anxiety

Life, Humor, and a Great Truth You Should Know about Yourself


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Reading Time: 1 min 43 sec

I hope the next 26’ish breaths are the most nourishing of your day.



4 THOUGHTS

1. An Affirmation of Life

“Breath is life. It sustains us and it is an expression of the life force within us. The fact that we are breathing is an affirmation of life.”

- Yogani, Spinal Breathing Pranayama

This is just a beautiful reminder: “The fact that we are breathing is an affirmation of life.” 👏

2. Not You: A Great Truth You Should Know about Yourself

“The first thing to remember is that the truth about anxiety and worry, even about panic, is that they are not you. They are actually only conditions that flow in and out of the present moment. Confusion arises when the intensity of these conditions leads you to begin to identify with them and become lost in a reaction to them.”

- Jeffrey Brantley, MD, Calming Your Anxious Mind

This is a primary goal of living mindfully: To recognize that emotions aren’t us, only conditions flowing in & out of the present moment.

Of course, we’ll never be perfect, but even small steps in recognizing this truth will significantly improve our well-being.

3. Kryptonite & Why Slow Breathing Complements Mindfulness Perfectly

“Attention is fragile. It can be rapidly depleted under certain circumstances…When we experience stress, threat, or poor mood—the three main things I call ‘kryptonite’ for attention—this valuable resource is drained.”

- Amishi Jha, Ph.D., Peak Mind

This is why combining slow breathing with mindfulness, or doing it just before meditation, is so powerful.

It counteracts these “attention kryptonites:” It reduces stress, improves mood, and quiets the threat regions of the brain. These changes make mindfulness more accessible physiologically.

4. Humor is an Essential Part of Life

“Humor opens closed hearts.
Humor can free us from the grip of our thoughts.
When we smile, we feel we can accept things we previously could not.
We feel we can forgive those who have wronged us.
Humor is an essential part of life.”

- Haemin Sunim, The Things You Can See Only…

Just a reminder to seek out humor this week, as laughing will always be the most therapeutic breathing exercise.


1 Quote

The one important thing I have learned over the years is the difference between taking one’s work seriously and taking one’s self seriously. The first is imperative and the second is disastrous.”
— Margot Fonteyn


1 Answer

Category: Breathing Muscles

Answer: Although the diaphragm is thought to be primarily a breathing muscle, there is evidence that it plays a critical role in preventing this.

(Cue the Jeopardy! music.)

Question: What is acid reflux?


In good breath,

Nick Heath, T1D, PhD
“Breathing is the compound interest of health & wellness.”


P.S. “flight sacramento receipt 2023”

Upcoming Workshops

Saturday, December 16:

Saturday, December 30:

Coaching

Breathing & Mindfulness 1-on-1


Amazon Associate Disclosure

I’ve been recommending books for almost 6 years. Yet somehow, I just discovered that I could be an Amazon affiliate [face-palm]. In any case better late than never. Now, any Amazon link you click is an affiliate link. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. So, if you’d like to support my work, buying books through these links is helpful : )

* An asterisk by a quote indicates that I listened to this book on Audible. Therefore, the quotation might not be correct, but is my best attempt at reproducing the punctuation based on the narrator’s pace, tone, and pauses.


 

How to Be Irreplaceable, Coffee or Breath, and the Most Important Study Yet


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4 Thoughts



1. Breathwork for Stress: The Most Important Paper To Date

“Research on breathwork could be likened to that of meditation, which received an unprecedented surge in scientific exploration two decades ago. We may be at a similar cusp with breathwork and anticipate considerable growth in the field.”

 - Nature Scientific Reports (2023)

 

IMHO, this is the most important breathing publication to date. Nothing is perfect, but this is a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials—basically the best scientific analysis that can be performed.

It’s a mind-blower…here are a few key takeaways:

  • Breathwork is as effective as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), meditation, mindfulness, and acceptance of emotions for reducing stress.

  • Breathwork is as effective as physical exercise for reducing anxiety and depression symptoms.

  • Whether breathwork is self-learned remotely, taught 1-on-1, or taught to a group doesn’t impact the above results.

I have a new Science 411 with all the details, if you’re interested. If you sign up, I highly recommend the 17-min podcast version because I add a lot of context, which is too much for written form.

2. A Humble Reminder for Thought 1

“Many ancient practices and rituals have been rejected by modern science, only to be resurrected from the grave by that same science!”

- Herbert Benson, MD, Relaxation Revolution

Let’s not forget that, although modern science is powerful, breathing exercises have something even more potent behind them: thousands of years of practice.

3. Coffee or Breathwork? Here’s My Lighthearted Take On It

“By replacing your morning coffee with breathwork, you can lose up to 87% of what little joy you still have left in your life.”

I’m late with this joke, but I recently saw that sentence (with green tea instead of breathwork), and I thought it was amazing.

Personally, I don’t plan on replacing my coffee with breathing. Of course, there’s nothing wrong with doing that; I just love coffee.

Instead, I think of my morning breathing as a no-sugar coffee creamer. It makes my coffee that much better, with no blood sugar spikes : )

4. A Tiny Thought On Methods (a play on a Thich Nhat Hanh quote)

Breathing methods come and go like clouds in the sky. Principles are my anchor.


Want to Become a Unique and Irreplaceable Breath Coach?

It takes just 30 minutes a week.

Here’s exactly how.


1 Quote

Here, the need for healing was not synonymous with brokenness. It was part of life.”
— Lisa Miller, Ph.D.

1 Answer

Category: Alveoli

Answer: These holes allow communication between two adjacent alveoli.

(Cue the Jeopardy! music.)

Question: What are the Pores of Kohn?


In good breath,

Nick Heath, T1D, PhD
“Breathing is the compound interest of health & wellness.”


P.S. SECRETS TO SUCCESS


How Focus Words and Breathing Can Help You Relax and Heal

I recently wrote a guest blog for ResBiotic on focus words and breathing. It includes 7 steps for using the relaxation response in your life. Enjoy!


* An asterisk by a quote indicates that I listened to this book on Audible. Therefore, the quotation might not be correct, but is my best attempt at reproducing the punctuation based on the narrator’s pace, tone, and pauses.


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Each Monday, I curate and synthesize information from scientific journals, books, articles, and podcasts to share 4 thoughts, 1 quote, and 1 answer (like "Jeopardy!") related to breathing. It’s a fun way to learn something new each week.

 

Why 6 Breaths/Minute Improves Heart Health & Quality of Life in Diabetes

Slow breathing is a highly effective yet overlooked therapy for diabetes.

 

It profoundly changed my life with diabetes, leading me to spend the past 5 years trying to understand it and share it with others.

 

I’ve found that it’s not going to fix everything (of course).  It may not even impact your blood sugars.  But, without question, two things it will do are improve your heart health and your quality of life.

 

And it’s available anytime, anywhere (no pre-authorization required). 

 

I think it’s a no-brainer for better health, and I hope this article inspires you to give it a try.

 

 

What is Slow Breathing? (and why was 6 breaths/minute in the title?)

 

Slow breathing is broadly defined as breathing at a rate of less than 10 breaths per minute.  More specifically, it usually refers to breathing at a rate of about 4.5 to 7 breaths per minute.

 

And even more specifically, almost every study on slow breathing and diabetes has used 6 breaths per minute.  And they’ve found some pretty remarkable things.

 

But before we get to that, let’s take a quick look at the breath-heart connection.

 

 

Understanding the Breath-Heart Connection: Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia and Heart Rate Variability

 

When we inhale, our heart rate increases.  When we exhale, it decreases (if you’d like more details, here’s a blog I wrote for ResBiotic that explains it fully).  This is known as respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA).

 

RSA is one of the underlying principles of heart rate variability (HRV).  Generally speaking, HRV is the beat-to-beat time variability of heart rate.  Research shows that higher HRV indicates a more balanced nervous system and better cardiovascular health.  For these reasons, higher HRV is associated with a better quality of life.

 

And it turns out that people with diabetes typically have worse HRV than non-diabetics.  (A negative side-effect of researching diabetes is that it reminds me of everything it adversely affects.  However, it’s also encouraging to find simple tools like breathing that can help (not fix) some of the problems).

 

 

HRV is Reduced in Diabetes

 

A 2018 meta-analysis found that patients with type-2 diabetes had significantly lower HRV than those without it.  Diabetics with chronic complications have even lower HRV

 

The lower HRV observed in people with diabetes is likely related to many negative aspects of the disease, such as chronic stress, inflammation, and increased oxidative stress. 

 

Perhaps unsurprisingly, low HRV is associated with adverse outcomes in diabetes.  For example, people with diabetes and low HRV are at increased risk of coronary heart disease.  Moreover, low HRV is an early marker of cardiac autonomic neuropathy, which can lead to heart disease, the number one cause of mortality in people with diabetes.

 

Sounds depressing, right?

 

 

Enter the Heart-Boosting Power of Slow Breathing

When we breathe slowly at around 6 breaths per minute, we synchronize signals coming from our cardiovascular, respiratory, and autonomic nervous systems. 

When we breathe slowly at around 6 breaths per minute, we synchronize signals coming from our cardiovascular, respiratory, and autonomic nervous systems. 

 

To get a little more technical, we have baroreceptors monitoring blood pressure. They sense the changes in heart rate that accompany each breath.  Then, they send their own signals to the heart. 

 

For example, as blood pressure rises, they tell the heart to slow down.  And as blood pressure falls, they tell the heart to speed up.

 

Here’s the issue: there’s about a 5-second lag for signals.  Thus, they end up getting mingled together with the signals from the breath.  One may be trying to increase heart rate while the other is trying to slow it down.

 

But when we breathe at about 6 breaths per minute, we synchronize these messages.  (To breathe at 6 breaths per minute, we need about a 5-second inhale and 5-second exhale (or 4/6 also works). This matches the time lag from the baroreceptors.)

 

When the signals get synchronized, great things happen.  Each breath amplifies heart rate oscillations, leading to greater HRV.  This also balances the nervous system, making us calm and relaxed.  If we do this regularly, it can significantly improve our quality of life.

 

Let’s break these down into a little more detail and look at 4 positive outcomes we get from slow breathing.

 

 

The 4 Key Benefits of Heart-Breath Synchronization for Diabetes

 

1. Improved Heart Rate Variability

 

This is the most potent effect.  As mentioned, when we breathe slowly, we amplify the heart rate oscillations occurring with each breath.  This increases HRV, a critical problem in diabetes.

 

One study published in Nature found that just 2 minutes of slow breathing at 6 breaths/min could bring the HRV of type-1 diabetics to levels of non-diabetic controls.  (Side note: this was the paper that convinced me to start sharing this information.  Nature is one of the most prestigious journals in the world.  If they’re talking about slow breathing and diabetes, I realized my results weren’t so crazy after all.)

 

A long-term study of people with type 2 diabetes and ischemic heart disease found that one year of slow diaphragmatic breathing significantly increased HRV, and this wasn’t even at precisely 6 breaths per minute. Just slowing down the breath was enough to boost HRV.

 

And better HRV means better cardiovascular health and a longer life.

 

It also means more resiliency to diabetic stressors, but I’ll save that for another blog post.

And better HRV means better cardiovascular health and a longer life.

 

2. Efficiency and Blood Flow

 

When bodily messages come into harmony, it creates efficiency.  Efficiency means your body doesn’t have to work as hard to complete its normal processes.

 

This efficiency also improves blood flow, a fundamental problem in diabetes.  For example, the same 2-minute study mentioned above found that slow breathing also improved arterial function.  Better arteries, more blood flow, and less chance of complications.

 

 

3. Reduced Blood Pressure

 

Slow breathing has consistently been shown to lower blood pressure.  A 2019 meta-analysis found an average systolic blood pressure reduction of about 5 points from slow breathing for about 20 minutes daily.

 

The blood pressure-reducing effects of slow breathing have also been shown in diabetes.  In a study of 65 type-2 diabetics with hypertension, slow breathing significantly reduced systolic and diastolic blood pressure.

 

These results are significant because Johns Hopkins Medical Center reports that people with diabetes are twice as likely to develop hypertension.  It’s also estimated that anywhere from 40 to 80% of diabetics have hypertension.  Moreover, a person with diabetes and hypertension is four times more likely to develop heart disease.  For these reasons, preventing and treating hypertension is a chief concern in people with diabetes.

 

Slow breathing provides one complementary therapy for doing just that.

 

 

4. Less Stress & Anxiety

 

And lastly, we can’t discuss heart problems without discussing stress.  We know when we’re stressed, we have chronic activation of the sympathetic (fight-or-flight) nervous system.  This raises heart rate and blood pressure, adding extra strain on our hearts.

 

Fortunately, slow breathing is one of the fastest and most effective ways to alleviate stress. You’ve probably been told at some point in your life to “just take a deep breath.”  It turns out there’s some solid science for this statement.

 

Slowing down the breath, especially with a longer exhalation, increases activity in the parasympathetic nervous system (rest-and-digest), reducing stress and increasing relaxation. Slow breathing also reduces activity in the amygdala (often referred to as the “fear center”), which also helps reduce stress.

 

 

Slow Breathing is a Superpower for Your Heart

 

To recap, slow breathing at about 6 breaths per minute is excellent for our hearts, especially if you have diabetes.

 

It harmonizes messages being sent from the cardiovascular and autonomic nervous systems.  This leads to a ton of benefits, but here are 4 critical ones for diabetic heart health:

 

  • Improved heart rate variability

  • Increased efficiency and blood flow

  • Lower blood pressure

  • Less stress and anxiety

 

For these reasons, the paper published in Nature concluded:

Slow breathing could be a simple beneficial intervention in diabetes.
— Nature Scientific Reports

 

Simple and beneficial, indeed.

 

 

Start Improving Your Heart Health Today

 

I hope this article motivates you to start a slow breathing practice.

But, if you’d like some more help, you can check out the Breathing for Diabetes Online Course, which covers everything you need to get started.

I hope you’ll check it out, and if you have any questions about slow breathing in general, please email me at nick@thebreathingdiabetic.  I always respond within 5 days (but usually ~2).


Breathing for Diabetes Online workshop

This may be your key to a healthy, more fulfilling life with diabetes.


 


Breathing & Love, Rising Above the Clouds, and 4 Years in 4 Points

 
 

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4 Thoughts


1. Demonstrations of Breathing & Love

Demonstrations of love are small, compared with the great thing that is hidden behind them.

- Khalil Gibran

Call it what you’d like, prana, qi, & so on, but the same is true: Demonstrations of breathing are small compared with the great thing that is hidden behind them.

2. Breathing for Diabetes: 4 Years in 4 Bullet Points

Based on about 4 years of research and self-practice, the 4 key ways that regular breathing practices help diabetes are by:

3. Breathing for (non) Diabetics: “Raising Our Heads Above the Clouds

But many of the same interventions that can help us get our heads above water can just as effectively be devoted to raising our heads above the clouds.

- Steven Kotler and Jamie Wheal, Stealing Fire

This is unquestionably true for breathing. Although everything I read, practice, and share is focused on keeping my “head above the water” as a diabetic, they can also “raise your head above the clouds” if you’re not diabetic.

Interesting side note: it’s typically broken people that find supplemental modalities like breathing—I guess because we need them the most : ) But if you’re not broken, all the benefits of breathing will be even more helpful.

So here’s to using our breathing to stay afloat, or rise above the clouds, today.

4. The Buddha, 20 Years after Enlightenment

Did you know that the Buddha was still meditating 20 years after his enlightenment? (I guess it never ends, folks 😄)

What kind of meditation, you might wonder? “Mindfulness of breathing.

Extra Thought: Take High Altitude Yoga Alongside Me One Last Time

My wife is moving on to a new yoga adventure 🎉. But, she’ll be teaching the High Altitude Yoga class we designed together one last time.

The class incorporates slow breathing, breath holds, and yoga into a challenging but fun 45-min flow.

It’s $8 and happening tomorrow morning (Tuesday, Dec 14) at 6:15 a.m. EST. I’ll be there, and I hope you’ll join me in taking it!

 
 

1 QUOTE

“Relaxing the breath, breathe in. Relaxing the breath, breathe out. Then joy arises naturally.”

- Bhante Gunarantana

The Four Foundations of Mindfulness in Plain English

 
 

 
 

1 ANSWER

Category: The Diaphragm

Answer: This organ rests on the top of the diaphragm.

(Cue the Jeopardy! music.)

Question: What is the heart?

P.S. This was inspired by Jill Miller’s amazing line: “Thank you from the bottom of my heart. Which is of course, my diaphragm.” (Makes me laugh every time.)


In good breath,

Nick Heath, T1D, PhD
“Breathing is the compound interest of health & wellness.”

P.S. and I’ve never respected anything more

 
 
 

Sign Up For The Breathing 411

Each Monday, I curate and synthesize information from scientific journals, books, articles, and podcasts to share 4 thoughts, 1 quote, and 1 answer (like "Jeopardy!") related to breathing. It’s a fun way to learn something new each week.

 
 

A Buffet of 13 Interesting Breathing Articles

 
 
 

I’ve been out of town, with less time than normal to work on the newsletter. So, I decided to share a buffet of interesting breathing articles this week.

I hope there are a few you enjoy!

 
 

 
 

4 Thoughts

1. Study Shows How Slow Breathing Induces Tranquility

Breathe slowly and smoothly. A pervasive sense of calm descends. Now breathe rapidly and frenetically. Tension mounts. Why? It’s a question that has never been answered by science, until now.

- Stanford Medicine News Center

We all know that slow breathing calms us, and fast breathing stimulates us. But in this great article, we learn that there are specific neurons “spying” on our breathing, “reporting their finding to another structure in the brainstem.

Enjoy the interesting read!

Thanks to new 411 reader A.L. for inspiring this thought!

Related: Feeling anxious? The way you breathe could be adding to it

Related: What Focusing on the Breath Does to Your Brain

2. This Ridiculously Simple Breathing Technique Is Scientifically Proven to Improve Mental Focus

I can't promise that it will make everything go smoothly, or take all your jitters away. But I can guarantee that you'll feel more focused and calm than you did before.

- Inc. Magazine

Perfectly said. If you need a quick way to increase focus, it might be as simple as making “your exhalations longer than your inhalations.

Enjoy the super quick read.

And, if you want to dive deeper down the rabbit hole, here are a few more:

Related: Diaphragmatic Breathing Exercises and Your Vagus Nerve

Related: Longer Exhalations Are an Easy Way to Hack Your Vagus Nerve

Related: Slower Breathing Facilitates Eudaimonia via Your Vagus Nerve

Related: This 2-Minute Breathing Exercise Can Help You Make Better Decisions, According to a New Study

3. The Importance of Breathing, from the American Institute of Stress

Please do yourself and favor and check out this issue of Contentment from the American Institute of Stress. They dedicated the entire thing to breathing.

Here’s what’s included:

  • The Health Benefits of Nose Breathing

  • Healing Power Of The Breath

  • The Setup Breath: Exhaling Deeply First

  • Re-Association: Fusing Awareness and Sound with Deep Breathing Practices

  • Take A Deep Breath

  • Yogic Breathing: Ancient and Modern

  • One-Minute Relaxation Exercise for Busy People

The first two were my favorites. You’re sure to find one or two you enjoy too.

P.S. I found this through an excellent Medium blog post.

4. Significant Brain Changes Found in Children Who Regularly Snore

Children who regularly snore have structural changes in their brain that may account for the behavioral problems associated with the condition including lack of focus, hyperactivity, and learning difficulties at school.

- Significant Brain Changes Found in Children Who Regularly Snore

This was a somewhat troubling read on how sleep-disordered breathing might explain hyperactivity and aggression in children.

With complex issues like these, it’s likely not as simple as “one thing.” But, this is an important read, especially if you have or work with children.

Thanks to great friend E.S. for sharing this with me.

Related: The influence of snoring, mouth breathing and apnoea on facial morphology in late childhood: a three-dimensional study. Thanks to HHPF for sharing this one.

Related Quote:If respiration truly acts as a fundamental organizer of oscillatory brain activity, then surely its modulation could be utilized to modulate brain activity to promote sleep.” - Frontiers in Psychiatry (2019)

 
 

 
 

1 Quote

In a single breath, more molecules of air will pass through your nose than all the grains of sand on all the world’s beaches—trillions and trillions of them.

- James Nestor, Breath

 
 

 
 

1 Answer

Answer: In the early 1770s, this gas was independently discovered in England and Sweden.

(Cue the Jeopardy! music.)

Question: What is oxygen?


In good breath,

Nick Heath, T1D, PhD
Diabetes is Tiny. You are Mighty.

P.S. Enough for the next 11 days

 
 
 

Sign Up For The Breathing 411

Each Monday, I curate and synthesize information from scientific journals, books, articles, and podcasts to share 4 thoughts, 1 quote, and 1 answer (like "Jeopardy!") related to breathing. It’s a fun way to learn something new each week.

 
 

The Lesser-Known Benefits of Nasal Breathing, Designed for Diabetes

 

As a person with type 1 diabetes, my experience with nasal breathing has been nothing short of miraculous.  It's been such a simple change, yet its impacts on my energy and blood sugars have been profound. I feel it would be irresponsible not to share it with other people with diabetes.

Luckily, people much brighter than me have become fascinated by the nose too.  Whole books have now been written on the topic.  It has been featured in popular sources such as Outside Magazine and the Cleveland Clinic.  An article published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience even concluded that “nasal stimulation represents the fundamental link between slow breathing techniques, brain and autonomic activities and psychological/behavioral outputs.”

But after several years of research, I have come to realize that the reasons nose breathing is so helpful for diabetes go far beyond the “obvious ones.” 

Of course, the usual suspects are essential, such as the warming and humidifying of the incoming air and the natural slowing of the breath.  But to fully understand the benefits for diabetes requires a synthesis of research from different fields, such as diabetic complications, the metabolites of nitric oxide, chronic stress, and sleep.

Let’s start with diabetic complications.

Oxidative Stress and Inflammation Reduce Blood Flow

Over time, the oxidative stress and chronic inflammation associated with diabetes can damage blood vessels, resulting in poor circulation

Less blood flow means that less oxygen reaches the cells, tissues, and organs

As a result of this poor circulation (and other complications), people with diabetes have an increased incidence of retinopathy, kidney disease, and foot problems.

Nose breathing—specifically inhaling through the nose—immediately helps with this.  For example, one small study showed that just five minutes of inhaling through the nose and exhaling through the mouth increased tissue oxygenation by 10%.  This increase was due to nitric oxide.

Nitric oxide is continuously produced in the paranasal sinuses.  When you breathe in through your nose, nitric oxide is carried into the lungs, where it opens up the blood vessels and improves blood flow in the lungs.  This results in better gas exchange and better blood oxygenation.

But that’s only the beginning of NO’s benefits.

How Nitric Oxide Helps with Blood Flow and Oxygenation

Typically, the nitric oxide produced in your nose is treated separately from the nitric oxide produced throughout the rest of your body.  Although it is known that that inhaling nitric oxide has effects outside of the lungs, scientists have not known how. Researchers at the Cleveland Clinic have recently shed light on the issue.

In a 2019 study, they did something simple yet meaningful.  The researchers had participants inhale extra nitric oxide, and they measured what happened in the blood afterward.  If nitric oxide’s journey ended in the lungs, they wouldn’t see any signs of it in distant blood samples.

The results showed the opposite

They found that inhaling nitric oxide significantly increased circulating levels of a specific form of the molecule, SNO-Hb.  These findings matter because, in a separate study published in PNAS in 2015, a different group of researchers found that SNO-Hb played an essential role in whole-body oxygenation.  Without it, mice received less blood flow to the heart and even had smaller litter sizes.

Why This is Important to Diabetes

The complications of diabetes also impact nitric oxide.  Sustained high blood sugars alter how hemoglobin stores nitric oxide. 

The end result is that people with diabetes generally have less SNO-Hb

And, as we just learned, SNO-Hb is critical to blood flow and tissue oxygenation. 

So, putting it all together:

  • People with diabetes suffer from poor circulation and insufficient oxygen.

  • Our noses are a source of nitric oxide—breathing through our nose utilizes it.

  • Inhaling nitric oxide increases an essential form of NO called SNO-Hb.

  • SNO-Hb is critical to improving blood flow and increasing whole-body oxygenation.

Therefore, nose breathing could be especially helpful in diabetes by maintaining normal SNO-Hb levels and hence helping improve blood flow and oxygenation throughout the body.*  Mouth breathing would not provide these benefits.

How High Blood Sugars Reduce Oxygen Delivery

In addition to altering how nitric oxide is stored, high blood sugar also modifies the relationship between oxygen and hemoglobin.  Specifically, it tightens the bond between them.

As a result, less oxygen can be delivered to the places it is needed.  (For the breathing nerds out there, it causes a left shift in the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve.)  This problem might be further exacerbated by stress.

Chronic Stress and Carbon Dioxide Alter Oxygen Availability

Diabetes also causes chronic stress—a less intense but sustained fight or flight stress response.  This stress causes people with diabetes to have anywhere from 14% to 20% more cases of anxiety than those without it.  Moreover, it has been reported that up to 40% of the diabetic population show symptoms of anxiety.  A 2013 meta-analysis, including over 12,000 people with diabetes, also found significant associations between diabetes and an increased probability of anxiety disorder or anxiety symptoms.

Chronic stress and anxiety, such as that experienced in diabetes, are often associated with overbreathing.  Overbreathing, or hyperventilation, simply refers to breathing more than your metabolic demands at any given moment, and is often associated with mouth breathing. Consequently, the body gets rid of too much carbon dioxide, which alters the pH of the blood.

This has a similar effect on oxygen and hemoglobin as high blood sugar. 

That is, it tightens the bond between them, reducing the amount of oxygen that can be delivered to the cells and tissues (this is known as the Bohr effect).

Together, we see that the high blood sugar and chronic stress associated with diabetes combine to reduce oxygen availability to the cells and tissues.

When we switch to nose breathing, the volume of each breath is naturally reduced.  This helps normalize carbon dioxide levels and restore blood pH to normal levels, which will improve oxygen delivery.** 

Combining this with the earlier discussion on nitric oxide, we see how this one simple change (nose breathing) helps offset some diabetic complications.

Nose Breathing, Sleep, and Diabetes: The Missing Link to Better Blood Sugar Control

If we breathe nasally during sleep, all of the benefits of nose breathing continue throughout the night. Of all the things nose breathing helps with, this might be the most critical for diabetes.

We have already discussed that diabetes causes chronic stress, which can lead to more rapid breathing.  Nose breathing helps naturally slow down the breath.  This will help you shift from a stressful sympathetic state to a calming parasympathetic state.  This shift is significant for people with diabetes who exhibit less parasympathetic tone at night than non-diabetics.  Thus, nasal breathing at night helps us increase parasympathetic tone and enjoy better sleep.

Receptors in your nose also act to maintain rhythmic breathing during sleep.  This might help explain why nose breathing reduces the risk of obstructive sleep apnea when compared to mouth breathing.  Diabetes is associated with a significantly increased risk of obstructive sleep apnea. So, if nasal breathing at night can help reduce this risk, it could be especially beneficial.

Lastly, we know that inadequate sleep causes insulin resistance.  By getting deeper, more restorative sleep, insulin sensitivity can be improved.  This could potentially lead to better morning blood sugars (that was my experience), setting you up for a better day of glucose control.

The More Subjective but Most Important Benefit of Nasal Breathing for Diabetes

Altogether, nasal breathing increases blood flow, improves tissue oxygenation, and appears to increase an essential form of bioactive nitric oxide that people with diabetes have less of.  It also improves sleep quality by helping us flip to a more calming state and by reducing the incidence of sleep apnea.  This can help improve insulin sensitivity.

When we combine all of these together, nasal breathing's net benefit can be simply stated as:

It gives you more energy. 

And it’s harder to objectively measure, but perhaps the best aspect of increased energy levels is more motivation to take care of your blood sugars. 

Diabetes is an exhausting full-time job that can lead to physical and emotional burnout.  Having more energy and enthusiasm to manage the disease could be the most valuable aspect of something as simple as breathing through your nose.

Footnotes:

*The levels of NO inhaled in the 2019 Cleveland Clinic study were greater than those produced in the nose.  But, the study validated that there is a mechanism by which NO that is introduced into the lungs can be transported throughout the body as SNO-Hb.  Thus, nasal breathing would only act to bring SNO-Hb up to normal physiological levels, whereas mouth breathing would rob the body of this important physiological process.

**This discussion is centered around the regular blood sugar fluctuations associated with diabetes and not diabetic ketoacidosis.

 
 

Heart Rate Variability, Stress Response, and PTSD

low_vagal_tone_may_account.png

In post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), physiological arousal is increased when a person is reminded of their traumatic experience.  This is somewhat unsurprising. 

An over activated sympathetic nervous system almost certainly plays a role in this. However, under activation of the parasympathetic nervous system, or “low vagal tone,” might be equally important. 

The goal of the paper I’m sharing this week was to examine these two components and determine which might be responsible for the enhanced stress response in PTSD.

As with most things, the answer is likely “they both matter.” But here is what they found.

Low Heart Rate Variability Linked to Enhanced Stress Response

(Read the Full Summary Here)

They measured high-frequency heart rate variability (HRV) as a marker of parasympathetic tone. Then, the participants were read a trauma script and their physiological response was recorded.

Results showed that patients with a higher baseline HRV did not experience as much stress.  The subjects with lower HRV showed a higher heart rate peak, followed by a slower deceleration of heart rate.  That is, they showed an elevated stress response.

The patients with lower baseline HRV also had longer half-recovery times, meaning that their stress response was not only elevated, but also prolonged. 

These findings suggest that low parasympathetic tone, rather than just increased sympathetic activity, might help explain the increased physiological stress response in PTSD.

Two Takeaways

  1. HRV measurements might provide insight into the severity of a person’s PTSD and predict how well they respond to stress.

  2. Slow breathing is one of the easiest ways to improve HRV, both immediately and long term.

If HRV predicts the stress response, and HRV can be increased via breathing exercises, it is conceivable that breathing practices could improve stress resiliency in PTSD.  (In fact, a 2013 study found that a yoga breathing program significantly improves PTSD symptoms in Australian Vietnam veterans.)

Finally (and importantly), these takeaways might be applicable to conditions other than PTSD, such as anxiety disorder, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes.

In good breath,
Nick

100 years of nasal breathing and mental function

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Happy Sunday! I hope you all enjoyed the extra hour of sleep as much as I did.

Last week, we learned that the nose might provide the link between slow breathing and improved emotional outcomes. Before we explore the modern science behind that idea, let’s go back a century and see what we can learn.

An odd sounding word

Over 100 years ago (1889 to be exact), an author named Guye coined the term “aprosexia.” Although it doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue, it’s pretty great:

  • Aprosexia
    : The inability to focus your attention due to nasal obstructions.

Guye argued that headaches and the inability to perform difficult mental functions are both caused by mouth breathing. He even suggested that medical practitioners ensure that breathing was not “habitually or temporarily suspended by breathing through the mouth.” (That advice holds true today.)

Guye put particular emphasis on children feeling “over-pressured” in school. He believed that kids would not feel overwhelmed if they had normal nasal respiration. Finally, he concluded with the quote above.

Old becomes new

There is often hidden wisdom rooted in old observations. And the science is catching up. A new study of the brain suggests that nasal breathing is intimately connected to emotional control. We’ll explore that research next week.

Until then, let’s focus on breathing through our nose 24/7, especially during sleep. Because, as we have learned, that motto was updated in 1983 to reflect the importance of nasal breathing during rest:

While asleep, shut your mouth to save your brain.

In good breath,
Nick

How slow breathing improves emotional well-being (hint: it might be in your nose)

 
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Hi everyone,

I hope you’re having a great weekend.

Let’s continue on our theme of slow breathing and enhanced well-being. If you missed/forgot last week’s post, check it out here.

The paper I’m sharing this week might win best title award (well, at least the part before the colon):

How breath-control can change your life: A systematic review on psycho-physiological correlates of slow breathing

(Click Here to read full summary)

That’s pretty awesome for a peer-reviewed journal article.

This paper examined a wide range of studies to understand how physiological changes associated with slow breathing correlated with improved emotional outcomes.

Here are the common results they found throughout the literature:

  • Slow breathing increases heart rate variability

  • Slow breathing increases respiratory sinus arrhythmia

  • Slow breathing increases alpha brain wave activity

These benefits were correlated with improvements in stress, anxiety, depression, and well-being.

Thus, breathing changes your physiology, and your physiology changes your emotions.

And to me, that wasn’t the best part. This was.

The authors hypothesize that the nose provides the link between slow breathing, brain and autonomic functioning, and positive emotional outcomes. It’s not just slow breathing, it’s nose breathing. Breathing slowly through the mouth would not improve stress and anxiety.

From a practical perspective, all of the studies used breathing rates of 3-6 breaths/min. With practice, we can use an app (such as Breathing Zone) to achieve these slow rates.

However, let’s not rely purely on the science. Try practicing slow breathing at 6 breaths/min for 5 min/day to see the results for yourself. They might turn out to be the most important 5 minutes of your day.

In good breath,
Nick

P.S. Lean into stress.

Breathe profoundly to reduce stress and anxiety

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Hi all,

Last week we learned some devastating statistics. (Do you remember that 1 in 3 adolescents meets the criteria for anxiety?)

The study I’m sharing this week shows you how to breathe (hint: deeply) to reduce anxiety.

The effectiveness of diaphragmatic breathing relaxation training for reducing anxiety
(Click here to read on website)

First, a quick rant. “Deep” breathing is not “big” breathing. Often, when someone says “take a deep breath,” we automatically take a big breath.

But, a deep breath simply brings air into the lower lungs (“right before the bottom”) where the largest concentration of blood is due to gravity. It doesn’t have to be (and usually shouldn’t be) big. Maybe we should call in “Profound Breathing”?

OK, rant complete.

In this study, patients with mild-to-moderate anxiety were given instructions on diaphragmatic breathing. They were told to take 10 diaphragmatic breaths, twice daily, which doesn’t sound like too much to ask. They performed this over an 8 week period.

The results showed that diaphragmatic breathing significantly reduced anxiety when assessed on the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) scale. Their average scores dropped from ~19 down to ~5 (lower is better).

The participants also improved physiological indicators of stress, including reducing their heart rate, breathing rate, and skin conductance.

Like I said last week, this isn’t woo-woo pseudoscience. Correct breathing changes your physiology to reduce stress and anxiety.

And the best part is that you can use deep breathing anytime you (or your clients or friends) feel stressed. And you can know that you are changing your physiology to promote relaxation.

In good breath,
Nick

P.S. Did you check out HHPF last week?

How to reduce anxiety and prevent disease

Anxiety is often excitement and anticipation without the breath.
- Michael Port


Hi all,

It seems like everywhere we look stress and anxiety are on the rise.

For example, did you know that 1 in 3 adolescents meet the criteria for anxiety in the United States? Or that 14% of active duty military report anxiety?

Not only are these stats devastating in general, but they also have negative implications for long-term health and well-being.

Let’s look at the numbers:

  • Anxiety increases the incidence of cardiovascular disease by 52%.

  • Stress-related conditions increase risk of autoimmune disease by 36%.

Thus, anxiety isn’t just bad in the moment, it also subjects you to chronic illness.

This is where breathing can help. Slow, deep breathing improves both subjective (e.g., questionnaires) and physiological (e.g., heart rate variability, parasympathetic activity, brain wave activity) indicators of anxiety, stress, and depression.

That last part is critical.

This isn’t some woo-woo, “just take a deep breath” stuff. Correct breathing changes your physiology to promote relaxation and focus. This reduces anxiety and improves your ability to deal with stress. All of which reduces your risk of disease.

Of course, breathing won’t fix everything. But, with essentially no side effects, it seems like slow breathing should be the first place we turn in the treatment of stress and anxiety.

In good breath,
Nick

P.S. If you haven’t heard of the Health & Human Performance Foundation (HHPF), you should check them out. They are a nonprofit organization conducting scientific research on the effectiveness of breathing for stress and anxiety. Click here to learn more about HHPF.

Staying healthy on vacations and “party weekends”

You should sit in meditation for twenty minutes every day – unless you’re too busy; then you should sit for an hour.” – Zen Proverb

Hi everyone,

I am a pretty structured person. I go to bed at 8 PM and wake up at 4 AM, even on the weekends. And I am consistent with my breathing routine:

Although I’m pretty crazy about all this breathing stuff, I try to maintain a decent balance of “normal life” as well.

I recently went to a Bachelor Party weekend and stayed in a house with about 10 other people. My sleep routine was out. But getting in some “breathing” wasn’t.

I didn’t have to look weird or do anything special. I taped up once I got into bed so very few would see. When I woke up, I put my headphones in and did 15 minutes of box breathing (in bed) using the iBreathe app. Finally, I laid there and did 5 static breath holds:

Hold 45 sec after exhale —> Rest 1 min
Hold 45 sec after exhale —> Rest 45 sec
Hold 45 sec after exhale —> Rest 30 sec
Hold 45 sec after exhale —> Rest 15 sec
Hold 45 sec after exhale —> End

The point of all of this is to show you that incorporating breathing exercises into your day is fairly easy, regardless of your situation. And the benefits are many.

Just a few minutes of slow breathing can increase heart rate variability, improve autonomic function, and reduce stress and anxiety.

And a few breath holds can improve immune function, improve insulin sensitivity, and increase O2 carrying capacity.

Breathing is not only one of the easiest self-care practices to perform, but it also provides the greatest return on investment.

While on vacation or during a “party weekend,” it might be easy to ignore our normal self-care routines. But, this is precisely when we need them the most.

In good breath,
Nick

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* My current Principle 1 practice is 15 minutes of box breathing. After 2 months, I’m up to a 10-10-10-10 box: 10 sec inhale, 10 sec hold, 10 sec exhale, 10 sec hold. (I started at 5-5-5-5)

** My current Principle 3 practice is 3-5 walking breath holds of at least 45 sec each. Then, I perform 2 minutes of Advanced Simulation of Altitude from the Oxygen Advantage®