Fusion Health Radio: the Health, Lifestyle, and Mindset Podcast

Michael Smith

Welcome to Fusion Health Radio. Your source of what you need to know and what needs to change on your journey to abundant health.

  1. Apr 15

    Hello, I am your Fascia - The Largest Sensory Organ You may have Never Heard Of

    https://shaolin-yijinjing.com/ The Largest Sensory Organ You may have Never Heard Of If I were to ask you to name the body's largest sensory organ, you would probably say the skin. It turns out that your fascia system holds that title now, given the recent revelation that the Fascial System is an internal organ with many circulatory, regenerative, and sensory functions. Over 80% of your body is made up of this beautiful and potent landscape. Before diving into this in-depth conversation, and a few practical follow up articles, I just want to pause. What are the implications in your life, and for your health knowing that? What comes to mind with respect to how you move, train, rest, age, and experience pain? Fascia has ten times more proprioceptive receptors than muscle tissue. The term 'proprioception' refers to your body's ability to sense its own position, movement, and special interactions. Your highly innervated fascia is a tissue most of us have never consciously thought about, it is more densely wired for sensation than the muscles you have trained and thought you were relying on for balance and precision. This is now established, peer-reviewed hard science. In China, at least 2500 years ago, this understanding was the basis for Acupuncture and the earliest approach to Qi Gong called Dao Yin. In the West, up until recently, and for at least five hundred years, anatomists dissecting the human body treated fascia as a simple membrane. They peeled it away to get to the ‘real’ anatomy made of muscles, nerves, organs, and bones underneath. What they discarded was, in fact, a system of extraordinary functional intelligence. What Fascia Actually Is Roughly 70 -90% of fascia is pure collagen, with the remaining tissues being made up of elastin and cells like fibroblasts. Collagen is non-living tissue in the conventional metabolic sense, because it is non-calorie dependent, and it is almost entirely protein. At its most basic, fascia is the extracellular matrix, the structural gel-like fabric that exists outside of your cells. Approximately 80% of all tendons, ligaments, and fascia are composed of the same type of collagen. This matters because it shows how much or your body is a living protein network. When speaking of fascia, we are also speaking of tendons and ligaments. They are the same material deployed in different structural configurations. There are many types of collagen in your body. The most abundant, called Type I, forms the densely packed fibres of tendons, ligaments, and deep fascial layers. Type III collagen is more elastic and pliable, and is found in your organs and skin. The ratio of collagen types within every one of your body’s tissue determines its mechanical properties, like stiffness, elasticity, and load tolerance. Your fascia organizes the almost infinite layers and lines of your muscles. There is the Endomysium, which wraps each individual muscle cell. The Perimysium wraps groups of cells into bundles called fascicles. And the Epimysium, which sheathes the entire muscle belly. These are all fascial layers. Without this scaffolding, muscle tissue would have no structural coherence. A popular image suggests that without fascia, your muscles would look like pulled pork. Beyond muscle, your fascia also wraps around your veins, arteries, and nerves. It encases your organs. It occupies the space between every muscle group, and between every distinct layer of tissue in your body. It is, quite literally, everywhere. A near infinite and continuous, body-wide web of structural and communicative tissues and gels. The fluid medium in which collagen fibres are suspended is called the Ground Substance, which is the 60% of you that is water – sort of. Ground Substance is a gel-like matrix of water, and highly charged and elastic proteins like, glycosaminoglycans, and proteoglycans. This is what gives the fascial system its dynamic, springy quality. Ground substance plays a critical role in hydration, nutrient transport, and the transmission of mechanical forces across the matrix. Researchers including Gerald Pollack (from the University of Washington) have proposed that structured water within the ground substance behaves as a fourth phase of water — more ordered than liquid water — with significant implications for cellular communication and bioenergetics. The Architects of Your Connective Tissue Your fascia likes to flow – everywhere and always. Your tissue matrix and embodiment are continuously being built, rebuilt, and reorganised by specialised cells called fibroblasts. These cells exist in the billions throughout your body right now. They are in constant motion, migrating through the fascial matrix and depositing new collagen fibres based on one primary input: the mechanical stresses placed on your body. This process is governed by a principle known as mechanical transduction, which is the conversion of physical force into a cellular biological response. If you push, pull, or twist a tissue appropriately and repeatedly, and the body will reinforce that tissue - and that physical capacity. You could even say that fibroblasts are one manifestation of Jing/Essence in Traditional Chinese Medicine. The converse is equally true, and honestly more immediately relevant. Any habitual postures and repetitive movement patterns build collagen in patterns that can work against you. Sit at a desk for years with rounded shoulders and a flexed lumbar spine, and fibroblasts are busy laying down collagen that locks those positions in. This is not simply tight muscles; it is a physically woven collagen matrix. This cross-linked and disorganised scar tissue made of collagen are associated with conditions including chronic low back pain, frozen shoulder (adhesive capsulitis), plantar fasciitis, and myofascial pain syndrome. Research has demonstrated that dysfunctional fascia contains a higher density of myofibroblasts, the more contractile fibroblast variants, which can generate and maintain chronic tissue tension independent of the nervous system. This is mechanical transduction in its most potent and problematic form. Your body reads the pattern of stress, and quietly, over years, building the structural hardware to execute it more efficiently. Your tissue becomes stronger and more efficient, or it becomes Velcro (or stiff), or it becomes tight through contraction. Free Energy - How Fascia Powers Movement One of the most functionally significant properties of the fascial system is its capacity for elastic energy storage and release. This is sometimes called 'free energy', in the sense that it is energy returned from elastic recoil rather than generated by active muscular contraction. This mechanism fundamentally changes the energetics of movement, and the evidence for it is remarkable. Researchers studying kangaroos placed them on treadmills with force plates and VO2 measurement masks, then had them hop at two different speeds: three metres per second and six metres per second. The finding was extraordinary: the kangaroos burned the same amount of energy hopping twice as fast. For a human runner, doubling speed would roughly double, or more than double, metabolic cost. For the kangaroo, the energy equation barely shifted. This elastic storage mechanism is well documented in human movement as well. The Achilles tendon, in a running human, stores and returns approximately 35% of the mechanical energy of each stride. The plantar fascia contributes an additional 17%. Together, these fascial structures are responsible for roughly half of the energy economy of human running. This finding reframes what 'fitness' actually means at a tissue level. Collagen, Elastin, and Tissue-Specific Architecture Not all connective tissue is built the same way. The fascial system deploys different collagen architectures depending on the functional demands of the region. Structures requiring high tensile strength with minimal stretch, your Achilles tendon being the prime example, are composed predominantly of densely packed, parallel-aligned Type I collagen fibres. The architecture is stiff by design: its job is to transmit force faithfully, and not to deform. Structures that must accommodate significant dimensional change, like the fascial sheath of the abdominal wall, the peritoneum, the walls of visceral organs all contain proportionally higher concentrations of elastin, a protein that can stretch to roughly 150% of its resting length, and return to baseline without structural damage. Elastin fibres are roughly 1,000 times more ‘elastic’ than collagen fibres, and while collagen provides tensile strength, elastin provides the elastic recoil that returns a stretched structure to its resting shape. The degree to which these structures can expand without permanent deformation depends on their elastin content and hydration state, both of which are trainable and nutritionally modifiable.     Fascia as Pain Conductor One of the most clinically significant ‘revolutions’ about modern fascia science is our understanding of pain. For decades, musculoskeletal pain has been primarily understood as either neural (nerve impingement, sensitization), or muscular (strain, spasm, trigger points). Fascia complicates both models, and sits at the centre of many pain presentations that neither the nerve or muscle model adequately explains. Fascia is densely innervated with hundreds of millions of free nerve endings. It is one of the most sense aware and therefore potent pain-generating tissues in the body. The delamination of collagen layers, which happens in spinal disc degeneration, exposes pain-sensitive structures and initiates inflammatory cascades. The collagenous outer ring of the intervertebral disc is a fascial structure; its integrity depends on the quality, organisation, and hydration of its collagen matrix. This is why the 80% lifetime prevalence of low back pain in the general population is

    16 min
  2. Apr 8

    Is your Qi stuck, or is it waiting for something?

    https://shaolin-yijinjing.com/   After 30 years of practicing Acupuncture, I would like to share some insights about ‘stuck Qi.’ Qi Stagnation can cause poor circulation or is due to poor circulation. The Circulatory function of Qi is the most important for your health, because it is the easiest to assess. The more Qi stagnation develops, the more pain, fatigue, and depression can occur. For both patients and clinicians, the urgency is to find out why. For example, Liver Qi Stagnation affects the movement of your blood, bile, enzymatic transformation (a function of Qi), and every nutrient getting where it needs to go. If your Liver Qi is stuck, your emotional adaptability can also become disoriented. This directs everyone’s focus to the Liver (of TCM) but may distract us from a whole-body stagnation that is waiting for something essential to change. Qi needs to move, but Qi cannot move alone. There is another aspect of Qi that brings up images of someone glowing in the dark, or radiating some kind of energy, or spiritual light. Which all animals do, in a way. The question, for both Qi skeptics and Qi enthusiasts, can a person’s Qi become more radiant? Today, I would like to prove that both are true. Qi needs to function as circulation and as a warming and activating ‘glow’. It turns out, this kind of measurable radiance can be cultivated in the most common-sense way imaginable. But your Qi is waiting for something…

    22 min
  3. 05/19/2020

    A Holistic Approach to Addiction and Sobriety - Dr. Dana Leigh Lyons

    Which of your angels is teaching you the most? Have you ever heard the expression, ‘Follow the guidance of your better angels.’ I love that affirmation of clarity and self-trust. I am also reminded of those childhood cartoons with a character who has an angel and a devil on each shoulder trying to convince them to do something ‘good or bad.' What does any of that have to do with your day? Well, after almost 2 months of self-isolation, quarantine, or whatever this has been like for you, you are probably getting familiar with the proverbial angel and devil on your shoulders. If you look at ‘pandemic’  life through the lens of Social media, most people are living in their pyjamas, eating more than usual, binge-watching tv shows and trying to stay busy or distracted – or both. Some of us are craving attention and contact while others are hiding in the laundry room for a moment of personal space. I hope you are finding your balance in all of that. I hope you are learning to appreciate your angels and demons.     Given the challenges that most people are facing, we decided to do a podcast on sobriety. I would like to introduce you to Dr, Dana Leigh Lyons. One of the smartest and most authentic people I know. In this unexpected episode of FHR, Anthony Sanna and I get to chat with Dana about her experience with addiction and how she has become a respected sobriety expert. If you are looking for some inspiration and guidance, or just some honest human truth about living through challenging experiences, please check out this insightful conversation. Dana offers some great online support. This link takes you to her sobriety kit and recovery journal.  Enjoy!

    1h 8m

Ratings & Reviews

4.7
out of 5
7 Ratings

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Welcome to Fusion Health Radio. Your source of what you need to know and what needs to change on your journey to abundant health.