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Posted by: admin on April 21st, 2009    Filled in: Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers

According to food expert Adele Davis, ‘calcium can be as soothing as a mother, as relaxing as a sedative, and as lifesaving as an oxygen tent.’

It is said that despite a diet adequate in calcium, stress can lead to relative lack of this mineral because of the buildup of lactic acid in the blood. This may be particularly so in those conditions where generalised muscular pain is associated with soft tissue injury. Lactic acid is said to ‘bind’ the calcium, making it difficult to assimilate.

Taking a glass of ultra-filtered calcium-enriched milk together with a daily supplement of calcium may help sleep to return to normal. (It should also be noted that all women require between 600 and lOOOmg of calcium per day between the ages of 30 and the beginning of menopause just to prevent the loss of bone mineral density which leads to the often painful consequences of osteoporosis.)

Foods rich in calcium include yoghurt, cheese and other dairy products, eggs figs, oranges, almonds and calcium rich vegetables such as cauliflower and broccoli.

The most readily absorbable natural sources of calcium are soft-boned fish such as sardines and salmon.

If you consume large amounts of sugar rich foods, excessive amounts of flour or alcohol you are likely to be low in dietary magnesium which is essential for calcium absorption. Magnesium-rich foods include sea salt, kelp, seeds of all kinds,nuts, beets, spinach, dates and prunes. According to some nutritionists magnesium oxide supplements taken a half hour prior to going to bed have replaced the sleeping pill for many insomniacs.

Of the B group vitamins the one said to be most influential in helping sleep is pyridoxine or Vitamin B6. This vitamin is said to have sedative effect on the nervous system. It appears to be essential for the normal functioning of the brain, and for maintaining the level of magnesium in the blood. When B6 is deficient, the amino-acid tryptophan is not used properly by the body. This has particular relevance to chronic pain patients where the levels of serotonin or 5 HT are known to be depressed in some with chronic pain. The taking of L-tryptophan has been associated with both promoting natural sleep and a natural anti-depressant and has been shown to increase the brain levels of serotonin.

To treat insomnia Vitamin B6 is usually taken in doses of 25-50mg daily.

Pantothenic acid, another of the B group of vitamins has also been linked with insomnia. This is a key vitamin in the conversion of fats and sugar in the body into cellular energy. The dose of this vitamin to promote natural sleep is lOOmg per day.

The vitamin B12 has also been used by orthomoloecular psychiatrists to treat depression and insomnia. It should be given only after a test for B12 deficiency is carried out. Supplements of 25 milligrams daily may then be of help in sleep disorders.

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Posted by: admin on April 21st, 2009    Filled in: Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers

The Associate-Professor of Psychology at the University of Sydney’s Department of Behaviourial Sciences, Professor Wendy-Louise Walker, has developed a whole range of imagery techniques described in an article in the Australian Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis in 1984. Amongst these, in her article entitled ‘Some Uses of Imaginative Involvement in Therapy’ was the following (slightly adapted for this book with thanks):

‘Imagine that you’re standing, in the very early morning on a beautiful beach, standing quite alone on that beautiful beach in the pastel stillness of that beautiful beach.

‘Now imagine a wide sweep of fine, pale sand. A clear, blue sea with waves forming, curling, breaking and washing up the beach in curves and scallops of lacy white foam, receding to leave the sand wet and glossy.

‘Imagine a deep blue sea on the horizon shading into paler colours. The sunlight is glinting on the water, the clear brightness of the sky is reflected in the wet sand as the waves recede.

‘Imagine it vividly, still in the cool of the morning so that everything is bright. The colours are so clear and you can feel a cool breeze against your face.

‘Further, imagine some grey and white seagulls are fluttering down to float ever so lightly on the water, out beyond the breakers.

‘Imagine everything looking so fresh, clean and new. The sound of the water, the breeze and the fine clean sand — the bright clear colours. You are now walking along the water’s edge — along the wet sand which is hard, and yet comfortable under your feet. As you walk along the wet sand, you feel the water occasionally washing over your bare feet.

‘You begin to feel exhilarated. You begin to feel joy and exhilaration. It’s such a clear, fresh morning. The colours are so clear and bright. You walk along with the cool air in your face and the waves sometimes washing in a sweep of lacy foam over your feet and then receding.

‘You feel that your body is healthy and light and you walk along with a fine, swinging stride feeling exhilarated and optimistic. You feel the future is great, the exhilaration is quite a vivid, physical feeling and you are intensely aware of the beauty of the sea and the beach and the sky as you walk along.

‘It becomes a very vivid, and very complete, real and total experience.

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Posted by: admin on April 21st, 2009    Filled in: Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers

One of the more controversial areas of the surgical treatment of pain in recent years has been the implantation of electronic devices into the body to stimulate the nerve pathways directly in the spinal cord. Such devices, known as spinal cord or dorsal column stimulators, have been implanted into patients’ spines over the past ten years.

Fine gold electrodes are inserted into the spine through an incision over the vertebral column. At first these are connected to an external computerised electrical stimulator while it is assessed for accuracy of location in the spinal canal and different stimulation methods are tried.

When it is found to be successful the patient undergoes a second stage of the operation in which a battery powered electronic stimulator is implanted under the skin of the patient’s chest or abdomen. After this has been done the patient uses a powerful radio device to send messages to the stimulator and direct the current being delivered, its strength and pattern of stimulation.

The success of such treatment varies according to which surgeon is reporting his, or her, success. But there is a certain degree of scepticism about the procedure from some of the innovators of the technique who have subsequently stopped performing it. Unfortunately, one of the major complications of the treatment is infection in the location of the fine electrodes — in the spinal canal. This usually leads to the removal of the $5000 stimulator unit which cannot be reused on other patients. Another unfortunate problem is the unexplainable loss of effectiveness which occurs in a previously helped patient — typically within the first six months of treatment.

A second opinion Those who are offered this form of therapy should always seek a second opinion. At best, it is an uncomfortable operation, at worst it is potentially harmful and fraught with postoperative problems.

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Posted by: admin on April 21st, 2009    Filled in: Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers

Adjuvant or co-analgesic drugs

These are drugs which are not specifically developed to treat pain, which are used to enhance the pain relieving effects of the analgesics. They include the antidepressants, tranquillisers and some muscle relaxants.

Analgesics

These can be divided into simple and mild pain killers and narcotic or opiate based and potent pain-killers. The narcotic drugs are all developed from the age-old knowledge that the opium poppy produces a natural and extremely potent pain killer and euphoria producing substance — opium, from which can be derived other substances such as morphine and heroin (diamorphine).

Steroids

Cortisone-like drugs, which are often injected into joints or into inflamed areas, have a limited role in chronic pain treatment.

The major side-effects of such drugs, when taken in high dosages, are a reduction in the body’s natural capacity to fight off infection or inflammation, a softening of the bones (osteoporosis) and in some cases extreme weight gain and stretch marks.

The intra-joint usage of such drugs is sometimes associated with weakening of the muscular tendons and the tissues surrounding the joints.

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Posted by: admin on April 20th, 2009    Filled in: Allergies

Most children wet the bed until they are three or four. Thereafter about 25 per cent of children continue to wet the bed, and some may also wet themselves during the day. In some children, this may continue until they are ten or more. Sometimes a urinary infection causes bed-wetting, and so can diabetes. However, in the vast majority of cases, the cause is probably psychological, with anxiety or insecurity at the root of the problem.

In many children with food sensitivity, bed-wetting has unexpectedly stopped when they were treated for other symptoms, and recurred, along with those other symptoms, when certain foods were reintroduced.

At first this was put down to coincidence, but most doctors now accept that food sensitivity (either allergy or intolerance) can cause bed-wetting.

It probably does so by making smooth muscles throughout the body contract. As well as being found in the bronchi (where their spasms can cause asthma) and the bowels (where they can cause diarrhoea), smooth muscles make up the wall of the bladder. If they contract excessively, the bladder empties much more frequently, and with less control.

Some adults with food sensitivity have to empty their bladder very frequently, and the mechanism is probably the same.

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Posted by: admin on April 9th, 2009    Filled in: Herbal

Promoting health through happiness is an interesting pursuit. The poet Conrad Ferdinand Meyer thought deeply about this subject and concluded that a heavy heart is not cured by unrestrained hilarity but responds very quickly to even a little happiness. Was he really right? Can life’s problems be sorted out by just a little happiness, even though our everyday demands, worries and sufferings continuously erode our energies?

Imagine a beautiful peach tree espaliered against the wall of your house. Each spring it blossoms anew and a few months later it brings forth delicious fruit. Why should we think it could be otherwise? Yet suddenly the unexpected happens. The peach tree flowers as usual, but just as the flowers open they fall to the ground. The bark of the tree dries up and the tree dies. What has happened? The tree was the pride of the household; its healthy growth, its beautiful blossoms and delicious fruit were the talk of the neighbourhood. How could this tree die so quickly and unexpectedly? What malicious enemy could have attacked it? You ask yourself all these questions but you can only find the answers by digging up the tree. It is then that you discover the cause: field mice have eaten the roots and so killed the beautiful tree.

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Posted by: admin on April 9th, 2009    Filled in: Herbal

If you want to move house, you should check the location you have chosen from the standpoint of bioclimatology; of course you will also wish to see whether the area is suitable, that is, whether you actually like it and it suits you. For this reason it would be useful if you could live in the selected area for a while before finally deciding to build or buy a property there. In accordance with our constitution and sensitivity, various circumstances can be significant, for example atmospheric humidity, elevation, and whether the area is known for the fohn or any other influential winds. You should also take into account whether you feel the cold or the heat, your preference as regards food and exercise or movement, or whatever type you are. In view of the different idiosyncracies and natures we have inherited and from which we cannot escape, it is by no means of little importance where and under what conditions we live. The various members of a family often differ in their needs and preferences, in which case it would be advisable to be guided by the more sensitive ones, choosing your site to suit them.

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Posted by: admin on April 9th, 2009    Filled in: Herbal

In Switzerland very few plants contain iodine. Iceland moss, lung moss, reindeer moss, larch moss (Usnea) and carrageen (also called Irish moss) are some of the plants that do contain vitamin A and a reasonable amount of iodine, as has been proved by the pharmacologist Professor Gessner. In Switzerland there are thirty-eight different varieties of these mosses, which are described in botanic terms as lichens. Professor Gessner reports that these additionally contain antibiotic substances with a strong tuberculostatic effect. Some of these lichens are used in Usneasan drops and Usneasan Cough Lozenges. Genuine eelgrass (Zostera marina) and thrift [Armeria maritima), which can be found on the shores of the North and Baltic Seas, contain iodine, fluoride and bromide, three essential trace elements. Small amounts of iodine are also found in watercress.

All seaweeds contain iodine, the amount varying according to the kind and where it grows. The species known as bladder wrack (Fucus vesiculosus) grows to a size of 5 cm (2 inches) wide and 1 metre (3 feet) long. Its iodine content varies between 0.03 and 0.1 per cent, and it is used to treat obesity, struma and scrofula. However, it is unsafe for some people to take large amounts of this seaweed, especially those with a sensitive thyroid.

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Posted by: admin on April 9th, 2009    Filled in: Herbal

Girls and women who become obese because of ovarian insufficiency should take herbal sitz baths and eat plenty of wheat germ, as this will stimulate the ovaries, increase the metabolic rate of the body and so dispose of undesirable fat. In addition, they should take the seaweed preparation Kelpasan for even faster results.

Lack of vigour and stamina, tiredness because of overwork and neurasthenic conditions call for foods rich in vitamin E, which have a better effect than all expensive medicines if taken over a period of time. Anyone suffering from impotence should not give up hope, but take a long-term course of wheat germ or wheat germ oil capsules and, at the same time, Kuhne treatments, which will certainly help, if not cure the problem completely. In addition to wheat germ, other sources of vitamin E are lettuce, watercress and soybeans. So make sure to eat enough of these natural products if you suffer from any of the above-mentioned conditions. Moreover, it is interesting to note that experiments on vitamin E have shown that no side effects have resulted if too much of the vitamin is taken.

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Posted by: admin on April 9th, 2009    Filled in: Herbal

It was many decades ago (in 1922) when the American scientist Herbert McLean Evans discovered vitamin E. Since then it has been proved that there is no better natural remedy for sterility and infertility. Many a woman could have saved herself great heartache if she had known about vitamin E. Not only does this vitamin prevent miscarriage, but it also promotes the healthy, normal development of the foetus, ensuring a normal pregnancy without complications.

However, vitamin E is not only important for women; men too depend upon an adequate supply of it for the normal functioning of the sex glands. In turn, vitality, pleasure in work and stamina are dependent upon the efficiency of these glands.

Vitamin E influences the development and function of the smooth and striped muscles, being able to prevent muscle degeneration. This is of great importance for the cardiac muscles. In fact, vitamin E, together with natural heart remedies such as Crataegisan and Auroforce, has proved most effective as a tonic for weak heart muscles. It can be added that a vitamin E deficiency is very bad for the nerves too.

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