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Showing posts with label breast pain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label breast pain. Show all posts

Monday, July 28, 2014

Can you see where this lady kept her cellphone?


The first image shows the vascular changes in the area where she kept her phone tucked into her bra.  Not good!

The second image is of one of my clients with painful fibrocystic breast disease affecting her left breast.  Incidentally, you will note that this "hot spot" would probably be missed by a mammogram, if she had one.  The third image is of her breast a year later, showing the wonderful benefits of the interventions we used with her.

Regardless of age and family history; if you are concerned about the health of your breasts, the first action is to arrange to have a breast thermogram.  A thermogram, unlike mammograms, is completely non-invasive and carries absolutely no risk of radiation induced cancer.  Thermograms are sophisticated infrared imaging of the breasts.  Unlike mammograms, the thermogram is your first tool for detecting inflammation in the breast, your precursor to breast cancer.

Have you ever wondered what comes before the cancer?
In most cases, its inflammation!



NB: Gary Moller has no financial links with the thermogram screening service

About this website 
The advice in these articles is given freely without promise or obligation. Its all about giving you and your family the tools and information to take control of your health and fitness.
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Wednesday, June 25, 2008

At last! - A bra that really does give support without slowly strangulating the owner.

This came in an email:

"Hi Gary,
I received a Walking New Zealand magazine and read with interest your article "Is your bra killing you". What excellent insight you have on such matters..(especially for a bloke!!), and I just had to introduce myself and my business to you. I am of the "well-endowered" variety , and after deciding to get fit about 3 years ago I went shopping for a bra to help me on my pursuit. Alas, the lingere manufacturers seem to think that once you reach a certain cup size you are either unable or uninterested in exercising. Very frustrating!

After producing our two beautiful daughters, I could put it off no longer, I decided to get fit! I needed to get out and smell the air so to speak. I entered a triathlon, nothing strenuous, but a goal nonetheless. Being of the ‘well-endowed’ variety I went shopping for a good sport bra to help me in my pursuit. Not only could I not find a decent supportive bra, they didn’t even make them in my size!
Frustrated but still determined I happened to read Oprah Winfrey’s ‘O’ magazine, her list of ‘a few things I think are just great’, and her love of the Enell bra. I ordered, received and tried out this wondrous vest, and have never looked back (I own one of each colour!). They allow me the freedom and ability to run, treadmill, do step classes, really anything I like, without being embarrassed or concerned about how my chest may be performing! I decided there must be other New Zealand women out there in the same bra boat as me – so I have begun Sportsupport in the hope that you will rejoice in the same freedom and dignity that Enell has brought to me. Enjoy and compete with confidence!

Lisa Harris
Founder - Sportsupport - A serious sportbra - for the larger busted women "
_________________________________
Gary Moller comments:
I am hoping to publish an independent product review of this bra soon, so keep an eye out for it. Even an apparently well designed bra can cause a surprising amount of discomfort and damage.
As an aside, I am surprised that the mainstream media has not picked up on this story - yet.

Please go here to read the original article


Do you have a question?
Email Gary: gary at myotec.co.nz (Replace the "at" with @ and remove spaces). Please include any relevant background information to your question.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Is your Bra killing you?


One of the more common statements by women who seek my advice is along the lines of: “My back and shoulders are killing me!”

While there are usually several things going on that are contributing to this discomfort, the bra is often one of the main culprits. Usually that culprit bra is good “Old Faithful” – that dearly beloved frilly bra that has served her owner so faithfully for 20 years. Her owner has put on some girth and Old Faithful is now a faded and ragged remnant - and the under-wire is hanging out.
Why change? There is a kind of emotional attachment, like a well worn security blanket. A comfortable sense of security that is less than perfect; but acceptable. A bit like a reliable husband who has long lost interest in her undergarments – not perfect, a bit worn – but reliable.
Some bras I encounter are so tight I marvel at the engineering that must have gone into designing those tiny clips that prevent the device’s pressurised contents from bursting forth! The owner was obviously several dress sizes less at the time of its first fitting. Another problem is the chest and shoulder straps may be too narrow, garrotting the trunk and even the tops of the shoulders. With the underwire, one could imagine it being the perfect tool for an underworld assassin!
Take a look at these photographs: They show some of the damage being caused to three women by bras. What you can see is the subtle indentation of the bra where it acts as a kind of tourniquet about the thorax (I prefer to describe it as a kind of leaky “beaver dam” that interrupts the normal flow of a pristine mountain stream). Because the blood and lymph flow goes upwards in that region of the body, the flesh above the bra line, as far up as the neck and shoulders, may show signs of a chronic lack of oxygen and nutrients and the build up of metabolic toxins. The body’s response to these metabolic poisons is to dilute the area with water, causing a podgy appearance and even a thickened hump at the base of the neck (Sometimes called a “Dowager’s Hump”). The area under the breast, where the underwire bites into the flesh may be thickened and painful. This is unhealthy. Of course, there are varying degrees of pain and fatigue affecting the back neck, shoulders and even the arms. While it takes very little tightness of a bra to affect blood and lymph flow, it has surprised me at times just how tight a bra can be. How on Earth can a person breathe properly with such a restrictive band about the chest?

Feel great – burn your bra!

While I am not an expert on such matters, the solution is hardly rocket science: Get rid of that old bra and replace it with one that fits properly. I advise women to go to a specialist store that has a “bra expert” and get a proper fitting (I assume there are such places and people). I think the best design to investigate is the sports bra which has broad straps that support the breasts without biting into the flesh and an elastic chest strap which allows unrestricted inflation of the lungs.
Yes, there are specialists in bras with Wellington even having its very own official “Bra Lady”, Luella Plimmer, who can be contacted via here.
A broad strap sports bra may be much better when hiking with a back pack. Other than the better support it gives during exercise, the broader, flatter shoulder straps are less likely to bite painfully into the shoulder muscles when the weight of the backpack is on the shoulders. If there is biting, then even a light weight will cause neck and shoulder pain and poor circulation to the arms and hands.
If a woman is losing or gaining weight, the bra sizing should be progressively adjusted accordingly just as one does with tight jeans.
Take the bra off when relaxing about the house, even if it is entirely comfortable, because it takes only a little pressure on the body to interfere with the blood and lymph flow.
If you have been wearing a restrictive bra and have pain in your upper body and shoulders with a build-up of fluid under the skin, then several once a week massages by a trained masseur will help ease the muscle tension, shift the stagnant fluid and get normal flows going again.
For the latest article on this topic, go here

Talk to Gary Moller:
gazzamoller@BitWine