Struggling to get a restful night? If you live with TMJ (temporomandibular joint) disorder, your jaw discomfort might be quietly undermining your sleep. TMJ doesn’t just affect your jaw - it can trigger a cycle where pain and disrupted sleep reinforce each other, leaving you exhausted and stressed.1
TMJ can cause tension and soreness in your jaw, face, and head. This discomfort keeps your nervous system alert, making it difficult for your body to fully unwind at night…
If you’re putting in the effort at the gym, on the field, or even just staying active day to day, sleep isn’t just “downtime” - it’s where the real recovery happens. While training challenges your muscles, it’s sleep that helps rebuild them stronger, making it a critical (and often overlooked) part of both muscle recovery and overall athletic performance.
Why Sleep Matters for Muscle Recovery…
When summer nights turn sticky and restless, it’s not just the temperature outside that keeps you awake — it’s how your body, bedding, and environment respond to the heat. The truth is, temperature plays a major role in how well we sleep, and when things get too warm, your body struggles to drift into the deep, restorative rest it needs.
Activity trackers have become a staple on millions of wrists, quietly collecting data on everything from heart rate to daily steps. One of their most intriguing functions is sleep tracking — the promise of understanding how well (or poorly) you rest each night. But just how reliable are wearables like the Apple Watch, Fitbit, or Oura Ring when it comes to sleep?
New research from the Journal of the American College of Cardiology has shown that having a fatty heart, regardless of your weight, increases your risk of heart failure by 50-100%! Pericardial fat, which is the fat that surrounds your heart, can increase your risk of heart failure regardless of other risk factors like body weight, smoking, and high cholesterol. The study also found that women who met the criteria for high pericardial fat volume had double the risk of heart failure, where men who met the criteria has a 53% increased risk.
Many chronic conditions are linked to each other, which means having one increases your risk for developing another. About 85% of people ages 60 or older have at least one chronic disease, and 60% have at least two.
We all know it’s important to eat a healthy balanced diet – but did you know that the time of day you eat can matter just as much? Several recent studies have shown that eating after 8:00 p.m. is the worst time to eat – here’s why.
Good news for tea lovers! Research has shown that certain types of tea may be able to help you fall asleep and stay asleep at night.
Our brain health has a significant impact on the quality of our lives. Did you know that one in seven adults are diagnosed with dementia?