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Degene die het
hart, de grote vaten en de ojas wil beschermen, moet vooral de oorzaken
van mentale storingen vermijden.
~ Characa Samhita
(Sutrasthana hoofdtuk 30, sutra 13)
In Amerika is veel onderzoek gedaan naar de werking van de TM-techniek
op hart- en vaatziekten:. Hieronder in het Engels een samenvatting:
NIH-Funded Scientific Research on Transcendental Meditation
The National Institutes of Health has granted more than $24 million over
the past 20 years to study the effects of the Transcendental Meditation
(TM) program and other related programs on cardiovascular disease. The following
is a summary of findings of the published research as well as a listing
of universities where recent studies have been conducted.
Reduced Blood Pressure (Current Hypertension Reports, December
2007)
This meta-analysis of 17 published studies from the medical literature
(selected from over 100 published studies for their careful experimental
design utilizing randomized controlled trials) reported on the effects
of stress reduction techniques on elevated blood pressure in about 1000
subjects total. The treatments employed included simple biofeedback, relaxation-assisted
biofeedback, progressive muscle relaxation, stress management training,
and the Transcendental Meditation program. The results of statistical analyses
showed that none of the first 4 treatment approaches demonstrated statistically
significant reductions in elevated blood pressure, while the Transcendental
Meditation program showed both significant clinical and statistical reductions
in blood pressure. Full
Article
Improved Quality of Life for Congestive Heart Failure Patients (Ethnicity
and Disease, March 2007)
This study examined the effects of conventional health education and
the practice of the Transcendental Meditation technique on measures of
heart failure severity and quality of life in a randomized controlled trial
of twenty-three older African American men and women with congestive heart
failure (CHF). The results indicate that the use of the TM technique may
be effective in improving the quality of life and functional capacity of
heart failure patients. Full
Article
Reduced Metabolic Syndrome (American Medical Association’s
Archives of Internal Medicine, June 2006)
This 16-week, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial of 103 coronary
heart patients found that the Transcendental Meditation technique improved
blood pressure and insulin resistance components of the metabolic syndrome
as well as cardiac autonomic nervous system tone compared with a control
group receiving health education. These results suggest that the TM technique
may modulate the physiological response to stress and improve coronary heart
disease risk factors. Full Article
Enhanced Longevity (American Journal of Cardiology, May
2005)
This study was a first-of-its-kind, long-term, randomized trial. It evaluated
the death rates of 202 men and women, average age 71, who had mildly elevated
blood pressure. Subjects in the study participated in the Transcendental
Meditation program; behavioral techniques, such as mindfulness or progressive
muscle relaxation; or health education. The study tracked subjects for up
to 18 years. The study found that the TM program reduced death rates by
23%. Full
Article
Reduced Blood Pressure and Use of Hypertensive Medication
(American Journal of Hypertension, January 2005)
This long-term, clinical trial evaluated 150 men and women, average age
49, with stage I hypertension (average blood pressure 142/95 mm Hg). Blood
pressure in the Transcendental Meditation group reduced by nearly 6 mm diastolic
pressure and by 3 mm systolic pressure. In contrast, blood pressure in the
progressive muscle relaxation group and conventional health education classes
reduced by 3 mm diastolic pressure, with no change in systolic pressure.
Use of hypertensive medication was also found to significantly decrease in
the TM group in comparison with controls. Full
Article
Reduced Blood Pressure in At-risk Teens (American Journal of Hypertension,
April, 2004) This $1.5 million, four-year, randomized, controlled study
found that adolescents at risk for heart disease experienced decreased blood
pressure as a result of the daily practice of Transcendental Meditation.
Reduced Atherosclerosis (American Journal of Cardiology,
April 2002)
This study found that subjects with multiple risk factors for cardiovascular
disease substantially reduced atherosclerosis through a multi-modality
treatment program derived from a system of traditional medicine that included
the daily practice of the Transcendental Meditation technique. In the study,
57 adults were randomly assigned into three treatment groups. After one
year, the ceratoid intima-media thickness decreased significantly more in
the subjects who were randomly assigned to the TM group.
Regression of Atherosclerosis (Stroke, March 2000)
A well-designed, randomized, controlled clinical trial found that the
daily practice of the Transcendental Meditation technique was associated
with or reduced narrowing of the arteries in the heart and brain in high-risk
hypertensive adults, thereby decreasing the risk of heart attack and stroke.
After six to nine months, carotid artery wall thickness decreased in the
TM group compared to matched control subjects. This regression was similar
to that achieved by some lipid-lowering drugs and extensive lifestyle changes.
Full
Article
Relaxation of Blood Vessels (Psychosomatic Medicine, July 1999 and January
1999)
A study of middle-aged adults reported that the Transcendental Meditation
technique reduced blood pressure by reducing constriction of the blood
vessels (vasoconstriction), thereby decreasing the risk of heart disease.
A separately published study on adolescents with high normal blood pressure
found that randomly assigned subjects who practiced the TM technique exhibited
greater decreases in resting blood pressure, vascular resistance, and stress
reactivity from pre-to post-treatment, compared to controls.
Reduced Blood Pressure: Comparisons with Other Procedures
(Hypertension, November 1995 and August 1996)
Clinical studies of older African Americans found that the TM program
was 1) as effective as antihypertensive drugs in reducing blood pressure,
2) twice as effective as progressive muscle relaxation in lowering hypertension,
and, 3) significantly effective in reducing blood pressure for both men
and women in all five major risk categories, including obesity, high alcohol
use, low exercise levels, psychological stress and high salt intake.
Bron: http://www.tm.org/national-institutes-of-health
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