expressing concerns about their relationship.

Managers who remember to say "thank you" to people who work for them may find that they feel motivated to work harder. Researchers at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania randomly divided university fundraisers into two groups. One group made phone calls to solicit alumni donations in the same way they always had. The second group — assigned to work on a different day — received a pep talk from the director of annual giving, who told the fund-raisers she was grateful for their efforts. During the following week, the university employees who heard her gratitude message made 50% more fundraising calls than those who did not.

There are some notable exceptions to the generally positive results in research on gratitude. One study found that middle-aged divorced women who kept gratitude journals were no more satisfied with their lives than those who did not. Another study found that children and adolescents who wrote and delivered a thank-you letter to someone who made a difference in their lives may have made the other person happier — but did not improve their well-being. This finding suggests that gratitude is an attainment associated with emotional maturity.

Dr. Amar Singh, MD and Dr. Poonam Singh, MD

Ways to cultivate gratitude

Gratitude is a way for people to appreciate what they have instead of always reaching for something new in the hopes it will make them happier or thinking they can't feel satisfied until every physical and material need is met. Gratitude helps people refocus on what they have instead of what they lack. And although it may feel contrived at first, this mental state grows stronger with use and practice.

Here are some ways to cultivate gratitude regularly

Write a thank-you note. You can make yourself happier and nurture your relationship with another person by writing a thank-you letter expressing your enjoyment and appreciation of that person's impact on your life. Send it, or better yet, deliver and read it in person if possible. Make a habit of sending at least one gratitude letter a month. Once in a while, write one to yourself.

Thank someone mentally. No time to write? It may help you think about someone who has done something nice for you and mentally thank the individual.

Keep a gratitude journal. Make it a habit to write down or share with a loved one thought about the gifts you've received each day.

Count your blessings. Pick a time every week to sit down and write about your blessings — reflecting on what went right or what you are grateful for. Sometimes it helps to pick a number — such as three to five things — that you will identify each week. As you write, be specific and think about the sensations you felt when something good happened to you.

Pray. Religious people can use prayer to cultivate gratitude.

Meditate. Mindfulness meditation involves focusing on the present moment without judgment. Although people often focus on a word or phrase (such as "peace"), it is also possible to focus on what you're grateful for (the warmth of the sun, a pleasant sound, etc.).

Gratitude is when memory is stored in the heart and not in the mind. Let us be grateful to the people who make us happy; they are the charming gardeners who make our souls blossom.

Reflect on your present blessings, on which every man has many, not on your past misfortunes, of which all men have some.

—Charles Dickens (M. Dickens, 1897, p. 45)

References:

https://bit.ly/2UZMm2X

https://bit.ly/3m6eUn7

https://bit.ly/36614vx

https://bit.ly/3fwT2Pw

Published 11/25/2020


About Us

Dr. Amar Singh, MD, and Dr. Poonam Singh, MD, are board-certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine and American Board of Obesity Medicine. They specialize in preventing, treating, and reversing chronic diseases using an evidence-based holistic approach. They are specifically interested in weight management, hormone re-balancing, and longevity. The American College of Physicians has recognized them as Fellows, FACP,  for their excellence and contributions made to both medicine and the broader community. They enjoy teaching, volunteering, and advocating for their patients. Their mission is to share simple, effective, and proven strategies that lead to meaningful, sustainable, and long-lasting well-being.

Read More
Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD

Oil for Brain Health?

We are inundated with daily advice about ‘diets’ and ‘superfoods’ to improve our health. One dietary regime that has stood the test of time – and importantly, scientific scrutiny – is the Mediterranean diet. Once a year, various diets are scored by a panel of nationally recognized experts in diet and nutrition. Earlier this year, U.S. News and World Report named the Mediterranean diet as the best diet of 2020 for the third year in a row. In second place was another consistent high performer in the rankings, the DASH diet (dietary approaches to stop hypertension), which lowered blood pressure.

The common thread between the Mediterranean diet and the DASH diet is olive oil. Olive oil has been an essential part of Mediterranean cuisine for 5,000 years. Homer, the famed Greek poet, called it “liquid gold.” The ancient Greeks so valued olive oil that cutting down an olive tree was a crime punishable by death! Traditionally, whole olives are crushed into a paste, which is then pressed to extract the oil. The method of extracting oil from olives has not changed much in thousands of years, except the tools are now stainless steel instead of stone. Olive Oil, particularly the extra virgin kind (EVOO), made from pure cold-pressed olives, contains many antioxidants and has significant anti-inflammatory properties. These are the two most important properties of healthy foods.

EVOO is a superfood rich in cell-protecting antioxidants, known for its multiple health benefits, including helping put the brakes on diseases linked to aging, most notably cardiovascular disease. Boosting brain function is key to staving off the effects of aging. And if there was one thing every person should consider doing right now to keep their brain young, add EVOO to their diet, according to research by scientists at Temple University. Their study appeared in the journal Aging Cell. It addressed another aging-related disease, tauopathies characterized by the gradual buildup of an abnormal form of a protein called tau in the brain, leading to a decline in mental function and, eventually, dementia. Their findings are the first to suggest that EVOO can defend against a specific type of cognitive decline linked to tauopathy known as frontotemporal dementia. Alzheimer’s disease is itself one form of dementia that primarily affects the hippocampus, the brain’s memory storage center. Frontotemporal dementia affects the areas of the brain near the forehead and ears. Symptoms typically emerge between ages 40 and 65 and include changes in personality and behavior, difficulties with language and writing, and eventual deterioration of memory and ability to learn from prior experience. Their previous research on mice also showed that EVOO preserves memory and protects the brain against Alzheimer’s disease. This adds another piece of the puzzle in the story about EVOO’s ability to ward off cognitive decline and to protect the junctions (synapses) where neurons come together to exchange information.

Dr. Amar Singh, MD and Dr. Poonam Singh, MD.

In a study published in 2018, Spanish scientists demonstrated potent anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects of olive oil. Administering olive oil to animals significantly reduced the number of harmful chemicals that can cause tissue injury and aging, particularly within the brain. Olive oil administration also increased the enzymes that protected against oxidative damage in the brain and reduced the harmful actions the lipopolysaccharide releases by bacteria in the gut, reducing inflammation in the brain. The gut microbiome (the genetic material of all the microbes - bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and viruses - that live on and inside the human body) changes drive the brain inflammation. This is the likely scenario: an imbalance in the gut bacteria leads to inflammation, chemical debris released from the bacteria migrate out of the gut into the blood and then into the brain. The most harmful of this bacterial debris is called lipopolysaccharide, and it can induce a robust inflammatory response inside the brain. Olive oil modifies how your gut microbiome communicates with your brain. 

Olive oil’s beneficial effects on the human brain and body are likely related to the polyphenols’ hydroxytyrosol (HT) and Oleic acid (OA) presence. HT protects cells that are under oxidative stress. OA is a monounsaturated omega-9 fatty acid that is generally higher in olive oil than vegetable fats. It has beneficial effects on blood cholesterol levels. 

Bottom-line

EVOO has been a part of the human diet for a very long time and has many benefits for health, for reasons that we do not yet fully understand. The realization that EVOO can protect the brain against different forms of dementia allows us to learn more about the mechanisms through which it acts to support brain health. Brain benefits a lot from adding olive oil to your diet, and these benefits originate in response to the changes that olive oil makes to your gut microbiome. Olive oil should become a big part of the diet for anyone with an aging brain.

Reference:

https://bit.ly/35AiCzF

https://bit.ly/2K4Toky

https://bit.ly/3pA7Npa

https://bit.ly/3lCpy50
Published 11/20/2020


About Us

Dr. Amar Singh, MD, and Dr. Poonam Singh, MD, are board-certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine and American Board of Obesity Medicine. They specialize in preventing, treating, and reversing chronic diseases using an evidence-based holistic approach. They are specifically interested in weight management, hormone re-balancing, and longevity. The American College of Physicians has recognized them as Fellows, FACP,  for their excellence and contributions made to both medicine and the broader community. They enjoy teaching, volunteering, and advocating for their patients. Their mission is to share simple, effective, and proven strategies that lead to meaningful, sustainable, and long-lasting well-being.

Read More
Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD Amar Singh, MD and Poonam Singh, MD

Coronasomnia

While COVID-19 has already caused devastation worldwide, physicians and researchers see signs that the pandemic is also affecting people’s sleep. This disruption is due to increased stress and anxiety, leading to some sleep experts labeling it coronasomnia. If this is not addressed, coronasomnia could prove to have profound public health ramifications, including elevated risks for high blood pressure, depression, and other health issues long after the pandemic has ended.


We’re a sleep-deprived society in general. This pandemic has amplified anxiety and stress to an inflection point, impacted by uncertainty and the barrage of information directed towards us.

That uncertainty is being carried with you into your bed and affecting how you sleep and, thus, how alert you feel in the morning. Here are a few things people should know about coronasomnia and how to overcome sleepless nights.

Dr Amar Singh, MD and Dr Poonam Singh, MD

Get bright light early

People need to get back to the basics about sleep that we somewhat take for granted. It is about going to bed and getting up at the same time every day and getting sunlight or bright light in the first one or two hours after waking up. These are all things to remind your internal clock when it’s time to be awake. People should also perform a nighttime routine 30 to 60 minutes before bed to wind down and signal to their brain; it’s time to sleep. Even if people are sleeping at a different time than usual, just by doing a routine is a reminder; it’s classical conditioning that says, ‘stuff is happening that typically happens when I go to bed.’

Give your system a break

Our sympathetic nervous system is on overdrive with all that’s going on, and that is why people are having trouble sleeping. We need to do things that relax our sympathetic nervous system. 

While many people think exercise helps, timing is everything. At night, a person’s core body temperature drops and dips throughout the night, and when you exercise, you elevate your core body temperature. Exercising is fantastic, but it should be done in the morning or at least three hours before going to bed.

Have a clear mind

It is also important to use mental health strategies. Set aside, ‘worry time.’ Take 10 minutes to write down all the things racing through your mind. This typically should occur one to two hours before bedtime is another room—doing it too close to bedtime may be associated with increased agitation and trouble falling asleep. Writing your thoughts helps to clear them from your mind. You can even rip the paper out, crumble it up and throw it away in a symbolic act of dumping the thoughts.

Avoid news overload

At some point, you have to stop watching and listening to the news. It's essential to keep up with what's going on in the world, but if you’re lying in bed and the last thing you do before you go to bed is check in with your 24-hour news station, it is not going to help with the sympathetic nervous system. Not to mention that the light from the TV itself is telling your brain to be awake, but now your mind is exposed to incredibly anxiety-provoking content.

The right kind of noise can help

Some people feel exhausted, but when they turn off the lights, their thoughts continue to race. The worries may be over something as massive as the state of the world or as personal as how to pay bills. We need to engage the mind just enough, but not so that it's stimulated, but so that it's less likely to go through continually looping thoughts. This is where noise works. Use a desk fan or white noise machine.

Why alcohol won’t work

While individuals have been self-medicating with alcohol even before the pandemic, it is essential to avoid using beer, wine, or spirits for their sedative properties. People might feel like they fall asleep more quickly, but it won’t be restful. Alcohol will prevent lying awake for hours when you get in bed, but it changes the whole way your sleep architecture looks. Alcohol use too close to bedtime decreases rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep, which is one of the deep, restorative sleep stages, early in the night. Later in the night, as the alcohol wears off, there is an increase in REM sleep—called REM rebound, which is associated with vivid dreams and nightmares—which is, in turn, more anxiety-provoking. Alcohol is also associated with increased awakenings during the night, which is further disruptive to your sleep.

Reference:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7274952/
Picture source: Prashant Singh

Published 11/14/2020


About Us

Dr. Amar Singh, MD, and Dr. Poonam Singh, MD, are board-certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine and American Board of Obesity Medicine. They specialize in preventing, treating, and reversing chronic diseases using an evidence-based holistic approach. They are specifically interested in weight management, hormone re-balancing, and longevity. The American College of Physicians has recognized them as Fellows, FACP,  for their excellence and contributions made to both medicine and the broader community. They enjoy teaching, volunteering, and advocating for their patients. Their mission is to share simple, effective, and proven strategies that lead to meaningful, sustainable, and long-lasting well-being.

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