Mobile Experience
Evidence-based Outcomes
By stimulating the calming parasympathetic nervous system, slow breathing reduces stress and anxiety in as little as 5 minutes.
Slow breathing can change the baseline function of the nervous system toward a calmer state, helping you lower everyday stress levels and sleep deeper.
Slow breathing can lower blood pressure, improve blood flow, and enhance heart rate variability, all of which are critical to maintaining healthy cardiovascular function.
Long term use of slow breathing and relaxation can improve blood sugar regulation through holistic improvements in stress management, emotional regulation, and physical health.
Adjunctive treatment
Easy access, easy to use
Practice 15 to 20 minutes a day
Increase mental and emotional wellbeing
Parasympathetic activation
Supports heart health and vagus nerve balance
Slow breathing for decreases free radicals
Learn self-regulation and understanding of your physiology
Slow breathing helps those who say they can't or have a hard time meditating
FAQs
Slow breathing increases the activity of the parasympathetic (rest and digest) branch of the nervous system, restoring balance to the nervous system in people with diabetes.
REFERENCES:
Bianchi L, Porta C, Rinaldi A, Gazzaruso C, Fratino P, DeCata P, Protti P,
Paltro R, Bernardi L. Integrated cardiovascular/respiratory control in type 1
diabetes evidences functional imbalance: Possible role of hypoxia. Int J
Cardiol. 2017 Oct 1;244:254 259. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2017.06.047. Epub
2017 Jun 15. PMID: 28666602.
Esposito P., Mereu R., De Barbieri G., Rampino T., Di Toro A., Groop P.H.,
Dal Canton A., and L. Bernardi (2016), Trained breathing induced
oxygenation acutely reverses cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction in
patients with type 2 diabetes and renal disease, Acta Diabetologica, 53(2),
217 226, doi: 10.1007/s00592 015 0765 5.
Bernardi L, Gordin D, Bordino M, Rosengård Bärlund M, Sandelin A,
Forsblom C, Groop PH. Oxygen induced impairment in arterial function is
corrected by slow breathing in patients with type 1 diabetes. Sci Rep. 2017
Jul 20;7(1):6001. doi: 10.1038/s41598 017 04947 4. PMID: 28729675;
PMCID: PMC5519543.
Slow breathing synchronizes the heart, lungs, and nervous system (a state of resonance), which enhances blood flow and allows the body to function efficiently and optimally.
REFERENCES:
Donald E McMillan; The Effect of Diabetes on Blood Flow Properties. Diabetes 1 June
1983; 32 (Supplement_2): 56–63. https://doi.org/10.2337/diab.32.2.S56
Evgeny G. Vaschillo, Bronya Vaschillo, and Paul M. Lehrer, (2006) Characteristics of
resonance in heart rate variability stimulated by biofeedback, Applied Psychophysiology
and Biofeedback, 31 (2), 129 142, DOI: 10.1007/s10484 006 9009 3.
By eliciting the relaxation response, slow breathing reduces stress and anxiety in as little as 5 minutes.
REFERENCES:
Li, C., Barker, L., Ford, E.S., Zhang, X., Strine, T.W. and Mokdad, A.H. (2008), Diabetes and anxiety in US adults: findings from the 2006 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System. Diabetic Medicine, 25:878 881. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.14645491.2008.02477.x Grigsby AB, Anderson RJ, Freedland KE, Clouse RE, Lustman PJ. Prevalence of anxiety
in adults with diabetes: a systematic review. J Psychosom Res. 2002 Dec;53(6):1053 60. doi: 10.1016/s0022 3999(02)00417 8. PMID: 12479986.
Smith KJ, Béland M, Clyde M, Gariépy G, Pagé V, Badawi G, Rabasa Lhoret R, Schmitz
N. Association of diabetes with anxiety: asystematic review and meta analysis. J
Psychosom Res. 2013 Feb;74(2):89 99. doi:10.1016/j.jpsychores.2012.11.013. Epub
2012 Dec 28. PMID: 23332522.Magnon V, Dutheil F, Vallet GT. Benefits from
one session of deep and slow breathing on vagal tone and anxiety in young and older
adults. Sci Rep. 2021 Sep 29;11(1):19267.doi: 10.1038/s41598 021 98736 9. PMID:
34588511; PMCID: PMC8481564.
Slow breathing boosts heart rate variability (HRV) and mental resiliency, allowing people
with diabetes to handle and bounce back from daily diabetic stressors easier.
REFERENCES:
Skinner TC, Joensen L, Parkin T. Twenty-five years of diabetes distress research. Diabet
Med. 2020 Mar;37(3):393 400. doi: 10.1111/dme.14157. Epub 2019 Oct 31.
PMID: 31638279.Laborde S, Allen MS, Borges U, Dosseville F, Hosang TJ, Iskra M, Mosley E, Salvotti C, Spolverato L, Zammit N, Javelle F. Effects of voluntary slow breathing on heart rate and heart rate variability: A systematic review and a meta analysis. Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2022 Jul;138:104711. doi: 10.1016/ j.neubiorev.2022.104711. Epub 2022 May 24. PMID: 35623448. Perna G, Riva A, Defillo A, Sangiorgio E, Nobile M, Caldirola D. Heart rate variability: Can it serve as a marker of mental health resilience?: Special Section on "Translational and Neuroscience Studies in Affective Disorders Section Editor, Maria Nobile MD, PhD. J Affect Disord. 2020 Feb 15;263:754 761. doi: 10.1016/ j.jad.2019.10.017. Epub 2019 Oct 12. PMID: 31630828.
Through stimulation of the vagus nerve and activation of the relaxation response, slow
breathing reduces inflammation and oxidative stress.
REFERENCES:
Domingueti CP, Dusse LM, Carvalho Md, de Sousa LP, Gomes KB, Fernandes AP.
Diabetes mellitus: The linkage between oxidative stress, inflammation, hypercoagulability and vascular complications. J Diabetes Complications.
2016 May-Jun;30(4):738 45. doi: 10.1016/ j.jdiacomp.2015.12.018. Epub 2015 Dec 18.
PMID: 26781070. Li TT, Wang HY, Zhang H, Zhang PP, Zhang MC, Feng HY, Duan XY, Liu WB, Wang XW, Sun ZG. Effect of breathing exercises on oxidative stress biomarkers in humans: A systematic review and meta analysis. Front Med (Lausanne). 2023 Apr 5;10:1121036. doi: 10.3389/fmed.2023.1121036. PMID: 37122322; PMCID: PMC10132211. Bhasin MK, Dusek JA, Chang BH, Joseph MG, Denninger JW, Fricchione GL, Benson H, Libermann TA. Relaxation response induces temporal transcriptome changes in energy metabolism, insulin secretion and inflammatory pathways. PLoS One. 2013 May 1;8(5):e62817. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0062817. Erratum in: PLoS One. 2017 Feb 21;12 (2):e0172873. PMID: 23650531; PMCID: PMC3641112.
Slow nasal breathing improves blood flow and harnesses nitric oxide, increasing oxygen uptake in the blood and improving whole-body oxygenation.
REFERENCES:
Bianchi L, Porta C, Rinaldi A, Gazzaruso C, Fratino P, DeCata P, Protti P, Paltro R,
Bernardi L. Integrated cardiovascular/ respiratory control in type 1 diabetes
evidences functional imbalance: Possible role of hypoxia. Int J Cardiol. 2017 Oct
1;244:254 259. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2017.06.047. Epub 2017 Jun 15.
PMID: 28666602. Sánchez Crespo A, Hallberg J, Lundberg JO,
Lindahl SG, Jacobsson H, Weitzberg E, Nyrén S. Nasal nitric oxide and regulation of human pulmonary blood flow in the upright position. J Appl Physiol. 2010;108:181–188. Lundberg JO, Settergren G, Gelinder S, Lundberg JM, Alving K, Weitzberg E.
Inhalation of nasally derived nitric oxide modulates pulmonary function in humans.
Acta Physiol Scand. 1996 Dec;158(4):343 7. doi: 10.1046/j.1365201X.1996.557321000.x. PMID:8971255.