April 8, 2010
Herbal Remedies | Sweating, Body Odor And Its Herbal Remedies
Sweating is a kind of reaction towards heat in our body. Sweating is a normal phenomenon; it becomes problematic when it becomes excessive. The disorder associated with too much sweating is termed as Hyperhidrosis. In this disorder there is extreme sweating in whole body especially in the feet, hands and armpit area.
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2 Comments on Herbal Remedies | Sweating, Body Odor And Its Herbal Remedies »
April 12, 2011
born2streak @ 2:30 pm:
The National Institutes of Health have funded a number of studies on the effectiveness of acupuncture in the treatment of various illnesses and in managing pain. There are a variety of studies from China on the effectiveness of various Chinese herbal remedies. These studies have done little to resolve the controversy about Traditional Chinese Medicine. The studies in China are frequently criticised for their poor design and execution, with the results generally being highly suspect as a result. Some studies in this county have found that acupuncture does not help a given condition, while others find that subjects have the same level of benefit regardless of whether they received “sham” acupuncture or an actual acupunture treatment. A joint MIT-Harvard study, published in 2008, showed that acupuncture had an effect beyond placebo. There have also been a small number of studies using fMRI that show measurable changes in brain activity when subjects received acupuncture treatments, which were different than the changes that occured with placebo. There remains a lot of room for more study into the effectiveness of TCM modalities. The evidence can be quite contrary, but it is compelling enough for further study. I would say that it is premature to announce that acupuncture and TCM isn’t at all effective, while also remembering that there are a number of TCM practitioners who freely make extremely bold claims that should be taken with a grain of salt.
May 13, 2011
grinchman @ 6:52 am:
The above comments were posted by me with permission from Nicole, along with my responses.
There was another discussion about my article on Facebook in which someone suggested that I consider using herbs. The author of that response said that she was certified in herbal remedies. The following is my response to the suggestion of herbal remedies:
Grinchman responded:
Daily doses of extremely powerful opiate based painkillers do not eliminate the pain. They simply allow me to function at a slightly higher level than I would otherwise.The pain is literally crippling and incapacitating without the narcotics.I hope you would agree that the strongest and most effective herbal remedy could not be expected to control that level of pain. I certainly realize that you mean well and have my best interests in mind, and I appreciate not only your concern, but your feedback as well . My intent was for the article to focus on the larger issue of inadequate pain management, not on me. Thanks.
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