The Best Physical Therapists in NYC
Quick Links
Manual Therapy Bursitis Plantar Fascitis Meniscus Tears Labral Tears Kinesiology Taping Pilates Rehab
Visit Our Main Website:
www.ActiveCarePhysicalTherapy.com
Blog Posts Are Below:
NYC Physical Therapist Karena Wu discusses her role at the NYC Walk to Cure Arthritis, held on May 14th, 2016. She has been working on the committee for the NYC walk for the last 5 years. May is national arthritis awareness month and the NYC walk was the #1 walk in the country for the last two years. Arthritis is one of the most common conditions treated by physical therapists at ActiveCare Physical Therapy. The staff at ActiveCare PT participate in the walk to help bring awareness of this condition to their patients as well as the public. To read more, click here.
Team ActiveCare Physical Therapy raised almost $9,000 this year for the Walk to Cure Arthritis. We had 20 team members walk on Saturday, May 14th, 2016. ActiveCare hosted a booth and gave out information and samples for the participants. The NYC Walk to Cure Arthritis was the largest Arthritis Foundation walk in the nation.
You can continue to donate under our team name: www.walktocurearthritis.org/nyc/activecarephysicaltherapy. Please help us reach our $10,000 goal. We are only $1,000 shy! Thank you for everyone’s support and time.
About 52 million people in the U.S. suffer from arthritis. On Saturday, thousands of people will gather in New York City to raise money for this important cause.
Physical Therapist Karena Wu, who is on the committee for the Walk to Cure Arthritis, appeared on PIX11 to speak about the disease.
Click below to watch the clip:
Walk to Cure Arthritis is the Arthritis Foundation’s annual community fundraising 5K walk event. The funds raised from the 5K support the nonprofit mission and research aimed at finding a cure for arthritis, America’s leading cause of disability. Whether you have a family member or loved one who suffers from arthritis, or are simply looking for a walking or running event for charity, the Walk to Cure Arthritis is a great way to get moving in support of a worthwhile cause!
ActiveCare Physical Therapy has formed a team for the Walk to Cure Arthritis to help the more than 50 million Americans and 300,000 children with arthritis live better today and to keep the Arthritis Foundation’s promise of finding a cure for tomorrow.
If you are interested in joining our team or in donating, please visit our team page.
By Chef Cindi Avila, originally published at Today.com.
Do you slather your food in Sriracha sauce or top everything with Tabasco? If so, a new study from the British Medical Journal says you could actually live longer than those who aren’t putting much “spice” in their life.
A half-million people in China took part in the study and in the end, researchers found those who ate spicy foods as little as twice a week reduced their risk of death by 10 percent.
Up the spicy intake to six times a week and that number increases to 14 percent. Sounds good, right? We thought this might be too good to be true. While we don’t want to rain on your pepper parade, we do want to set the story straight. So here’s the good and bad news.
Weight Control
New York City gastroenterologist Dr. Prem Chattoo says one of the biggest benefits of eating spicy food (especially jalapenos, habaneros and cayenne) comes from capsaicin.
This “natural chemical speeds up the metabolism by increasing heart rate and body temperature,” according to Dr. Chattoo. Nutritional health counselor Cindy Kasindorf, co-founder of Joni Juice, points out, “the best time to eat spicy food is with a heavier meal during lunch or dinner. It will stimulate the digestive tract.”
Fountain of Youth
The study found eating spicy food could help you live longer. But what about looking younger?
Dr. Chattoo says spicy food can “slow down the aging process by increasing blood flow to the face and body. This makes skin look and feel more youthful.” Kasindorf adds, “I believe any foods that help with the inside of your body will make you look better on the outside.”
Healing
Kasindorf started Joni Juice as a way to help her clients and colicky kids manage certain health issues. She makes it a point of adding some spicy elements to several of the company’s juices. One reason? “Spicy foods are an excellent way to relieve sinus congestion and open up the breathing airway.”
According to Dr. Chattoo, spicy food “not only helps people with sinus conditions potentially decrease their symptoms, but it also helps increase blood flow and overall circulation which improves healing properties.”
Vegan food expert Pamela Elizabeth, the restaurateur behind Blossom and Blossom Du Jour restaurants, crafts much of her menus based on health properties.
Vegan food in particular is known for its spices and Elizabeth says there’s a good reason for that.
“For centuries, chili peppers have been noted as being medicinal. Since they are chock full of vitamins like A and C, they can help boost the immune system and even fight the common cold.”
Heart Helper
Dr. Chattoo says “spicy food acts as an antioxidant and blood thinner, which aids in heart disease by improving cardiac blood vessel strength.” Talk about heart healthy!
Anti-inflammatory
Physical therapist Karena Wu from ActiveCare Physical Therapy says her favorite side effect from spicy food is its anti-inflammatory properties. Wu not only treats patients for arthritis, but is a rheumatoid arthritis sufferer as well.
She is glad spicy food can “help with pain and healing by increasing blood flow to an affected area.” Mark Bailey, who is a private chef in New York City knows this first hand.
“My grandmother loved making Escovitch fish because the scotch bonnet peppers she believed helped relieve the pain of her arthritis. Capsaicin is the active ingredient in scotch bonnet peppers and it’s known to fight inflammation. So I definitely keep this in mind when cooking for my own parents now.”
This can be also be good for people with auto immune diseases, Parkinson’s and even asthma sufferers. Dr. Chattoo suggests “finding spicy foods with the highest concentration of capsaicin is key. For example, raw chopped peppers would be very high in capsaicin and potentially the most beneficial.”
Anti-bacterial
Who knew spicy food can actually kill stomach bacteria? Dr. Chattoo says this is a big benefit as the peppers help prevent further infections throughout the body.
Temperature Regulation
Elizabeth says one of the most interesting things about spicy food is that “it can heat up your body when it’s cold out and, surprisingly, can cool your body off when you are hot. Eating spicy food makes you sweat and sweating actually helps your body temperature regulate itself. So while it may seem strange, definitely put more heat on your food when the heat is on.”
Irritant
Dr. Chattoo says while capsaicin has benefits, it also has some downsides. “Capsaicin can be a very potent irritant. It can cause damage to the lining in the stomach, which in turn can cause gastritis, stomach ulcers and even intestinal disease such as colitis.” Ouch!
A Bad Burn
You may like the burning sensation spicy food has on your tongue, but the flipside to that is “spicy food can also cause heartburn and/or reflux disease. The reason being: its acidic and irritant properties can cause a rather unwanted effect once it hits your insides.”
If you experience any of these conditions after eating spicy food, Dr. Chattoo says you should consider “adding a side of cream or yogurt to your dish. This may help protect the digestive system by neutralizing the burning potential and temper the irritant properties that can cause harm.”
Kasindorf also says that when paired with a cooked or raw vegetable, you’ll lessen the burn.
Dr. Sean Lager from Gotham City Orthopedics takes a different approach saying, “If spicy food causes indigestion or GERD (gastro-esophageal reflux) then it is best to avoid such foods. If one insists on eating foods with lots of heat then they need to take a Zantac or Prilosec before hand.”
Taste”less”
While you may think spicy food is enhancing the taste of your food, Dr. Chattoo has to be a bit of a Debbie Downer here because he says the fact is “spicy foods can also cause damage to the taste buds hampering your sense of taste.”
This might be the reason why over time you feel like you can turn up the heat even more on your favorite foods — or explain why you can eat the Buffalo wings with the “too hot to handle” sauce.
The Unspeakable
You probably won’t want to tell your friends if you suffer from this spicy side effect, especially not while eating!
Dr. Chattoo says spicy food can “worsen hemorrhoids by causing further damage and irritation.” He says it can also make IBS (irritable bowel syndrome) worse, and even potentially cause diarrhea. Not fun.
Eye-yi-yi
If you’ve ever chopped peppers at home you may know about this unwanted side effect. You are chopping and seeding when all of the sudden you rub your eye.
Kasindorf points out that “you should be careful not to touch your eyes if handling anything spicy and you may not realize it, but even after hand washing it may still be on your skin. To be safe you may want to wear gloves and take them off and discard them immediately after preparing the pepper.”
This past weekend, the ActiveCare Physical Therapy team took part in the annual Arthritis Foundation Walk to Cure Arthritis. The event started at Foley Square Park in NYC, and participants walked over the Brooklyn Bridge and back. The 5K walk raised over $500,000 and counting!
Check out our pictures below, and click here to make a donation.
This past weekend, Karena Wu and Team ActiveCare Physical Therapy collaborated with the Arthritis Foundation for the 2014 Walk to Cure Arthritis. The event was held at Foley Square Park in New York, and participants walked over the Brooklyn Bridge and back.
This year, Karena was the Corporate Chair Honoree, and was able to generate support from great companies such as SpiderTech Kinesiology Tape, Body Armor Sports Drink, Kind Bars, and Biofreeze.
Celebrity Chef Seamus Mullen, who was honored as the Celebrity Honoree, along with Tertulia, catered breakfast in the VIP tent. A beautifully sunny day made the program and the walk over the East River such a spectacular event. Our team of 50 were so excited to surpass our goal of $10,000!
You can still make your donation and help The Arthritis Foundation reach $400,000! Click here to make your contribution.
Thank you everyone for your generous support and participation!
Photos: William Reynolds
May is Arthritis Month, and here at ActiveCare Physical Therapy, we are gearing up for the Walk to Cure Arthritis, coming up this Saturday, May 17th.
Owner and Physical Therapist Karena Wu stopped by “The Couch” on CBS New York to talk about the effects of arthritis pain and the importance of Saturday’s walk. Watch the clip below:
You can help more than 50 million Americans who suffer from Arthritis by supporting the cause. Our goal is to raise over $10,00 this year! To make your donation and to learn more, visit our team page.
We appreciate your support!
I have been a Physical Therapist for 14 years. Seamus and I were introduced by Wylie Dufresne, who is known for being proactive about taking care of his health and who was recently diagnosed with osteoarthritis himself. Seamus and I started working together in 2010 when he was trying to control the disease. Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) is an autoimmune disease. It is a systemic arthritis where your immune system, which normally protects you against disease, mistakenly attacks your joints. RA affects 1.5 million people in the United States, if found in more women than men and commonly affects people between the ages of 30 and 60.
Chef Mullen has gone down a long and arduous path in resolving this. I am happy to share the fact that since he has altered his diet, resumed a regular workout schedule and has supplemented his health, his tests have been negative for the rheumatoid factor (RF). The RF factor is the autoantibody that is found in individuals diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis. The higher the level of RF factor found in your system, the increased chance of articular (or joint) destructive disease.
I sat down with Seamus at his delicious restaurant Tertulia to find out more about this special Chef and his work in raising awareness for a cause dear to his heart.
I was diagnosed with RA in 2007 and I soon learned that Arthritis is something that affects people of all ages! I had been so naive when it came to understanding what it meant to live with arthritis that I was pretty sure others out there didn’t know either and I wanted to do whatever I could to raise awareness and hopefully be an inspiration to others living with the disease.
I’ve done the walk, I’ve spoken on behalf of the foundation and participated in the Faces of Arthritis campaign and lots of press over the years.
This is a terrific honor for me, I’ve been living with RA for several years and I have gotten to a place in my life where RA doesn’t hold me back or limit me and I hope that my experience can be an inspiration to others living with arthritis understand that just because they live with arthritis it doesn’t have to derail their dreams.
Being the celebrity honoree makes the walk all that much more important!!
I went through a period of real emotional and physical distress and for quite a while it felt all-encompassing, but I’ve managed to get to a place through diet, exercise and lifestyle where I feel GREAT. This is a serious change from when I was first diagnosed.
The importance of raising awareness about arthritis as a disease that affects people of all ages. And for those of us living with Arthritis, to recognize the importance of working together, supporting one and other and ultimately not to let the disease get the upper hand! If you’re living with arthritis, there is NO need to suffer.
It’s always great to meet other folks in the arthritis community and broaden the outreach.
It’s great to know that there is an organization out there advocating and fundraising for the disease. I try to be as open as I can about talking about the disease and always refer folks living with arthritis to take advantage of the resources available to them through the AF.
My team is incredibly supportive, I think last year we had one of the largest teams at the walk!!
I think most chefs feel a real responsibility to their individual communities…we all like to think of our restaurants as a part of our community and working directly with charitable organizations is a big part of our roles as members of our community.
Arthritis is something that effects nearly all of us…even if you may not personally live with arthritis, chances are you have a friend or family member who does and working with the AF is a great way to help those loved ones.
I think it’s pretty ingrained in the fabric of what we do. Most chefs I know are very concerned with social responsibility and contributing to their community.
Arthritis affects everyone!
Well, those little ‘tastes’ of working in a fantastic restaurant and the celebrity status chefs get is definitely enticing. But it comes as a cost. And that cost is the long hours standing, bending forward, the intense heat and the criticism when you mess up at your station. Once you’ve gone through the school and become a chef, this is the life. You do it every day. It is normal for you and it is part of the job. You do it with a normal working body. Imagine how this might feel with a disease called Rheumatoid Arthritis?
Chef Seamus Mullen of NYC’s Tertulia and El Colmado is known as the chef with RA. Seamus became a patient of mine a few years ago. His course started in his left hip with excruciating pain and a visit to the emergency room. Multiple tests and doctor visits later, it was confirmed that he had RA. Our visits together focused on reducing his inflammation, restoring his joint immobility, reducing soft tissue restrictions while trying to maintain strength and flexibility without further irritating his already irritated joints. His biggest contributing factor: working in a hot kitchen, under stressful conditions that added more joint compression, load and irritation. Not the ideal working condition for someone with RA.
Symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis include joint stiffness, swelling and pain. The joints become inflamed during periods of exacerbation. The area gets ‘hot’, with increased skin temperature, significant swelling, and redness. The joint is ‘angry’. Typically, symmetrical distribution of joint irritation is present, meaning the same joint on both sides of the body. Also, hands are very commonly affected which means stirring, chopping, plating, all the work needed to create those magical dishes become difficult.
Other symptoms involve feelings similar to the flu: malaise, fatigue, and muscle aches. For moderate to severe RA, nodules can appear under the skin as well as the involvement of major organs like the lungs, heart and eyes.
Treatment for rheumatoid arthritis focuses on reducing inflammation and slowing or stopping the progression of the disease. Treatment includes medications, occupational or physical therapy, and regular exercise. Medications help reduce inflammation and typically work best in combination. They can include non-steroidal anti-inflammatories, steroids, biologic agents and pain killers. Physical and occupational therapy utilize manual therapies, exercises and modalities that reduce pain and inflammation and restore function. Other exercises focus on isolated joint strengthening, endurance and stability training as well as balance and proprioceptive activities. Exercises that increase flexibility and maintain strength around a joint reduce joint irritation by increasing space in the joint, reducing compression and allowing for tissue healing.
As Seamus has shown us, there are many food products that reduce inflammation. His journey in life after being diagnosed with RA lead to the creation of his book, Hero Food, which focuses on the healing power of foods. These are easily included in your diet and can make for very tasty dishes that also serve to help heal the body.
Arthritis affects the young and the old and there are many different types. This is only one type that we are discussing here. This disease did not hold Chef Seamus back. He turned his journey into a positive experience that helped him personally as well as professionally. In fact, Chef Seamus is our Celebrity Honoree at the 2014 NYC Arthritis Walk. Even with the work requirements in the kitchen, he is still able to spend time helping others with this condition. Participating in group events with a mutual cause is a wonderful way to celebrate people who have been diagnosed with a condition, but continue to live life to its fullest and keep themselves healthy and happy.
2014 5K NYC Walk to Cure Arthritis
Foley Square Park, walking across and back over the Brooklyn Bridge
5K and 3K (3 mile and 1 mile option available)
Saturday, May 17th, 2014.
Registration starts at 8:30am, walk starts at 10:00am
Pain in the thigh has a number of potential causes and can lead to a loss of functionality of the leg and difficulty in movement. Our dedicated team of physicians, chiropractors, and massage therapists will design a treatment based on your symptoms that will help provide relief and restore full function to your leg.
Physical therapy is able to help with nearly every cause of pain in the thigh, studies prove. Some of the more common reasons include:
The exact method of restorative therapy will vary based on the root cause of your symptoms. Common methods of treatment include massage to loosen tightened lug muscles and therapeutic exercise to build strength, restore the legs range of motion, and provide pain relief. For patients with pain caused by sciatica, manual manipulation of the spine can potentially reduce the pressure exerted on the nerve to provide relief.Our experienced practitioners will create a treatment program suited to your needs.
Karena Wu was asked to be a part of the 2013 Arthritis Walk in NYC. She will be on the Committee that will oversee the logistics, sponsorship and fundraising attributes of this fun and charitable event. We participate because it is a condition that has already affected Karena and is one of the most common conditions to affect people of all ages. This year’s walk will be held on May 19th, 2013 in Historic Battery Park. Team ActiveCare will participate again, and hopefully we can beat our numbers by having more than 35 people on our walking team. Please see our old images at www.bestptnyc.com on our Collaboration page.
29 West 38th Street
Suite 601
New York, NY 10018