How does your body function well?

A lot of people determine their health and wellness by how they feel. If they aren’t in any pain, they smile and go about their day. If there’s pain anywhere in the body, they know to schedule a chiropractic appointment because something is wrong. While that thought process seems straightforward, it’s not about how your body feels at that given moment — it’s about how it functions.

Believe it or not, pain is the last thing to come and is a direct result of body dysfunction. Maintaining function (how freely and effortlessly our body moves) is critically important and helps us avoid pain in the first place.

Are you experiencing any of these painful signs of body dysfunction?

  • Muscle and joint pain
  • Headaches
  • Neck and shoulder pain
  • Lower back pain
  • Plantar fasciitis
  • And so much more

Request your next chiropractic appointment with Dr. Twila

How well do you move?

When your body functions correctly, everything feels like it is working in unison — your bones, muscles, joints, brain, and even your nerves. When that’s not happening, there’s a weakness somewhere. You may not be in pain, but your body’s ability to do things you like to do will be limited. For example, try sitting down with your legs out in front of you. Now reach to touch your toes. If you cannot touch your toes, that’s dysfunction. Something is keeping your body from doing what you need it to do. While that may not be causing pain right now, it could lead to lower back pain and other issues that will require treatment.

What chiropractors look for during assessments is if anything is out of alignment and seeing if the body is functioning properly.

We want to see how you bend, flex, extend, and rotate. We also look for critical warning signs such as nerve interference, muscle hindrance, abnormalities in structure, and other imbalances that could either be causing you pain now or eventually. The goal of each chiropractic adjustment is to re-establish order and function in the body, so everything is properly aligned.

Function and strength go hand-in-hand

When we adjust you, we are bringing motion to your joints and body. That newfound function won’t stay that way if you have weak muscles, though. It is imperative that we work with you on a variety of exercises to improve your range of motion, strengthen your muscles, and remove any nerve interference. We do that in a variety of ways, including:

  • Chiropractic adjustments
  • 1-on-1 personal training with our medical exercise professionals
  • Massage
  • Various techniques to release scar tissue and relax really hard muscles
  • Yoga

Call Brain-Body Connection Chiropractic today

We hope you enjoyed today’s blog post on why maintaining function is important to our bodies. Remember, the goal at Brain-Body Connection Chiropractic is to continue offering all your chiropractic and wellness needs under one roof. This allows us to treat everything from a backache to poor posture, range of motion issues, post-injury management, a herniated disc, scoliosis, and more. And routine maintenance is important so that you keep feeling wonderful and functioning correctly.

Sometimes, all you need is a quick adjustment from a chiropractor, but Dr. Twila Henderson and her growing team will always do a complete evaluation to see if more techniques are needed to help your brain and body function properly.

You know you need water to survive, and you feel better when you drink it regularly. But what’s really at play in the body when you sip H2O?

In short, a lot.

Believe it or not, your body weight is about 60 percent water, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Your body uses water in all its cells, organs, and tissues to help regulate temperature and maintain other bodily functions. Because your body loses water through breathing, sweating, and digestion, it's important to rehydrate by drinking fluids and eating foods that contain water.

RELATED: 6 Unusual Signs of Dehydration You Should Know About

The amount of water you need depends on a variety of factors, according to the Mayo Clinic: The climate you live in, how physically active you are, and whether you're experiencing an illness or have any other health problems all affect recommended intake.

Here are the reasons why water is such a powerful element when it comes to your health.

6 Unusual Signs of Dehydration You Should Know About

How does your body function well?

1. Water Protects Your Tissues, Spinal Cord, and Joints

Water does more than just quench your thirst and regulate your body's temperature; it keeps the tissues in your body moist, according to the Mayo Clinic Health System. You know how it feels when your eyes, nose, or mouth gets dry? Keeping your body hydrated helps it retain optimum levels of moisture in these sensitive areas, as well as in the blood, bones, and brain. In addition, water helps protect the spinal cord, and it acts as a lubricant and cushion for your joints.

2. Water Helps Your Body Remove Waste

Adequate water intake enables your body to excrete waste through perspiration, urination, and defecation. Water helps your kidneys remove waste from your blood and keep the blood vessels that run to your kidneys open and filter them out, according to the National Kidney Foundation. Water is also important for helping prevent constipation, points out the University of Rochester Medical Center. However, as research notes, there is no evidence to prove that increasing your fluid intake will cure constipation.

RELATED: Are You Drinking Enough Water? These Are the Health Risks of Dehydration

3. Water Aids in Digestion

Water is important for healthy digestion. As the Mayo Clinic explains, water helps break down the food you eat, allowing its nutrients to be absorbed by your body. After you drink, both your small and large intestines absorb water, which moves into your bloodstream and is also used to break down nutrients. As your large intestine absorbs water, stool changes from liquid to solid, according to the National Institute for Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. Water is also necessary to help you digest soluble fiber, per MedlinePlus. With the help of water, this fiber turns to gel and slows digestion.

4. Water Prevents You From Becoming Dehydrated

Your body loses fluids when you engage in vigorous exercise, sweat in high heat, or come down with a fever or contract an illness that causes vomiting or diarrhea, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. If you're losing fluids for any of these reasons, it's important to increase your fluid intake so that you can restore your body's natural hydration level. Your doctor may also recommend that you drink more fluids to help treat other health conditions, like bladder infections and urinary tract stones. If you're pregnant or nursing, you may want to consult with your physician about your fluid intake because your body will be using more fluids than usual, especially if you're breastfeeding.

RELATED: Water Fasting 101: What You Need to Know

5. Water Helps Your Brain Function Optimally

Ever feel foggy headed? Take a sip of water. Research shows that dehydration is a drag to memory, attention, and energy, per a small study on adult men from China published in June 2019 in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. It’s no wonder, considering H2O makes up 75 percent of the brain, the authors point out. One reason for that foggy-headed feeling? “Adequate electrolyte balance is vital to keeping your body functioning optimally. Low electrolytes can cause issues including muscle weakness, fatigue, and confusion,” says Gabrielle Lyon, DO, a functional medicine physician in New York City.

6. Water Keeps Your Cardiovascular System Healthy

Water is a huge part of your blood. (For instance, plasma — the pale yellow liquid portion of your blood — is about 90 percent water, notes Britannica.) If you become dehydrated, your blood becomes more concentrated, which can lead to an imbalance of the electrolyte minerals it contains (sodium and potassium, for example), says Susan Blum, MD, founder of the Blum Center for Health in Rye Brook, New York. These electrolytes are necessary for proper muscle and heart function. “Dehydration can also lead to lower blood volume, and thus blood pressure, so you may feel light-headed or woozy standing up,” she says.

RELATED: Is It Dehydration or Something Else?

7. Water Can Help You Eat Healthier

It may be plain, but it’s powerful. In a study of more than 18,300 American adults, people who drank just 1 percent more water a day ate fewer calories and less saturated fat, sugar, sodium, and cholesterol, according to a study published in February 2016 in the Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics. Water may help fill you up, especially if you drink it before eating a meal, a notion that was backed up in a small study of 15 young, healthy participants that was published in October 2018 in Clinical Nutrition Research.

How Much Water Do You Need?

As the Mayo Clinic notes, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine recommends that men consume 3.7 liters (15.5 cups) and women get 2.7 liters (11.5 cups) of fluids per day, which can come from water, beverages in general, and food (such as fruits and vegetables). You can also try the Urine Color Test, courtesy of the U.S. Army Public Health Command, to evaluate how you’re doing on drinking up. After going to the bathroom, look at the color of your urine. If it is very pale yellow to light yellow, you’re well hydrated. Darker yellow is a sign of dehydration. Brown or cola-colored urine is a medical emergency, and you should seek medical attention.

Additional reporting by Jen Laskey.

How does your body function well?

How does your body function well?

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How does the body maintain its function?

All of the organs and organ systems of the human body work together like a well -oiled machine. This is because they are closely regulated by the nervous and endocrine systems. The nervous system controls virtually all body activities, and the endocrine system secretes hormones that regulate these activities.

What is the body's most important function?

The body's functions are ultimately its cells' functions. Survival is the body's most important business. Survival depends on the body's maintaining or restoring homeostasis, a state of relative constancy, of its internal environment.

Why is it important to know body functions?

Part of taking care of our health is understanding the different parts and systems of the body. That way, we will know how to best take care of them. Your body has a bunch of different systems, and they all work together to keep your body running.