MENSTRUAL PROBLEMS: HOW TO COPE-IN VARIOUS SITUATIONSC-AT HOME: LACK OF EXERCISE AND LACK OF MONEY

Posted: under Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers.

Getting sufficient exercise is a problem for a stay-at-home mother. Going for a walk with a toddler will exercise him, but it won’t do a lot for you except give you a breath of fresh air. It can be a real nuisance to be so tied, especially if you are one of those people who need regular exercise to help cure or prevent period pain. You can do the pelvic rock, of course, almost any time around the house. But that’s not the same thing as going to a disco, for example, or playing tennis or going ice skating, because you miss the company. Some of the new leisure and sports centres provide creches for mothers who want to use the sporting facilities, but they are costly. And so is using a babysitter, unless you belong to a baby-sitting group and help one another for free.

Lack of money-The bad thing about being your own boss is that you’re working without pay. And if you have been used to two salaries, and you suddenly have to learn to cope on one, you probably won’t be able to afford baby-sitters or creches very often, or even some of the food you would perhaps like. There’s really no reasonable answer to that. I could advise you to buy food instead of clothes, but I can hear the, hollow laughter of mothers who gave up buying clothes for themselves when their first babies were born and have been feeling the pinch ever since, despite all their sacrifices. The poverty of the young family in a society where so many women work and earn is a social problem we have hardly begun to consider, let alone solve.

The depression of the miseries is particularly hard to contend with when you are tied to the home day in and day out and you can’t afford outings or treats. Belonging to a group of parents can be a help—you’ll baby-sit for one another free for a start. Some groups run meetings in the evenings as well as during the day, and just to take an evening off now and then will help a great deal. An evening out with your husband is even better, while a week-end away is nicer still. No wonder British Rail’s ‘Golden Rail Breathers’ are overbooked. But I do know how difficult it is to arrange. Once you have children depending on you, you will soon find that nothing is simple any more, not even a short trip to the shops.

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Comments (0) Apr 29 2009


AN A-Z OF EMOTIONAL PAIN: DEPRESSION

Posted: under Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers.

This quite often follows pain, especially if relief is slow. Depression can be biological, psychological or environmental. In other words, severe depression can be in the family genetically, and medication is necessary. Erratic hormone levels can be the cause of depression in the case of young mothers and menopausal women.

Natural therapies of homoeopathy and acupuncture are necessary in the treatment of depression. Finally nutritional requirements may be inadequate and atmospheric toxins in air and water and food may be to blame. Heavy metals may be found in the bloodstream so elimination techniques are needed.

Gentian and mustard are the correct Bach Flower remedies for depression. Also in my experience vitamin B3 (niacinamide or niacin) can be just the necessary vitamin to pull you out of it. This should be taken under direction as there is an interesting side effect (hot itchy skin) if the dose is too high or is taken at the wrong time with a hot drink. Don’t self dose.

Lack of direct sunlight can also cause depression but it isn’t noticeable till about three months later. So if you miss your ten minutes of sunshine a day in the winter, you may become depressed in the spring. The cure in Europe is to take vitamin D tablets with calcium, but in a sunny country like Australia, the answer is to have your lunch sitting in the wintery sun. (Don’t sit in the sun in summer if you value your skin!)

With acupuncture, we balance the earth pulses to cure depression along with worry and tension. Many a case of nervous breakdown has been cured in. a week with needles. There are no drugs involved here.

A new mother came for help. She was suffering post-natal depression and didn’t want to have medical treatment if it involved medication while she was breastfeeding. She found looking after the baby tiring and she felt she couldn’t cope.

She was asked specifically about her menstruation before the pregnancy, and she had always had painful and long periods. Her diet was discussed and it was apparent that she suffered cravings for sugar which left her very tired in the afternoons. It was obvious that she desperately needed to correct her diet, especially to include protein at breakfast, and she was happy to have acupuncture to balance the erratic hormone levels. A multi-mineral and multi-vitamin tablet to correct her nutritional status was advised. A specific homoeopathic tablet was given to her and a month later a happy mother came to see me. It was recommended that she have monthly check-ups for the next six months to circumvent a possible relapse.

Post-natal depression is a serious condition if allowed to develop. The tragedy of babies being mishandled is a sad reality. Natural therapies have much to offer. Prevention here is so much better than cure. Depression is often deeply submerged anger.

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Comments (0) Mar 20 2009


AN A-Z OF LUMBAR OR PAIN AND LEG PAIN: MENOPAUSE

Posted: under Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers.

There should be no illness associated with this time in a woman’s life when her natural cycle of fertility is coming to an end. There are many factors to take into account, however, and every woman is different.

My experience of thirty years in a predominantly female practice has helped me to prepare the woman for the change (commonly called the climacteric). Those likely to have pain, bleeding, hot flushes, a dry vagina and emotional disturbance are those who have usually had trouble with their menstrual cycle.

Don’t wait for the mid-forties to early fifties to seek help. As soon as a hormonal problem manifests itself after puberty take action immediately.

Your systems need balancing in some way. Maybe your spine needs adjusting; or the chi energies of acupuncture are topsy-turvy; you may need nutritional counselling or your body requires homoeopathic remedies.

From the very first period, if there is menstrual pain, find out why. Taking ‘the pill’ to relieve dysmenorrhoea or acne is just not on. This suppression of symptoms causes complications to a woman’s health later on in her life.

The correction of any structural pelvic problem by a chiropractor is the first consideration. This is not traumatic. It is an easy and uncomplicated adjustment when the injury first occurs. The treatment can be a little more complex with time and age. Falls and sports injuries contribute to these pelvic and spinal strains.

Balancing the chi energies with acupuncture is stunningly effective and it can be done with needles or the laser machine. Combining these two therapies, I find, halves the number of treatments needed and makes it easier for both patient and practitioner.

Correct nutrition is an important adjunct to therapy. If you suffer constant tiredness start with a protein breakfast which usually eliminates the headaches and emotional turmoil that often accompany hormonal cycles. Mineral and vitamin supplements are needed if eating patterns are not good.

Calcium is needed early in life to prevent osteoporosis later on; it also stops heavy bleeding, and magnesium phosphate tablets ease cramps. Many women seem to require mineral supplementation. This is easily determined by a hair analysis. As vitamin C doesn’t store in humans, we need it daily to help prevent broken capillaries as well as for many other conditions. Stress unfortunately depletes our supply of vitamin B found in whole grains.

A mixture of hops, centaury, agrimony, wormwood and bog beans are herbals suggested as a tissane (tea simmered slowly and used as a tonic). Another mix is raspberry, lime blossom and Pulsatilla. My choice for women’s health problems is red clover tea.

Women who decide to take control of their lives and have started to do yoga, tai chi or such in their fifties, have shown dramatic improvement in their health – from alleviating painful intercourse to the equally painful suppression of emotional distress.

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Comments (0) Mar 20 2009


AN A-Z OF LUMBAR OR PAIN AND LEG PAIN: LUMBAR STRECH

Posted: under Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers.

Do this after any strenuous work session and before going to bed. If you do hurt your back again, attempt this exercise immediately. It could save you much trouble. It often releases the muscle spasm before you even get to the clinic.

• On hands and knees, place your hands a bit forward of your knees.

• Keep arms fully extended for this exercise.

• Lower hips to heels, arms at full extension. Then bring the body weight forward against the extended arms. Lower the pelvis to the floor as you hyper-extend the lower back. Let the stomach sag.

• Hold this last position for 5-10 seconds, relaxing the back muscles and letting the pelvis hang.

• Repeat 5-7 times.

The bridge

• Lie on your back, knees bent, feet flat on the floor, arms extended at the side.

• Elevate your pelvis as high off the floor as possible without undue strain.

• Hold at this height for a slow count of 2 or 3, extend this later up to a count

of 6.

• Relax for a similar count and repeat 5 times.

Feel like a stretch?

• Stand under a doorway, or under an overhead beam. Reach above with both

hands, holding onto door frame or beam.

• Lean trunk weight forward and kick extended leg backwards, mainly on the side

of any leg pain.

• Repeat several times, exaggerating the stretching and hyperextension of the

lower back.

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Comments (0) Mar 20 2009


RIB PAIN

Posted: under Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers.

Women who have had breast operations where one breast has been removed can experience pain in the ribs afterwards. It is a constant source of work for osteopaths to free all the muscle drag that occurs from the weight imbalance.

My recommendation after years of experience with postoperative care for mastectomy cases is that you should have therapy once a month till it settles down. The muscles are freed around the ribs and the dorsal spine may need to be manipulated gently.

Sandra’s story-Sandra suffered acute rib pain, spreading around to her back. She fell on her side at work two years previously. After some conventional therapy of massage and heat treatments, the trouble settled down.

As time passed, pain radiated to her ribs. The X-rays indicated there was no problem, except for a slight scoliosis!

If the X-ray had been taken with her standing, it would have emphasised the rotation in her upper lumbar spine and made the diagnosis clearer. The curves had to be reversed. It took time, patience, effort and understanding.

Rib pain can also be related to referred pain. Ulcers in the stomach will shoot pain into the back, as can heart trouble, hiatus hernia, cancers and a lot of other problems.

Our work looks at the whole person first. A correct diagnosis is always important in any profession. But it’s no good guessing and putting a person on anti-inflammatory drugs because arthritis might be a possibility. Keep on with these drugs and you may soon get a real ulcer with referred back pain. Then it can be said, ‘I told you so.’ It doesn’t take much time to have the spine and ribs assessed professionally once and know there is no structural fault.

One interview won’t delay important investigation. It may not be as bad as you think. We X-ray too to prove the point. Referrals are very quickly given if there is any suspicion of a serious condition. Rib fractures are easily picked up with compression tests and palpation.

Margaret’s story-It happened when I got out of my car to open the gate. My dog jumped in and knocked the hand brake off. The car rolled and pinned me against the fence breaking my leg. But that’s not what gave me the greatest pain. After the leg was out of plaster, I was still having trouble. When I breathed in, I could feel a sharp pain in my right ribs. I went to the doctor again and he told me I just had a posture problem. That didn’t help the pain though.

I then went to see my chiropractor, and after a physical examination, I was told that I had badly sprained a rib. It was fixed there and then and I felt great after one adjustment.

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Comments (0) Mar 20 2009


AN A-Z OF DORSAL AND THORACIC PAIN

Posted: under Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers.

For all the happiness that mankind can gain Is not in pleasure, but in rest from pain. John Dryden (1631—1700)

There are twelve vertebrae in the middle section of the spine (called the dorsal spine) and twelve corresponding pairs of nerves. When we talk of the thoracic section of the spine, we mean the rib cage as well, which also involves the front of the chest.

The nerve supply from the middle spine radiates out to the organs of the lungs, breasts, heart, stomach, gall bladder, liver and around the ribs into the chest, greatly influencing their function. The lower dorsal spine supplies the nerves to the kidneys — another important organ. Pain in this region makes you feel very vulnerable.

Alternative therapists work to free any interference to normal nerve, blood and lymphatic supply. We believe that all joints must perform freely or good health is affected. This is our philosophy based on clinical experience.

The systems affected by the dorsal spine are mainly respiratory, alimentary and cardiac, i.e. our breathing, digestion, heart functions and – for women – lactation. Spinal trouble in this area can adversely affect these systems.

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Comments (0) Mar 20 2009


HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE: COMPLEMENTARY TREATMENT

Posted: under Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers.

Most of the complementary therapies offer advice for sufferers of high blood pressure. Stress reduction is an obvious target for the therapies, but there are many that are more specific in their aims.

Royal jelly is reputed to lower high blood pressure, and can be taken in many forms on a daily basis. Garlic and onions reduce cholesterol, which has been linked to high blood pressure, and hawthorn berries and rosemary can help to lessen oedema. Yellow dock can he taken as a tea to stimulate kidney function. Uva ursi and com silk are good natural diuretics, aiding kidney function. Passionflowers calm, and dandelion leaves provide calcium and potassium which therapists say vitalise the kidneys and reduce oedema. Raspberry leaf has a similar effect.

Acupuncture can help, as can acupressure and reflexology, to cause the body to relax, and to stimulate the body’s ability to work efficiently. In pregnancy, acupuncture can help with pre-eclampsia but only in conjunction with orthodox medicine. Homoeopathy has remedies too numerous to mention; because high blood pressure can be caused by any number of things, it is best to consult a homoeopath who can diagnose and treat your specific causes.

A clinical nutritionist is likely to suggest you reduce sugar, animal fats, and red meats; the reduction of salt, as previously mentioned, has been recognised as having some effect in the fight against high blood pressure. Tea, coffee and alcohol should be kept to a minimum, while grains, fibre and fresh fruit and vegetables should be increased in your diet. Vitamin B3 (Niacin) can control blood pressure, but only under the supervision of your GP. Omega-3 oils and calcium can also be supplemented.

Massage with oils thought to decrease blood pressure is an option; try soothing oils like lavender, marjoram, melissa or neroli. Vapourisation and bathing with a few drops of the oils in your bath water are also useful. Camomile, bergamot, rose and frankincense can invigorate and rejuvenate, and some have anti-depressant qualities. Fennel and lemon cleanse and detoxify.

Bach flower remedies are directed not towards the blood pressure, hut at the irritability which may be causing the underlying stress. Vervain is used for strain; impatiens for impatience and irritability; agrimony for those who hide worries behind a brave face. Oak and elm are for anyone who feels overwhelmed.

A good exercise programme can keep you fit, which helps to reduce high blood pressure. As well as being an exercise T’ai Chi is also a mechanism for relaxation: relaxation therapies themselves can also help in high blood pressure. Reflexology reduces stress, and stimulates the circulatory system.

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Comments (0) Mar 11 2009


HEADACHES: SUB-ARACHNOID HAEMORRHAGE,

Posted: under Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers.

Complementary treatment

There are no complementary therapies that will deal with sub-arachnoid haemorrhage during the attack. You need a doctor, a hospital and a neuro surgeon, and the quicker the better. Call for emergency services as soon as you suspect sub-arachnoid haemorrhage. While you are waiting, you can offer the sufferer arnica (30c every five minutes until medical attention arrives), and rub Rescue Remedy (a Bach flower remedy) into pulse points to prevent shock. However, don’t attempt to give anything by mouth if the patient is unconscious.

After emergency help has been sought, and after the haemorrhage has been controlled, there are a number of things that can he done to help the patient rehabilitate. Paralysis of any kind can be helped by reflexology, chiropractic and osteopathy. Dance and music therapy, as well as yoga and T’ai Chi offer an enormous psychological boost, as well as gentle physical exercise to help ensure a speedy recovery. It is essential that all exercise is gentle, and that you consult your GP before beginning any exercise programme.

Acupuncture and acupressure, as well as cranial osteopathy, can help you to deal with headaches following the illness; persistent headaches can he controlled with lavender oil. Relaxation methods can he undertaken, if discussed first with your doctor. Certainly there is a great deal of fear and anxiety following such a frightening attack, and psychotherapy may help you deal with that. Bach flower remedies are good for this sort of problem

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Comments (0) Mar 11 2009


HEADACHES, SINUSITIS: SELF-HELP

Posted: under Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers.

If you’re a regular sinusitis sufferer then there are a number of things that you can do. Firstly, go to your doctor al the first sign of a sinus infection – you may nip it in the bud. Secondly, when an infection begins, a short course of decongestants may open up the antrum and allow proper and adequate drainage of the sinuses. But beware, decongestants should only be used for a maximum of ten days without seeking further advice from your doctor, as otherwise rebound congestion can occur to make matters much worse.

A word of caution here. If you’re on anti-depressant drugs called monoamine-oxidas inhibitors (MAOIs for short) you can get a severe reaction if you use decongestants, either by mouth or as nasal drops. You should know if you’re on an MAOI because you will already have been warned not to eat cheese. These drugs are not in common use now, but because the blood pressure is sent sky high, the interaction is potentially fatal.

If you’re an allergic person, then try to avoid the things that you’re allergic to; not always easy, but worthwhile if you can do it. Hay fever and dust-mite allergy are significant causes of nasal allergies. What we call hayfever is actually a reaction to a large number of different types of airborne pollens, and not just to those produced by grasses.

These pollens are released at specific times of the year, for example, silver birch in April to May; plane (a common tree in London) in May; grasses from May to August; and nettle from June to September. After this, in the autumn come the spores from moulds and fungi.

Many hayfever sufferers are allergic to only one or two types of pollens and spores, and the timing of their worst symptoms coincides with the release of pollen from those particular species. Pollen is so small that it needs a microscope to be seen, and being small and very light it remains suspended in the air for considerable periods of time. When it lands on the lining of the nasal passages the allergic reaction it provokes causes inflammation and swelling of the cells lining the nose, together with increased mucus production. Both these processes cause the nasal passages to become blocked.

Hayfever is worst when there is the most pollen in the air. This depends upon a large number of factors, whether the plants you are allergic to grow in your area (or up-wind), whether they are sporing at the time, and the weather conditions (which can either encourage sporing and also keep spores in, or wash them out of the air). In general, dry sunny weather encourages plants to produce spores. The amount of pollen in the air increases during the morning when the pollen is released. This pollen rises, sometimes into the upper atmosphere. The pollen count also goes up again in late afternoon when this pollen starts to descend. Rainy conditions tend to wash the pollen out of the atmosphere, but on the other hand, wet conditions before the pollen season encourage plants to produce even more pollen when eventually they pollinate.

The chief self-help principle for hayfever sufferers is to avoid the pollen to which you are allergic. Try to avoid parks, gardens, and the countryside in general; watch the weather reports, which often include a pollen count, and on days that are likely to be bad try to stay indoors with the windows shut. When driving in the countryside keep the windows closed, and when out walking use sunglasses.

If you are severely affected it may help to take a short holiday during the worst of your own hayfever season – because there is relatively less pollen in cities you may have less trouble there. The seaside also tends to have less pollen – if for n other reason than if there is an on-shore breeze it will be coming from over the water and thus blowing pollen-free air towards you. High mountain areas are also a good place to go to; up in the mountains the grasses tend to produce less pollen.

Going abroad may help. For a start the same plants may pollinate at slightly different times because the seasons may be earlier (if you go south) or later (if you go north). In addition, the plants that are common to the new area may be ones t which you’re not allergic. Often hayfever sufferers find that their symptoms g almost completely when they go on a foreign holiday.

Allergy to dust mite is like hayfever, except that it occurs all year round. Ho dust consists largely of old skin flakes that have been shed by people living in house, and dust mites are microscopically small insects that live off these flakes skin. Both of these substances can prove highly allergic to certain sensitive people, and are often responsible for the symptoms of a continual running nose, made worse by exposure to dusty rooms.

Self-help is not easy because it is impossible to remove dust completely from your home. However, a reduction in soft furnishings will help. Polished wooden floors, linoleum or cork tiling may be better than a deep-pile carpet; Venetian blinds better than curtains, and duvets better than blankets.

You can cut down the amount of dust by frequent damp dusting (dry dusting merely serves to push more dust into the air again). Regular vacuuming of the carpets helps (especially in the bedroom and under the beds), and of the curtains, and from time to time the mattress and the blankets.

Wash your curtains, and of course your blankets, regularly; sunlight kills off the dust mite so drying blankets in the sunshine will help considerably. Put clothes away in wardrobes rather than leaving them hanging on chairs or on the back of a door; and, finally, remember that the dust mite tends to inhabit wool in preference to man-made fibres. Therefore, if you choose mainly man-made fibres for your clothes, your bedding and your soft furnishings, you may reduce your long-term problems.

Passive smoking can cause a lot of problems for those who are sensitive or allergic to tobacco smoke, and is yet another good reason for banning smoking -or, at least, providing smoke-free /.ones in offices, restaurants, public transport and other public places. Even a brief exposure to tobacco smoke can block you up for the next twenty-four hours, if you are sensitive to it.

A filtered air purifier may be a useful and inexpensive option; one look at the used filter gives you an idea of the kind of dust and dirt that exists in the air of our day-to-day environment.

Many sufferers from sinusitis find that they are worse in the artificial atmosphere of the air-conditioned office. Poor quality air-conditioning produces air that is too dry, which irritates the lining of the nose. Air-conditioning produces air that is high in positive ions, and there is some evidence that these also irritate the nasal passages.

Poorly maintained air-conditioning can often recycle fumes and solvents round the office, causing problems in those who arc sensitive to these substances; both air-conditioning and (especially) domestic warm-air central-heating systems, if poorly maintained, can encourage moulds and fungi to grow in the warm, dark and sometimes moist conditions in the pipes. These produce millions of spores, and when the air-conditioning/central heating is switched on, these spores are blown out into the room air, causing further problems in those who are allergic to them.

It’s not always easy to get round problems caused by office air-conditioning. Often the windows are fixed shut; but, if you are able to open them, you may find your symptoms are alleviated by breathing in fresh outside air. Alternatively, you may be able to counter the effects of positive ions by using an ioniser. And, finally, if you always get sinus and nasal troubles when the hot-air central heating is switched on, get someone competent to check it.

If you do get a cold, resist the temptation to blow your nose hard – you may well blow infected material from the centre of the nose into the sinuses. Sucking it out again is nothing like as easy as it was to blow it in there! Do resist the temptation to blow your nose too vigorously. Just wiping it is usually quite sufficient.

Anything which causes pressure inside the nose should also be avoided. So, if you go swimming, you would do well to avoid diving or duck-diving because the pressure that is generated inside the nose can easily push material into the sinuses. Similarly, it’s inadvisable to go scuba-diving when an attack of sinusitis is brewing.

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Comments (0) Mar 11 2009


MENINGITIS: PREVENTION

Posted: under Pain Relief-Muscle Relaxers.

We can now immunise against two of the bacterial types of meningitis. There’s been a vaccine against the A and C strains of meningococcal meningitis (one of the bacterial forms) for some years, but there isn’t one against the B strain yet, which is unfortunate, because that’s the one that mainly does the damage.

Immunisation against meningococcal meningitis may be useful in a persistent local outbreak, and there are some countries (notably Nepal, Kenya and Norway) where meningitis is currently prevalent. Travellers to these countries may be offered meningitis vaccination before they go. Travel vaccination requirements change from month to month – check the current requirement with your doctor or practice nurse at least six weeks before you are due to travel.

Secondly, immunisation against Haemophilus Influenzae is now available, called the Hib vaccine. It’s presently being offered to children under age of four in the UK. Haemophilus Influenzae more commonly produces severe respiratory infections, especially in children. Despite its name, it doesn’t cause influenza.

A full course of immunisation consists of three injections at intervals of about six weeks. Older children will require fewer injections, and adults don’t need it because they will have developed a natural immunity.

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Comments (0) Mar 11 2009