Sleep Disorder Specialists Duarte CA

See below to find local sleep disorder specialists in Duarte that give access to expertise on sleep disorder symptoms, psychotherapeutic treatments, sleep apnea, snoring, hypnogenesis, as well as advice and content on sleep disorder counseling.

Stuart Andress Mc Carthy, MD
(909) 981-5406
1330 San Bernardino Rd Ste J
Upland, CA
Specialties
Otolaryngology, Sleep Medicine
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Cincinnati Coll Of Med, Cincinnati Oh 45267
Graduation Year: 1977

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Pomona Valley Hospital Adult and Children's Sleep Disorders Center
(909) 865-9152
1601 Monte Vista Avenue
Claremont, CA
Doctors Refferal
Necessary
Ages Seen
All Ages
Insurance
Insurance: Most insurances are accepted. Please call your insurance carrier for verif
Medicare: Yes
Medicaid: Yes

David Wells
(626) 303-1004
300E.Fooothill Blvd.
Arcadia, CA
Company
Buddha's Eye Ayurveda
Industry
Ayurvedic Practitioner, Yoga Instructor

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Jo-Ann Savoia, RN, MFT
(626) 791-3322
1952 Loma Vista St.
Pasadena, CA
Specialty
Colon Therapy, Life Coaching, Nutrition, Spiritual Counseling

Julie Boynton
9096231619,ext1
PO Box 1390
Claremont, CA
Company
Julie Boynton, RSHom (NA), CCH
Industry
Homeopath

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Glendale Adventist MC Sleep Disorders Center Glendale Adventist Medical Center
(818) 409-8323
1509 Wilson Terrace
Glendale, CA
Doctors Refferal
Not necessary
Ages Seen
16 months and up
Insurance
Insurance: All
Medicare: Yes
Medicaid: No

Sleep Disorders Institute St. Jude Medical Center
(714) 446-7240
1915 Sunny Crest Drive
Fullerton, CA
Doctors Refferal
Yes
Ages Seen
2 years and up
Insurance
Insurance: PPO, Managed Care, Medicare


Breianne Pryse
(626) 792-1184
1225 Huntington Dr., Suite 2
Arcadia, CA
Specialty
Acupressure, Akashic Records, BioSET, Channeling, Crystal Therapy, Distance Healing, EFT / TFT, Energy Healing, Flower Essences, Guided Imagery, Herbology, Homeopathy, Hypnotherapy, Integrative Medicine, Kinesiology, Life Coaching, Medical Intuitive, Metaphysics, Neuro-Linguistic Programming, Past Life Regression, Psychic, Psychotherapy, Reconnective Healing, Reflexology, Reiki, Remote Healing, Shamanic Healing, Spiritual Counseling, Theta Healing, Wellness Centers

Holistic & Natural Healing Center
(626) 398-3849
1668 East Washington, Suite 102
Pasadena, CA
Services
Other, Nutrition, Massage Therapy, Jin Shin Jyutsu, Homeopathy, Herbal Medicine, Healing Touch, Fitness/Exercise, Diabetes, Arthritis, Aromatherapy
Membership Organizations
American Holistic Medical Association

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Huntington Family Medicine
(626) 792-1912
301 South Fair Oaks Avenue, #405
Pasadena, CA
Services
Qi Gong, Other, Mind/Body Medicine, Meditation, Family Practice, Energy Medicine, Coaching
Membership Organizations
American Holistic Medical Association

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Sleep on it

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Wake up! New research reported by the American Association for the Advancement of Science shows that sleep is one of the brain’s most powerful tools for learning and remembering.University of Chicago researcher Daniel Margoliash found evidence that young birds practice singing while they sleep: Brain cells active during waking hours showed similar firing when the baby birds napped. “Birds dream of singing,” Margoliash says.And after navigating a spiral maze all day, rats apparently dream of running. Matthew Wilson of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology reported that the sleeping rodents’ brains replayed electrical signals characteristic of running.In human laboratory experiments, students who were tested and then allowed to sleep before retesting showed consistent improvement. In fact, Robert Stickgold of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology reported that a period of sleep between tests resulted in a 20% boost in performance without additional training, and “the more sleep the students got, the more they improved.”Says Stickgold, “Modern life’s erosion of sleep time could be seriously short-changing our education potential.” He says that “cramming all night may help you pass a test, but if you want to remember any of it after college, you need to sleep on it.”

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The Secret Life of Dreams

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By Jeanne Ricci

It has happened to all of us: You sit up in bed after a doozy of a dream and wonder What did that mean? Mankind’s fascination with dreams has a long history. In fact, one of the world’s oldest surviving documents, an Egyptian papyrus, contains dream interpretations. Most ancient cultures believed dreams were communications from deities or departed souls. More recently, psychologists Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung paved the way for using dream analysis when treating patients, believing dreams could shed light on the workings of the unconscious mind. Today, many medical and psychiatric professionals believe dreaming can help us move beyond depression and grief and even identify underlying health issues.

As long as you are sleeping, you are dreaming. That’s right, everyone dreams—even if you don’t remember your nightly adventures. “Most dreams occur during REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, which replenishes certain neurotransmitters,” writes Deirdre Barrett, PhD, assistant professor of psychology at Harvard Medical School, in her book The Committee of Sleep (Crown, 2001). Since you enter the light sleep stage characterized by REM every 90 minutes, you’ll likely have four to five dreams a night, assuming you sleep for eight hours. “Interfering with REM, and thus dreaming, interferes with creativity, problem-solving capability, memory, and, in extreme situations, even immune function and body temperature,” says Barrett. You don’t have to remember your dreams to reap some of the benefits, but if you can recall them, your dreams could tell you a lot. (For tips to enhance dream recall, see “To Dream, Perchance to Remember” on page 73.) “But stay away from dream dictionaries that would have you believe that one symbol means one thing,” Barrett warns. Instead, she recommends Our Dreaming Mind by Robert L. Van de Castle (Ballantine Books, 1995), which focuses on dream theory and learning to work with your dreams. If you really dive deeply into your dream life, the payoff is multifold. You can tap into more clarity and creativity, feel less depressed and stressed, and maybe even be able to predict disease.

Tap into your dream tank

With a little effort, you can draw creative inspiration for both your professional and personal life from dreams. Need help solving a problem at work or making a decision for your household? Dreams can shed light on information stored in your brain and also help you think outside the box. “If you are stuck in your waking life on any sort of issue, then dreams can help you come to a resolution,” says Barrett. In fact, artists, writers, and philosophers such as René Descartes and Samuel Taylor Coleridge have used a method called dream incubation to nurture their creative processes.

To get started incubating dreams, write a question such as Which apartment should I rent? or How can I increase productivity at work? on a piece of paper and place it by your bed. Review the question before going to sleep and ...

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