Dizzy, Tired, Poor Memory

Have you ever wondered why your brain feels so foggy at times, you can’t concentrate or you feel dizzy and dopey? 

THE LINK WITH YOUR BREATHING PATTERN

Are you suffering from low O2 to your brain and elsewhere?
Have you ever wondered why your brain feels so foggy at times, you can’t concentrate or you feel dizzy and dopey? Or why you wake up feeling exhausted, like you haven’t slept at all or like you’ve been pushing a truck up hill all night?

If you snore, suffer from sleep apnoea, have asthma, cough or mouth-breathe a lot or have chronic anxiety, chances are you’re breathing enough for 2-3 people. Overbreathing upsets the natural balance between oxygen (O2)  and carbon dioxide (CO2) in the blood. Loss of CO2 through overbreathing causes smooth muscle to constrict around airways and blood vessels, reducing the availability of oxygen to the brain and body tissues. Anyone who has experienced dizziness after blowing up balloons or practising deep breathing in a fitness class, will be familiar with how quickly excessive breathing can deprive the brain of oxygen. The MRI scan below shows a 40% reduction in oxygen in the brain after one minute of overbreathing. (Litchfield 1999)

Image courtesy of Dr PM. Litchfield, Grad School of Behavioural Health Sciences, Wyoming USA. (1999)

Red, yellow and pale blue areas (right-hand side of the scale) correspond to higher oxygen saturation.
How much might you be depriving your brain, organs and cells of essential oxygRed, yellow and pale blue areas (right-side of the scale) correspond to higher oxygen saturation.


How much might you be depriving your brain, organs and cells of essential oxygen by heavy breathing or snoring at night and puffing, sighing and gasping by day? It is not just stopping breathing (apnoea / apnea) that deprives your body of oxygen.en by snoring all night and puffing, sighing and gasping by day? It is not just stopping breathing (apnoea / apnea) that deprives your body of oxygen.

RELIEF THROUGH BREATHING RETRAINING


 Learn more about breathing retraining

A FIRST STEP TO BETTER BREATHING 

Increase oxygen to your brain, heart and every cell of your body with better ‘everyday’ breathing.

First, try to breathe just a little more gently when you think of it, say, think of taking a 1-2% smaller breath size than your usual, whether its mouth or nose breathing you are doing. Stay comfortable – even a small change should show you a benefit.

To go further you need to assess your breathing pattern, determine where (rate, rhythm, volume, use of breathing muscles, O2 / CO2 balance….) it differs from normal, and change it step by step. Below are some options to help you.
Ready to take action? Check out our online breathing course – BreatheAway