Archive for the ‘Health’ category

Yoga: It’s Not Just an Exercise.

February 10th, 2010

http://www.stressgroup.com/articles/article/1228898/11303.htm
stressgroup.com
by Amy Weintraub

In 1990, Jenny Smith was 41 years old. That year, her mental illness became so severe that she could barely walk or speak. After days of feeling wonderful one moment and hallucinating that spiders and bugs were crawling on her skin the next, she landed in the hospital for the second time that year.

Smith is a victim of bipolar disorder, a possibly hereditary illness characterized by oscillating feelings
of elation and utter depression. And though she had tried 11 different medications for relief, some in combination, nothing seemed to work. Upon leaving the hospital, Smith was told that she could expect to be in and out of psychiatric hospitals for the rest of her life. Soon after her release, Smith decided to learn hatha yoga, which incorporates specific postures, meditation and pranayamas, deep abdominal breathing techniques that relax the body.

As she practiced daily, Smith noticed that her panic attacks a symptom of panic disorder, a disease that approximately 20% of bipolar disorder sufferers also contend with–were subsiding. She has since become a certified hatha yoga instructor, and with the help of only Paxil, an antidepressant that she’d taken before without effect, Smith’s pattern of severe mood swings seems to have ended. She even taught her 11-year-old daughter–who had experienced panic attacks since age 7–the simple breathing technique of inhaling to the count of four and exhaling to the count of eight; as a result, her daughter’s panic attacks subsided.

Key to reaping hatha yoga’s mental benefits is reducing stress and anxiety. To that end, Jon Cabot-Zinn, Ph.D., of the University of Massachusetts, developed the Stress Reduction and Relaxation Program (SRRP), a system that emphasizes mindfulness, a meditation technique where practitioners observe their own mental process. SRRP has been the focus of several scientific studies in the last 20 years, and has been shown to significantly reduce anxiety and depression, and thus alleviate mental illness.

To date, the most persuasive evidence of the benefits of hatha yoga, and in particular pranayama, stems from research conducted by the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuroscience in India. New studies have shown a high success rate–up to 73%–for treating depression with sudharshan kriya, a pranayama technique taught in the U.S. as “The Healing Breath Technique.” It involves breathing naturally through the nose, mouth dosed, in three distinct rhythms.

According to Stephen Cope, MSW, LICSW, a psychotherapist and author of Yoga and the Quest for the True Self(Bantam, 1999), hatha yoga’s postures improve mood by moving energy through places in the body where feelings of grief or anger are stored. “Hatha yoga is an accessible form of learning self-soothing,” he says. “These blocked feelings can be released very quickly, [creating a] regular, systemic experience of well-being.” Yoga students may also benefit from their relationship with the yoga instructor, Cope said, which can provide a “container” or a safe place for investigating, expressing and resolving emotional issues. The instructor’s encouraging and accepting words may also help students defeat self-limiting notions.

Not all mental health practitioners are convinced of yoga’s healing powers, but many agree it can be helpful when combined with more traditional treatments. Zindel Segal, Ph.D., a University of Toronto psychiatry professor, recently studied SRRP when used in conjunction with cognitive therapy. He asked 145 people who were at risk for depression to undergo cognitive therapy either alone or with the SRRP. Segal found that after eight weeks of treatment, those participants who received both types of therapy were much less likely to relapse into depression. “This means that people can learn about their emotions not just by writing down their thoughts, which is what cognitive therapy is all about, but also by paying attention to the way their emotions are expressed in their bodies,” he says. “Both approaches allow people to observe their experience without judgment, an important first step in stepping out of depression.”

While yoga’s therapeutic capabilities are still under scientific scrutiny, Smith isn’t waiting for more proof. Having lost her grandmother to depression–she was one of many bipolar sufferers who take their own life due to the disease–Smith is determined not to let the disorder get the best of her. Since 1994, she has practiced and taught hatha yoga to depression sufferers–passing on what she believes has literally saved her life.

Young Teens See Pregnancy As A Way To Enhance Relationships

February 10th, 2010

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/49116.php
medicalnewstoday.com

Younger teen-agers who become pregnant tend to view pregnancy as a way to form or enhance connections with others, and are less likely to think they are unprepared to raise a child. By contrast, pregnant teens who are 18 or 19 years old acknowledge that they lack preparedness, but say there are advantages to having a baby earlier in life. These observations offer some insight into how to prevent teen pregnancies, researchers say in a paper published in the current issue of Pediatrics.

“We need to help teen-agers identify ways to connect with others in life besides motherhood,” says lead author Cynthia Rosengard, PhD, MPH, a researcher in internal medicine at Rhode Island Hospital and an assistant professor of medicine at Brown Medical School. “If those connections are lacking in a teen-ager’s life, that’s something we all need to look at – whether we’re parents, teachers or physicians.”

The study was conducted with 247 pregnant adolescents, ages 12 to 19, who were seeking prenatal care at a primary care clinic. They were given a survey that asked for demographic information and included open-ended questions about the advantages and disadvantages of being pregnant as a teen-ager compared to waiting until they were older.

While the teens’ answers varied, there were common themes. Among the list of advantages, they believed a baby would help them form connections with others, such as bringing them closer to their boyfriend or creating a family. One 13-year-old noted as an advantage, “being able to play along with your child not only being his/her parent but being a friend.”

Some said if they had a baby early in life, that would give them more time later to accomplish what they wanted. For example, one adolescent said her child would be older when she wanted to become a lawyer. Others expressed concerns about fertility later in life. And some said they would receive more support as a young parent than if they were older.

Some teens also said having a baby would require them to mature and take on more responsibility; one young woman said that motherhood would keep her from drinking and doing drugs. A 15-year-old wrote “the good thinks (sic) are that I have someone to live for.”

Among disadvantages, teens expressed that they would have more responsibility and would miss out on typical adolescent experiences. Some said they would have to put their lives on hold and revise their life goals. They also expressed concern that they could have difficulty juggling school and motherhood and might have to drop out of school. A 14-year-old responded: “1. No job to support me and my baby 2. Im (sic) not out of school.”

Those who said they were not prepared emphasized different areas in which they were not ready, including being too young and lacking stability. Teens also were concerned about how others might view them because they had a baby during adolescence.

Disadvantages mentioned by a 17-year-old were: “financial problems. Not waiting until I was married because I’m not sure if the father is always gonna be there.”

Researchers noted differences between the age groups. About half of those aged 18 or 19 said they were not prepared for pregnancy, compared to 42 percent of 16- and 17-year-olds and 35 percent of teens under 16. They gave reasons such as: immaturity, being emotionally unprepared, financial or employment instability, uncertain relationships and lack of stable housing. Likewise, 63 percent of the oldest teens felt the pregnancy would disrupt their life, while 83 percent of teens under 16 believed the pregnancy would bring on more responsibility and change their life plans.

Researchers also found a difference among Hispanics compared to other ethnic groups; Hispanic teens were less likely to say they were unprepared to raise a child. Overall, those surveyed cited more disadvantages than advantages to teen pregnancy. However, Hispanic teens cited positive aspects of pregnancy in terms of how it enhanced connections with others, including the perception that a baby would bring them closer to their boyfriend.

In the survey, disadvantages outnumbered the advantages, possibly because society sends many negative messages about teen-age pregnancy, Rosengard says. However, because the teens were already aware of some of the drawbacks, intervention efforts should reinforce these challenges.

“We can say that if you happen to get pregnant or you choose to get pregnant, you’re most likely going to have to put aspects of your life on hold. Chances are that you are going to miss out on being a teenager because there are more responsibilities. Perhaps if these disadvantages were more salient to these adolescents, they might have been able to do more to avoid a pregnancy,” Rosengard says.

There are known health consequences of teen-age pregnancy, as well. Adolescents often delay seeking prenatal care, have poor prenatal health behaviors, and give birth to low birth-weight infants. Even healthy infants born to teen-age mothers are at increased risk of neonatal death.

While pregnancy rates have declined in recent years, in 2000, more than 800,000 girls under the age of 20 became pregnant in the United States – with about half of those giving birth. In recent years, there has been a strong emphasis on programs designed to prevent teen-age pregnancies. However, little work has focused on what teen-agers believe about pregnancy, the authors write.

The collective responses in this study tell researchers that there is no uniform way to prevent teen pregnancy. “You really need to know who you’re talking to and where they’re coming from, and that should help you to tailor the way you intervene,” Rosengard says.

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Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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The study was conducted by researchers from Rhode Island Hospital, Women & Infants Hospital and Brown Medical School, all in Providence, RI. The research was supported by the Rhode Island Foundation.

Founded in 1863, Rhode Island Hospital (http://www.rhodeislandhospital.org/) is a private, not-for-profit hospital and is the largest teaching hospital of Brown Medical School. A major trauma center for southeastern New England, the hospital is dedicated to being on the cutting edge of medicine and research. Rhode Island Hospital ranks 13th among independent hospitals who receive funding from the National Institutes of Health, with research awards of more than $27 million annually. Many of its physicians are recognized as leaders in their respective fields of oncology, cardiology, orthopedics and minimally invasive surgery. The hospital’s pediatrics wing, Hasbro Children’s Hospital, has pioneered numerous procedures and is at the forefront of fetal surgery, orthopedics and pediatric neurosurgery. Rhode Island Hospital is a founding member of the Lifespan health system.

Contact: Nicole Gustin

Psychological Changes in Pubescent Girls

February 10th, 2010

http://health.howstuffworks.com/female-puberty7.htm
health.howstuffworks.com
by Tom Scheve

Puberty develops the mind as much as it develops the body. Whereas children (under the best of circumstances) live relatively carefree lives, girls who have gone through puberty may suddenly feel they have the burden of the world on their backs. On the other hand, the loss of childhood “innocence” also goes hand-in-hand with the development of a mind capable of processing higher thoughts and abstract concepts. As their entire world has changed from within them, girls must find and establish a new identity. This search begins long before their bodies stop evolving into their final adult forms.

Self-awareness increases and may be mistaken by others as self-obsession, but this is completely normal. An adolescent girl must closely examine her own beliefs and feelings in order to find her place and roles within the world. Girls will likely also feel self-conscious, especially in light of crude remarks or teasing by boys who are shorter and less developed and, in many cases, frankly terrified of the towering women now walking among them.

Existing sleep patterns will probably get turned on end during puberty, as girls may suddenly get enough rest to make old housecats look spry and lively by comparison. Moods may become erratic, due to hormonal fluctuations and the stresses of transitioning into adulthood in a world that isn’t sure when to stop treating adolescent girls like children. Mood changes may also be caused by the presence of parents, who have by now fully developed into embarrassing life forms. Puberty offers a perfect window of opportunity to rummage through parents’ belief systems and rearrange things to their liking. Many of the lessons and beliefs handed down to girls by parents as inalienable truths throughout childhood may now seem unjust, hypocritical and logically unsound. This new questioning mindset should be fed with all the information it craves. It also presents a good opportunity to broaden educational horizons and explore new subjects, philosophies and the lives of heroic women throughout history.

Clothing and appearance will become more individualized, as girls experiment with their physical image and how it can affect how a girl either blends in with her peer group or stands out from the crowd.

Pubescent Physical Development

February 10th, 2010

http://www.ehow.com/about_5369935_pubescent-physical-development.html
ehow.com
By Shae Lynn

Puberty is the time when a child’s body undergoes the physical changes that will transform them into that of an adult body. This takes place when the brain signals the hormones that stimulate the ovaries in a female and the testes in the male to initiate the growth and development of many aspects of their body.

Time Frame
1. A male child and a female child will experience puberty at different times of their lives. This difference can include a wide range in the individual child as well. A female enters puberty approximately one to two years earlier than a male. This occurs approximately between the ages of 9 and 14 for a female. A boy will begin puberty approximately between the ages of 10 and 17. Females also reach puberty in a less amount of time than a male.
Growth
2. The male child is generally shorter than the female child until the onset of puberty. When puberty does begin, even though the male has a slower start, he will continue to grow two years beyond that of a female. A female will reach her final height in about four years. A male will reach his maximum height in approximately six years. The average adult male is approximately 5 inches taller than the adult female.
Body Shape
3. The male child’s muscle will double in size, and his bones will be heavier. The male body fat percentage is approximately half of female’s body fat percentage. The female child will experience a widening of the hips during puberty. This is to accommodate her future delivery in childbirth. She will gain a considerable amount of fatty tissue in her body in the areas of her buttocks, thighs, pubic area, breasts, hips and upper arms.
Sex Organs
4. The testes in the male will begin to increase during puberty. They will continue to grow for the six years that puberty is in progress. There is a wide variation in this; however, the average adult testes size is approximately 20 cc. The testes will allow the male to impregnate the female in later years by producing sperm. They also excrete hormones necessary in the male body. This is present between the ages of 13 and 16. The female’s uterus and ovaries will become larger during puberty. Her body will begin preparation for her future child-bearing years by means of menstruation. This generally occurs at 12 years old, but some late bloomers are as old as 17 before menstruating.
Body Hair, Acne, Body Odor and Voice
5. The child entering puberty will notice body hair growing in their pubic area, under their arms and on their legs. Males will notice the additional growth of hair on their face, chest and abdomen. Because of hormones, acne might develop in the pubescent child. This is common and generally eases or disappears once puberty ends. These same hormones are responsible for body odor. General daily bathing and deodorant will keep this under control. Both males and females will experience the growth of their larynx. However, the male growth is much more substantial, and this causes his voice to change into a deeper sound. The male will generally obtain his adult voice by the time he is 15.

References

* All About Puberty

How Does Cross Dressing Affect a Heterosexual Relationship?

February 8th, 2010

http://www.ehow.com/how-does_4743206_cross-dressing-affect-heterosexual-relationship.html
ehow.com
By Lauren Vork

Cross Dressing In Heterosexual Relationships
1. While the term “cross-dressing” is sometimes applied to women in men’s clothing, there is generally very little stigma attached to this behavior in contemporary U.S. society. Instead, the term usually refers to men dressing in any clothing that is considered exclusively feminine, such as dresses, skirts, bras, panties or high-heeled shoes. Though cross-dressing in men is often associated with homosexuality, it is actually a more common practice among heterosexual men. According to Ellen Sherman of “Self-Help Magazine,” an estimated 1 percent of the straight male population engages in this behavior privately. Though this behavior often makes loved ones, particularly romantic partners, uncomfortable, the American Psychiatric Association does not recognize cross dressing as a disorder. Cross dressers cite many reasons for enjoyment of the activity, including sexual enhancement and a feeling of relaxation (Dr. Ellen Sherman, “The Real Truth About Crossdressing,” see Resources).
Misconceptions and Discomfort
2. One of the chief problems that cross-dressing can cause for a heterosexual relationship is a fear on the part of the woman based on a misconception of what the behavior signifies. Many women will worry that their boyfriends or husbands are really gay or transgender. They may have a difficult time being reassured on these points. Other problems for women in relationships with cross-dressers can include a culturally ingrained discomfort with the blurring of gender roles and a diminishing of attraction to her partner once she knows he enjoys playing the role of a female. It is common for women in this situation to feel that their partners can and should go to therapy to have the problem “cured.” (Anne Vitale, Ph. D. “Couple’s Therapy When The Male Partner Crossdresses,” see Resources).
Insecurity
3. Men who are particularly insecure about their cross-dressing pastime can become defensive and even aggressive if their female partners discover the truth. Such a man may feel an overwhelming need to express his masculinity through misogynistic and homophobic means, which can put a major strain on the relationship with his female partner and others (Anne Vitale).
Secrecy and Infidelity
4. For men who feel they must keep their cross-dressing desires a secret from their partners, but still wish to openly bring cross-dressing into sexual activities with another, infidelity can become a problem. This can create added feelings of betrayal if and when the main partner discovers the full truth.
Acceptance
5. As education and acceptance of cross dressing (and other non-standard sexual behaviors) becomes more widespread, more heterosexual couples are successfully and happily living openly with the knowledge of a cross-dressing male partner. Though the help of a supportive therapist is sometimes required, more men are able to work to dismiss feelings of shame, unworthiness and the worry that there is just something “wrong” with them. Meanwhile, a woman can learn to accept that her male partner’s cross-dressing is not a sign that he is less interested in her sexually or interested in changing his sexual identity. A woman can even express a sense of fun and enjoyment associated with her partner’s habits, as well as pleasure that he is able to fully trust her and be himself (Anne Vitale).

Am I Bi or a Lesbian Pretending to Be Heterosexual?

February 8th, 2010

http://www.selfhelpmagazine.com/article/am-i-bi
selfhelpmagazine.com
by Gail S. Bernstein, Ph.D.

Question: I’m a woman who thinks of herself as heterosexual. However, I also like to fantasize about sex with other women. Sometimes I go to lesbian clubs to flirt. This is very exciting for me but I struggle with the ethics. Am I bi or a lesbian pretending to be heterosexual? Or am I really heterosexual? I don’t want to pretend to be someone I’m not, and I don’t want someone to fall for me if I’m not available. Please help me figure out what to do.

It sounds like you’re struggling with two different issues. One is the question of whether you are a lesbian. The other is what to say about your sexual orientation to women you flirt with and find attractive.

That is the simpler of the two issues, because it is always easiest to be honest with people. If all you want is to dance and flirt, simply turn down offers/requests for more. If you are interested in a date, go. If you want to have a one-night stand but are not interested in an emotional commitment, be clear about that.

The question of whether you are a lesbian is ultimately one that only you can answer, for you are the only one who knows what you feel. One question you might ask yourself is how strong your feelings for women are in comparison of your feelings for men.

Women who are far more strongly attracted to other women often identify as lesbian or gay, while women who are far more strongly attracted to men typically identify as heterosexual. Women who are more evenly attracted to both women and men are more likely to identify as bisexual.

Some people prefer not to label themselves at all. It’s okay to be confused while you sort all this out. The question of “Am I Bi, Lesbian or Heterosexual?” will be answered.

For more information and sources of support, I suggest checking some of the sites listed in our Resources Department under Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual/Transgender. Good luck to you!
About the Author:

Gail S. Bernstein, Ph.D. is an author and psychologist. She has a psychotherapy practice in Denver, Colorado. Dr. Bernstein speaks and writes about gay, lesbian and bisexual people for both general and professional audiences, and is the author of the audiotape, NOT HETEROSEXUAL: An Educational Program About Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual People.

Heterosexuals `unaware’ of HIV risk

February 8th, 2010

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1608/is_9_17/ai_80309798/
findarticles.com
Men’s Fitness

While gay men account for about 42 percent of the estimated 40,000 new U.S. HIV infections each year, a study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicates that many nongay Americans are unaware of the HIV status of their sexual partners and their own chances of contracting the virus.

“High-risk heterosexual adults may not perceive themselves to be at risk for HIV and are therefore unlikely to seek testing,” says the study’s lead author R. Monina Klevens, D.D.S., of the National Center for HIV, STD and TB Prevention.

The vast majority of the world’s approximately 60 million AIDS cases have been caused by heterosexual contact, but such transmissions have been relatively unusual in the United States. However, the percentage of Americans who acquired AIDS through heterosexual contact has grown from about 2 percent in 1985 to between 10 percent and 15 percent currently. And a growing percentage of those diagnoses can be traced to “secondary transmission,” in which the HIV-infected partner was also infected heterosexually, rather than through a “primary risk factor” such as injection drug use or homosexual contact.

The CDC study, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, involved 581 participants. It found a large discrepancy between those who knew their partner engaged in primary risk behavior (nearly 80 percent) and awareness of that partner’s HIV status (35 percent of the men, 56 percent of the women).

“Heterosexuals with multiple sexual partners should be aware of their risk and should be encouraged to know their HIV status,” says Klevens, who called for larger follow-up studies. About one-third of the HIV-positive population in the United States is undiagnosed, reports the CDC.

People continue to be confused about their level of sexual risk, according to the HIV/AIDS Resource Center of the American Medical Association. Factors that increase the chances of HIV transmission include repeated exposures through unprotected sex; the concentration of HIV in blood, semen or vaginal fluid; the relative vulnerability of mucous membranes involved during sex; the duration of exposure; the strain of virus; the presence of herpetic or syphilitic lesions; and impaired judgment caused by alcohol, cocaine or other drug use.

“Heterosexuals `unaware’ of HIV risk”. Men’s Fitness. FindArticles.com. 08 Feb, 2010. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1608/is_9_17/ai_80309798/
COPYRIGHT 2001 Weider Publications
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning

Autism and Oxytocin

February 8th, 2010

http://articles.smashits.com/articles/politics/142110/autism-and-oxytocin.html
articles.smashits.com
Jessica Deets

Oxytocin is a nine amino acid peptide produced in the brain and released by the pituitary gland. It is produced in the body naturally, by both males and females, and plays a role in reproduction and may even contribute to those feelings we call “love.”

Recent research has linked oxytocin with the ability to trust others. Evidence suggests that it may even play a major role in a person’s ability to take care of others and for avoiding conflict.

It’s been demonstrated in animals that oxytocin acting within the brain plays a major role in establishing maternal behavior, as scientists put oxytocin into the ventricles of the brains of virgin rats and non-pregnant sheep, and it rapidly induced maternal behavior.

A team of Japanese and American researchers did a recent study where they genetically engineered mice to not process oxytocin. The result was that the males became more aggressive and the females often forgot to take care of their babies. Additionally, the males were quicker to attack aggressors and they would fight for a longer period of time than the mice with normal oxytocin production.

Acute stress can inhibit oxytocin release in humans, and that may explain sudden anger if someone is experiencing a lot of stress.

One characteristic of autism is a lack of a sense of empathy towards other people. They can sometimes be aggressive or have trouble relating to others.

While it would be quite a stretch for these results to go from mice to humans, scientists believe that this research may help to develop a treatment for people with autism. It could prove that internal problems with oxytocin may help offer an explanation about the nature of autism. If a direct relationship is found, it may provide us a way to help those with autism. Copyright 2005.

About the author:
Jessica Deets has been researching the internet for over 4 years and finds valuable information to help people. The website at www.bestautismnews.comhas information, news and a current blog regarding autism breakthroughs.

‘Oxytocin’ Can Be The Cure To Your Love Life

February 8th, 2010

http://living.oneindia.in/relationship/love-and-romance/2009/oxytocin-love-hormone-140409.html
living.oneindia.in
By : ANI

According to an online dictionary
, ‘answers.com’, “Oxytocin is a hormone that helps mammals bond. In humans, oxytocin level rise during childbirth, breast feeding and sex. Humans with higher oxytocin levels are more likely to trust other people. People’s healthy relationship can actually be measured if an Oxytocin meters is hunged around his neck.” Now, please don’t get baffled for this article is not intended to give you some of the biological trivias, or anything that has got to do with the metabolic processes in humans. It’s just a proven fact, which I’ll try to put is across to you. And for all those who already know about it, it’ll just help to corroborate the fact.

According to the latest study, researchers found that oxytocin, the so called love-hormone, which is linked to a mother’s tender feelings for her child and long-term devotion between partners, can play a crucial role in picking Mr. or Ms. Right. “When oxytocin courses through our blood, we are more likely to see people we don’t know in a more positive light,” says Angeliki Theodoridou, a psychologist at the University of Bristol, UK, and the study’s lead researcher.

So, the next question that possibly may hit you is, how true it is? Well, the consensus comes after an experimentation on 96 different man and woman. Following the procedure, researchers found that volunteers who received oxytocin rated male and female strangers as both more attractive and trusting. Spicy, isn’t it?

Researchers, however, did not examine how oxytocin could affect social judgements, but Theodoridou speculates that the hormone dampens brain activity in a region involved in processing fearful emotions, called the amygdala; amygdala is a complex structure involved in a wide range of normal behavioral functions and psychiatric conditions, which is located deep within the brain.”Although Theodoridou’s study shows that oxytocin acts similarly on men and women when rating strangers, sex differences could emerge in real-world situations,” says Jennifer Bartz, a psychologist at Mount Sinai Medical School in New York.

Recent studies have also begun to investigate oxytocin’s role in various behaviors, including social recognition, bonding, anxiety, trust, and maternal behaviors. The study builds upon previous knowledge of the important role oxytocin plays in the reproductive life of mammals.

Oxytocin

February 8th, 2010

http://www.articlesbase.com/relationships-articles/oxytocin-131754.html
articlesbase.com
Claudia Croft

My message regarding Oxytocin is primarily directed to women, as we have more ability to naturally produce the Oxytocin hormone (at least that has been my findings, but then again I have been concentrating on the Oxytocin hormone/peptide & and the resulting affect on women in particular).

Both medical journals and history suggest women actually have an Oxytocin ‘button’ if you will, better known as ‘Nipple Stimulation’. Both Medical Journal’s & history, state it is the first line of defense in bringing on child labor, lactation, and sexual arousal primarily as well as other states of well being such as stress relief. In all of these ’states of being’, nipple stimulation is recommended in order to start the body’s natural production of Oxytocin which in turn starts contractions, the production of milk and sexual arousal (in the primary states of well being).

The general populous tends to think of nipple stimulation as a direct correlation to sexual arousal *only*. To suggest to a woman she stimulate her nipples is rather hard in most cases simply because her mind is on the primary task at hand (child labor, lactation & sexual arousal – the later, especially in long-term relationships).

My interest in Oxytocin was initiated quite by accident in that I invented a device that was initially intended as an alternative to Nipple ‘piercing’. Yes, a non piercing form of jewelry. Flooded with comments from customers on how it re-awakened sexual desires, helps women with lactating problems, and relieves stress. My curiosity caused me to delve deep into the mystery of nipple stimulation, why it is recommended, what reactions it causes, and finally the how/why it causes women to produce their own Oxytocin.

Realizing this device (although decorative) has the potential to assist in so many areas of women’s lives I presented it to the FDA. Their response was that this device appeared to be an ‘acupressure’ device, which had no ‘classification’ and ‘nothing to be compared to’. It was agreed we could sell the device as a means of ’sexual arousal’, but not for any of the other afore mentioned states of well being or conditions. It was *strongly* recommended we contact the OBGYN branch of the FDA for further clinical studies of the Oxytocin phenomena (by this device). However, not being a major pharmaceutical company, the paper work and funding is going to be a long process, although we are plodding forward with it. Being considered a ‘back burner’ item as a nobody with nothing to offer is a lose to this arena, but I digress.

Please note, research has indicated that nipple stimulation is also a boon to *some* men’s sexual arousal as well, although the oxytocin factor is not as prevailing. It seems that other hormones (in men) tend to dissolve ~to some degree~ the positive affects of Oxytocin, but does indeed cause it to spike more in a bonding/trust mode, and in all probability even as a stress reliever.