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#6394 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Wed Aug 6, 2008 11:25 pm
Subject:: Re: Arnica Flower Tops as herb (diluted) or external ointment-gout,pai n,buises,swelling,archive links,more
cheyennecin
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Helenalin is a sesquiterpene lactone with potent anti-inflammatory and antitumor effects found in Arnica montana and Arnica chamissonis foliosa. ...
===
Helenalin is a sesquiterpene lactone with potent anti-inflammatory and antitumor effects found in Arnica montana and Arnica chamissonis foliosa. . http://au.groups.yahoo.com/group/FoodHerbHealth/message/6254
 
===========================
 

Arnica - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chamisso Arnica. Arnica chamissonis subsp. foliosa (Nutt.) Maguire. Arnica cordifolia Hook. -- Heart-leaf Leopardbane, Heartleaf Arnica; Arnica dealbata ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnica - 46k -

CalPhotos: Arnica chamissonis ssp. foliosa

Arnica chamissonis ssp. foliosa Chamisso Arnica ID: 5161 1631 2435 0009 [detail] © 1995 Saint Mary's College of California. Arnica chamissonis ssp. foliosa ...
calphotos.berkeley.edu/cgi/img_query?stat=BROWSE&query_src=photos_flora_sci&where-genre=Plant... - 5k -

Calflora: Arnica chamissonis ssp. foliosa

Common names: leafy arnica [PLANTS 2001], meadow arnica [Hrusa 2001], ... Arnica chamissonis ssp. foliosa, a dicot, is a perennial herb that is native to ...
www.calflora.org/cgi-bin/species_query.cgi?where-calrecnum=679 - 32k -

Arnica chamissonis foliosa (Chamisso Arnica)

Specific epithet: chamissonis - (Nutt.) Maguire. Subspecies: foliosa. Botanical name: - Arnica chamissonis foliosa (Nutt.) Maguire ...
zzforkids.com/Plants/A/Arnica_chamissonis_foliosa/default.asp - 69k -
=======================

PLANTS Profile for Arnica chamissonis (Chamisso arnica) | USDA PLANTS

A PLANTS profile of Arnica chamissonis (Chamisso arnica) from the USDA PLANTS database. ... Distribution of Arnica chamissonis Less. ssp. foliosa (Nutt. ...
http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=ARCH3 - 53k -
 
View Native Status
Distribution Map Legend

See U.S. county distributions (when available) by clicking on the map or the linked states below:

USA (AK, AZ, CA, CO, ID, MT, NM, NV, OK, OR, UT, WA, WY), CAN (AB, BC, MB, NT, ON, QC, SK, YT)
 
=============================

Chamisso Arnica | Plant Information

Complete description of the Chamisso arnica (Arnica chamissonis) including plant information and identification of a Chamisso Arnica.
www.gardenguides.com/plants/plant.asp?symbol=ARCH3 - 37k -

Plant Detail: Arnica chamissonis foliosa

Arnica. * Species:. chamissonis. Subspecies:. foliosa. * Family (scientific):. Asteraceae. * Family (common):. Aster. SYNONYMS. * Distribution in Canada: ...
www.evergreen.ca/nativeplants/search/view-plant.php?ID=03612 - 20k -

CNPLX: Arnica chamissonis ssp. foliosa

SPECIES INFORMATION. Arnica chamissonis ssp. foliosa - meadow arnica, leafy arnica ... Arnica chamissonis var. jepsoniana Arnica foliosa var. incana ...
www.cnplx.info/nplx/species?taxon=Arnica+chamissonis+ssp.+foliosa - 12k -

ITIS Standard Report Page: Arnica chamissonis ssp. foliosa

Subspecies, Arnica chamissonis ssp. foliosa (Nutt.) Maguire -- arnica de Chamisso sous-espèce multifeuille, Chamisso arnica ...
www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=184938 - 35k -

Liber Herbarum II: Arnica chamissonis ssp. Foliosa

Ser.nr. 6889. Latin, Arnica chamissonis ssp. Foliosa / Arnica chamissonis subsp. foliosa (Nutt.) Maguire. 47-76, 48-38. top of page Plant ...
www.liberherbarum.com/Pn6889.HTM - 6k
 
===
 
 
Chamisso Arnica (Arnica chamissonis)

225 x 169 - 14k - jpg
en.wikipedia.org
Chamisso Arnica (Arnica chamissonis)

225 x 169 - 17k - jpg
www.answers.com
Chamisso arnica
192 x 127 - 26k - jpg
www.forestryimages.org
Chamisso Arnica
128 x 192 - 19k - jpeg
calphotos.berkeley.edu
Chamisso Arnica
192 x 128 - 18k - jpeg
calphotos.berkeley.edu
Image:Arnica chamissonis.jpg
400 x 600 - 23k - jpg
commons.wikimedia.org
Image:Arnica chamissonis.jpg
600 x 900 - 48k - jpg
upload.wikimedia.org
Asteraceae, Arnica chamissonis ...
816 x 612 - 108k - jpg
www.stingersplace.com
Asteraceae, Arnica chamissonis ...
816 x 612 - 288k - jpg
www.stingersplace.com
Asteraceae, Arnica chamissonis ...
816 x 612 - 235k - jpg
www.stingersplace.com
 
=============================

The Anti-inflammatory Sesquiterpene Lactone Helenalin Inhibits the ...

The sesquiterpene lactone helenalin is a potent anti-inflammatory drug whose molecular mechanism of action remains unclear despite numerous investigations. ...
www.jbc.org/cgi/content/abstract/273/50/33508 -

Sesquiterpene lactone helenalin suppresses Leydig ...[Reprod ...

Sesquiterpene lactone helenalin suppresses Leydig and adrenocortical cell steroidogenesis by inhibiting expression of the steroidogenic acute regulatory ...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16777379 - Similar pages

Helenalin, an anti-inflammatory sesquiterpene lact...[Biol Chem ...

The anti-inflammatory sesquiterpene lactone helenalin inhibits the transcription factor NF-kappaB by directly targeting p65. [J Biol Chem. ...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9348104 -

Two Crystalline Forms of Sesquiterpene Lactone Helenalin - X-Ray ...

Two Crystalline Forms of Sesquiterpene Lactone Helenalin - X-Ray and NMR Study ... Miroslav (1995) Two Crystalline Forms of Sesquiterpene Lactone Helenalin ...
dlib.lib.cas.cz/716/ -

Biochemical Pharmacology : Inhibitory effects of helenalin and ...

The sesquiterpene lactone helenalin, which can be isolated from several plant species of the Asteraceae family, is a potent anti-inflammatory and ...
linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0006295201007298 -

NMR study of sesquiterpenes of the helenalin and parthenin series

The assignment of the proton and carbon spectra of some cyclopropane sesquiterpene lactone derivatives of. helenalin and anhydroparthenin is presented. ...
doi.wiley.com/10.1002/mrc.1260230703 - Similar pages

Helenalin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Helenalin is a sesquiterpene lactone with potent anti-inflammatory and antitumor effects found in Arnica montana and Arnica chamissonis foliosa. ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helenalin - 29k -

The anti-inflammatory sesquiterpene lactone helenalin inhibits the ...

We have previously shown that helenalin and other sesquiterpene lactones selectively inhibit activation of the transcription factor NF-kappaB, ...
grande.nal.usda.gov/ibids/index.php?mode2=detail&origin=ibids_references&therow=347969 - 7k -

The anti-inflammatory sesquiterpene lactone helenalin inhibits the ...

The sesquiterpene lactone helenalin is a potent anti-inflammatory drug whose ... We have previously shown that helenalin and other sesquiterpene lactones ...
lib.bioinfo.pl/pmid:9837931 - 81k -

APT Online - THE TRYPANOCIDAL EFFECT OF SESQUITERPENE LACTONES ...

Sesquiterpene lactones constitute a large group of biologically active compounds obtained from plants. The lactones, mexicanin (MXN) and helenalin (HLN), ...
apt.allenpress.com/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1645%2FGE-3373 -
 
================
 
 
=============================
 
Helenalin reduces Staphylococcus aureus infection in vitro and in ...
This study was designed to evaluate the effects of helenalin on S. aureus infection. First, in vitro experiments were conducted. These studies revealed that ...
http://lib.bioinfo.pl/pmid:17010538 - 65k
 
Helenalin, a natural sesquiterpene lactone that was detected in the alcoholic extracts from flowers of Arnica montana and Arnica chnamissonis spp., ...
http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0304383504009413
 
Arnica
The dried flowers of another member of the daisy family, Heterotheca inuloides, ... Arnica contains some highly poisonous compounds, such as helenalin, ...
http://170.107.206.70/drug_info/nmdrugprofiles/nutsupdrugs/arn_0025.shtml - 18k -
 
Thieme-connect - Full text article
Helenalin- und 11,13-Dihydrohelenalinester aus Blüten von Arnica montana*. Helenalin- and 11,13-Dihydrohelenalinester from Flowers of Arnica montana ...
www.thieme-connect.com/ejournals/se/abstract/plantamedica/doi/10.1055/s-2007-969856  -
 
Herbal Drugs and Phytopharmaceuticals: A Handbook for Practice on ... - Google Books Result
by Max Wichtl - 2004 - Medical - 704 pages
Besides helenalin and lla,13- dihydrohelenalin esters (= helenalins), Arnica chamissonis, ssp. foliosa flowers also contain their corresponding 2,3-dihydro- ...
http://books.google.com/books?isbn=0849319617...
What Herbs REALLY Do Inside Your Body: Arnica
Arnica’s bright yellow, daisy-like flowers are now the favored therapeutic ... Helenalin works by preventing the inhibitor’s release from NF-kappa-B. This, ...
http://drholly.typepad.com/dr_holly_phaneuf/2004/08/arnica.html - 26k -
 

#6393 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Wed Aug 6, 2008 8:43 pm
Subject:: Re: Plant Sources against fungus,mildew,herbal-Goldenseal,Gumweed?,mor e
cheyennecin
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GUMWEED: archives included: (contains selenium)-
Curly cup gumweed
263 x 350 - 17k - jpg
www.tpwd.state.tx.us
Gumweed Grindelia integrifolia
282 x 418 - 36k - jpg
www.dereila.ca
Willamette Valley gumweed
478 x 383 - 58k - jpg
home.comcast.net
Grindelia lanceolata (Fall Gumweed, ...
655 x 546 - 24k - jpg
www.springcreekforest.org
Curlycup gumweed (Grindelia ...
200 x 249 - 58k - jpg
en.wikipedia.org
More from upload.wikimedia.org ]
 
 
============
===
 

Wild Plants of the Sierra Nevada - Google Books Result

by Ray S. Vizgirdas, Edna M. Rey-Vizgirdas - 2005 - Travel - 321 pages
Gumweed (Grindelia) Description: These species are biennials or ... The flower heads can be boiled in water and used as an external remedy for skin diseases ...
books.google.com/books?isbn=0874175356...
====================

Skin Rash Salve - Herbal Extracts and Tinctures at Rocky Mountain ...

Suggested Uses: For external use only. For irritations due to poison ivy, ... Grindelia flower (Grindelia spp.) Also known as Gumweed, Grindelia is native ...
www.rockymountainherbals.com/herbal-remedies-skin_rash_salve.html  - 21k -
 
 
=================================

Problem Weeds - A Cattlemen's Guide - Agriculture - Government of ...

In early times, curlycup gumweed had medicinal uses. Spanish New Mexicans would drink an extract made from boiling three flower buds three times in three ...
www.agriculture.gov.sk.ca/Problem_Weeds_Cattlemens_Guide - 63k -

Native American Ethnobotany - Google Books Result

by Daniel E. Moerman - 1998 - Science - 927 pages
(80: 50) Delaware Antirheumatic (External) Used as a medicine for rheumatism. ... (171:46) Grindelia fastigiata Greene, Pointed Gumweed ...
books.google.com/books?isbn=0881924539...

2.7 Poison Ivy / Oak / Sumac. | Henriette's Herbal Homepage

Native Americans used the resin from the gumweed plant to treat poison ivy. ... Harvesting: Jewelweed is an annual, which means it flowers, produces seeds ...
www.henriettesherbal.com/faqs/medi-2-7-poison-ivy.html - 31k
 
==============
The Crow used the flowers of the curly top gumweed to make a tea for coughs and .... then applied to inflamed sores and wounds as a cooling, healing salve. ...
www.fpj.sarteck.com/members.php?action=view_profile&mid=11 - 54k
 
Ginger Bread Tracks and Pine Needle Pasta: A Savory Guide to ... - Google Books Result
by Melanie Armstrong - 2005 - Cooking - 160 pages
Curlycup gumweed/resinweed (grindelia squarrosa): If you tangle with the ... resin out of the flower heads to use as a salve for poison ivy outbreaks. ...
books.google.com/books?isbn=1589791908...
 
Left over salve was stored in a bottle or cup for future use. ... pain relieving salve made of ground Jimsonweed leaves, or washed with a Gumweed decoction. ...
www.cabrillo.edu/~crsmith/OhloneMed.html - 74k
 
=============
(I AM SO IMPRESSED WITH THE EXTERNAL USES FOR ARNICA (montana and related species) and now that GUMWEED is out in full force, too, and the flowers are similar to the Arnica flowers, I thought I'd simply check the above info, and nothing really indicates the similar applications from it's flowers. --"Cheyenne Cin" - P.S. I ate a sticky gumweed unopened top today, it's gummy, chewy and tastes rather good!)

=========================
 
6348 Plantain Herb Salve;broadleaf plantain tea,plantain leaves in salad,archive links
... Black AshFraxinus nigra Fallgold Black ... GaillardiaGaillardia aristata Western Marsh CudweedGnaphalium palustre Broadleaf GumweedGrindelia squarrosa Common SunflowerHelianthus annuus ... Lee & Cindy leeandcindy@... cheyennecin May 19, 2005 10:51 pm 1296FORBS ...
Lee & Cynthia
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jul 29, 2008
1:23 am
6279 senecio-NEVER INGEST internally,dangers,pictures,herbal uses-yellow da isy sunflower
... Tragopogon (Goat's Beard, etc)-for Liver, Gall Bladder, diuretic, etc. ... top, that opens and ... gaillardia aristata) Gumweed (grindelia subalpina) Yellow Salsify (tragopogon dubius major) Arrowleaf Senecio (senecio triangularis ... Lee & Cindy leeandcindy ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jul 16, 2008
7:30 pm
6203 Re: herbalremedies.com-gout remedies page,but really covers lots more than just gout or arthritis
... Grand Fir Grapefruit Grapefruit Seed Grape Seed Gravel Root Green Tea Griffonia Grindelia Ground Ivy Guarana Guayacan Guggul Gumweed Gymnema Hawthorn Hazelnut He Shou Wu Heather Hemidesmus Hemp Henbane Herb Robert Hesperidin Hibiscus Histidine Holly Honey ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jul 2, 2008
3:23 am
6202 herbalremedies.com-gout remedies page,but really covers lots more than just gout or arthritis
... Grand Fir Grapefruit Grapefruit Seed Grape Seed Gravel Root Green Tea Griffonia Grindelia Ground Ivy Guarana Guayacan Guggul Gumweed Gymnema Hawthorn Hazelnut He Shou Wu Heather Hemidesmus Hemp Henbane Herb Robert Hesperidin Hibiscus Histidine Holly Honey ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jul 2, 2008
3:16 am
6119 Re: Salsify -- Tragopogon (Goat's Beard, etc)-for Liver, Gall Bladder, diuretic, etc.
... forgot what it's called. I have salsify- a tall leafy stalk with yellow flower on top, that opens and ... gaillardia aristata) Gumweed (grindelia subalpina) Yellow Salsify (tragopogon dubius major) Arrowleaf Senecio (senecio triangularis ... Lee & Cindy leeandcindy ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jun 12, 2008
3:12 am
5908 Symbio's Food Effects Index-Great List of Medicinal Properties!
... allergic rashes. Not recommended for pregnant or lactating women, for children, or for long-term use. GUM BENZOIN Yeast killer. GUMWEED SEE: GRINDELIA GYMNEMA Indian herb also known as gurmar. Antioxidant. Antiseptic. Astringent. Diuretic. Mild laxative. Helps ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
May 5, 2008
5:51 pm
5810 Re: Goldenseal (Hydrastis canadenis)(w/Echinacea)cold, flu,infection,digestion,more(link)
... com/group/FoodHerbHealth/msearch?query=goldenseal& pos=230&cnt=10 == Plant Sources against fungus,mildew,herbal-Goldenseal,Gumweed?,more = = don't try to join Rapture Imminent Group-can't get new members in! http://groups.msn.com/RaptureImminent/messages ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Mar 24, 2008
5:52 pm
5361 Re: With Selenium-CANNOT CATCH virulent flu strains,more
... total ascorbic acid ... With all the research studies showing selenium to be an incredibly important trace ... = A curlycup gumweed bloom. (Grindelia ... http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=gumweed+Grindelia+selenium&btnG=Sear ch THIS IS A COMMON WEED IN ...
lee & cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Dec 3, 2007
11:28 pm
4662 Re: Some Aster Root Uses;Chronic Bronchitis Chinese Medicine,more
... 19k - [PDF] Introduction to Ethnobotany CurriculumFile Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML Cancer: alum root, curly-top gumweed, goat’s rue, milkweed, purple coneflower. Chest pains: American licorice, beardtongue, prairie coneflower, prairie ... schoolgardens ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jul 5, 2007
2:30 am
2862
Medicinal Herbs Ci-G (with links to the rest of the alphabet)
... inflammatory diseases because of it’s anti-inflammatory effects. Used in weight loss, and as a caffeine free coffee replacer. Gumweed Grindelia squarrosa Use for asthma (except where a weak heart is involved), bronchitis, whooping cough, catarrh of uterus and ...
 
Matched Messages 1 - 10 of 20 (1.180 sec)   First  |  < Previous  |  Next >  |  Last
 
 
1817 Database of Santa Barbara Wildflowers (Pictures)
... Bidens pilosaCold Springs Trail A weed. Hairy or Narrowleaf Fringe-pod Thysanocarpus curvipesSpring, Carrizo Plain Hareweed, Gumweed Tarweed or Sticky Madia Madia gracilisRomero Trail These small flowers grow next to the trail kind of as if they were weeds ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Aug 25, 2005
2:08 am
1789 This and That- more about herbs, wildflowers and weeds (Yellow Dock)
http://www.newvita.com/ingredients/a1.html new vita® Herbal Ingredients Achieve Better Health in Weeks Acanthopanax Root Bark Traditional Uses Removes wind and dampness, supplements liver and kidneys, strengthens tendons and bones, invigorates blood ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Aug 19, 2005
6:49 pm
1734 Tea to Fight Colds and Flu (Find the WILD WEEDS NOW, and USE THEM!)
... coneflower, you will immediately be able to recognize the yellow coneflower. = WEEDS FOUND EVERYWHERE, and quite valuable -- Gumweed (selenium/camphor content) Broadleaf Plaintain seeds (allantoin content) = Also in my tea-- Rhus Glabra leaves Wild Geranium ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Aug 7, 2005
4:45 pm
1691 Plant Sources against fungus,mildew,herbal-Goldenseal,Gumweed?,more
... known as terpenoids. ... www.shirleys-wellness-cafe.com/herbs2.htm - 118k - = (BY THE WAY, THE WEED WE DISCUSSED the other day, gumweed- (WITH SELENIUM AND CAMPHORY TASTE, etc.)-- I've been eating it and I really believe it's doing great things (against stuffiness ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jul 26, 2005
9:24 pm
1672 Re: SELENIUM-Will Keep the VIRULENT part of FLU Away from LUNGS! More
... where-taxon=Grindelia+camporum+var.+camporum - 40k - Henry W. Coe State Park Wildflower Album - Grindelia camporum Great Valley Gumweed Grindelia camporum. Sunflower / Aster / Composite Family (Asteraceae). Blooms May through October. Photo by Barry Breckling ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jul 23, 2005
8:17 pm
1671 Re: SELENIUM-Will Keep the VIRULENT part of FLU Away from LUNGS! More
... with sticky flowers that aren't really even flowers anymore, "GUMWEED", get some, and keep it for FLU- and selenium! At least that ... okprairie.com/ Images/gum%20weed.jpg 174 x 146 pixels - 8k Image gumweed curly gumweed http://images.google.com/images?svnum=10&hl=en ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jul 23, 2005
8:02 pm
1447 update on 'repeat' summer grazing of common yard weeds, mushrooms, etc
... cordifolia) Black-eyed Susan (rudbeckia hirta) Tall Coneflower (rudbeckia ampla) Gaillardia (gaillardia aristata) Gumweed (grindelia subalpina) Yellow Salsify (tragopogon dubius major) Arrowleaf Senecio (senecio triangularis) Black-tipped ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jun 16, 2005
8:49 pm
1388 Wild Begonia-Rumex venosus(Vein Dock);HUGE LIST of Edible Plants (and Inedible Plants, too)
Page 9-- CONFESSION- I am leaving a segment out of this now- perhaps a couple of segments, and here is the link again The mission of Longevity Herb Press is to heal ourselves and our ... http://business.gorge.net/longevity/Publications/Medicinal%20Plants ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jun 6, 2005
3:40 am
1297 Re: FORBS-NOBLE FOUNDATION PLANT IMAGE GALLERY - http://www.noble.org/imagegallery/Forbhtml/fCommonIndex.html
... GoldenrodEuthamia graminifolia Common GaillardiaGaillardia aristata Western Marsh CudweedGnaphalium palustre Broadleaf GumweedGrindelia squarrosa Common SunflowerHelianthus annuus Cultivated SunflowerHelianthus annuus Nuttall's SunflowerHelianthus nuttallii ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
May 20, 2005
4:51 am
1205 Male Cottonwood Tree Buds; more-Uses of Native Plants of North Table Mountain Vicinity, Golden, Colorado
... medicinal uses· The domesticated version of this plant is common in gardens along the Front Range. Grindelia squarrosa Curlycup Gumweed· LEAVES: tea for several ills · FLOWERS: tea for several ills - stomach aches in particular; decoction of flowering tops applied ...
 
=============================================

#6392 From: Lee & Cynthia <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Wed Aug 6, 2008 4:05 am
Subject:: Re: barley,beta glucan (whole oats)-gout,arthritis,Heart,Diabetes,lower cholesterol,excretes toxins,more
cheyennecin
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6391
 
 
ARCHIVE LINKS:
 
... 1479.htm - 69k - Cached - Similar pagesBarley Beta-Glucan Fiber Lowers Coronary Heart Disease RiskMay 20, 2008 ... Barley Beta-Glucan Fiber Lowers Coronary Heart Disease Risk. ... Intestinal bacteria use soluble fibers as food sources. ... www.naturalnews ... http://au.groups.yahoo.com/group/FoodHerbHealth/message/6391
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
9:44 pm
6312 Chicory
... inulin such as ... www.nsc24.com/nscproducts.htm - 27k Beta Glucan, immune enhancer, natural ... 1494Re: glutathione, watermelon ... 662Pero Beverage(Coffee Substitute-contains malted barley, barley, chicory, rye) ... Cafix Pero and Cafix are two ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jul 23, 2008
10:24 pm
6203 Re: herbalremedies.com-gout remedies page,but really covers lots more than just gout or arthritis
... Baical Skullcap Banaba Leaf Banana Baneberry Barberry Barley Basil Bay Bayberry Bean Bearbind Beech Flr. Bee Pollen ... Beet Root Belladonna Bentonite Clay Benzoin Bergamot Beta carotene Beta glucan Beta sitosterol Beth root Bifidobacterium Big sagebrush ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jul 1, 2008
9:23 pm
6202 herbalremedies.com-gout remedies page,but really covers lots more than just gout or arthritis
... Baical Skullcap Banaba Leaf Banana Baneberry Barberry Barley Basil Bay Bayberry Bean Bearbind Beech Flr. Bee Pollen ... Beet Root Belladonna Bentonite Clay Benzoin Bergamot Beta carotene Beta glucan Beta sitosterol Beth root Bifidobacterium Big sagebrush ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jul 1, 2008
9:16 pm
6091 Re: The 10 Best Foods You're Not Eating
... pressure. CARROTS One of the best sources of the antioxidant beta-carotene, which the body converts to vitamin A. This ... IBAngelofLight ... leeandcindy@... cheyennecin Jul 6, 2005 8:48 pm 1163Glutathione-from Barley (Grass)-more about Barley (probably growing in your back yard ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jun 7, 2008
6:19 pm
5924 Re: Cystic Fibrosis-Glyconutrients,more(Very Serious Problem!)
... same bed with adults. CYSTIC FIBROSIS- glutathione, 200-500 mlgms. or Cystine, (NAC). CYSTITIS-YARROW, CHAMOMILE, CELERY SEED. Barley broth, cranberry ... Lee & Cindy leeandcindy@... cheyennecin Jul 22, 2006 1:05 pm 3072The mineral selenium proves itself as ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
May 6, 2008
8:49 am
5870 glucomannan-Konjac root extract and Aloe Vera (used in weight loss fi ber,more)-archive links included
... sprout granules Yucca powder FIBER Acacia gum Barley bran Cellulose fiber Corn bran Glucomannan ... polysaccharides also known as mucopolysaccharides, MPS, Beta-linked glucomannans (including the Beta- 1,3; Beta-Glucan and the Beta-1,4 known ... Lee & Cindy leeandcindy ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Apr 10, 2008
6:48 pm
5619 Re: Peritoniti(peritoneum inflammation)-Echinacea,Garlic,Horsetail,Parsley,Dandelion,more
... antibacterial action. It can help activate T cells and natural killer cells. Protects the heart against free radical damage. Barley Juice Powder - Extremely rich in nutrients needed by body. Helps develop a strong resistance to disease, fungus, serious degenerative ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Feb 2, 2008
11:08 am
5094 Astaxanthin-from pink microalgae,salmon-arthritis pain,colds & flu,sun tans
... more ... Glucan cancer ... For Information on Beta Glucan see my page "Beta" - Click Here ... highly concentrated natural source ... lecithin, flaxseed, phytosterols, soy protein, rice bran, barley, astaxanthin, Probiotic Blend*, Enzyme Blend** *Lactobacillus ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Oct 8, 2007
8:45 pm
5066
Order Lithium,Pine Bark Extract,more-Attention Deficit Disorder Herbal Remedy,etc
... powder Wheat sprout granules Yucca powder FIBER Acacia gum Barley bran Cellulose fiber Corn bran Glucomannan Guar gum Gum ... Bee propolis 2:1 extract Bee propolis 90% Bentonite clay Beta Glucan Betaine HCl Caprylic triglyceride Carrageenan Chitosan ...
 
 
4096 Beta Glucan-anti-Diabetes,anti-Cancer,Cholesterol Lowering,more
food sources beta glucan-Oats,Barley,Soluble Fiber,Grains, Mushrooms (see http://au.groups ... claim CFR 101.81 is based on ... www.idahobarley.org/barleyfoods.htm - 31k - ThirdAge: Beta-Glucan Different food sources contain differing amounts of ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Feb 13, 2007
5:23 pm
3994 Sarcoidosis
... breakfast or lunch and then an evening meal. Drink lemon barley water between meals, but do not drink with food or for ... dose. She also suggested for me to use Colloidal Silver, Beta Glucans with Maitake, Olive Leaf Liquid and Dr. Chi's formula ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jan 30, 2007
7:17 pm
3756 Re: Top 10 Resolutions:Eat Smart to Extend Your "Healthspan"
... 1459-66. · Delaney B, Nicolosi RJ, Wilson TA et al. Beta-glucan fractions from barley and oats are similarly antiatherogenic in hypercholesterolemic ... Virtamo J, Albanes D. Dietary carotenoids, serum beta-carotene, and retinol and risk of lung cancer in ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Dec 19, 2006
4:22 pm
3755 Top 10 Resolutions:Eat Smart to Extend Your "Healthspan"
... LDL resistance to oxidation. J Nutr. 2004 Jun;134(6):1459-66. · Delaney B, Nicolosi RJ, Wilson TA et al. Beta-glucan fractions from barley and oats are similarly antiatherogenic in hypercholesterolemic Syrian golden hamsters. J Nutr; 2003 Feb 133 ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Dec 19, 2006
1:01 pm
3574 Organic Wholesome Diet-Selected Products;Drakshasavaa,more
... thyme, marjoram (apigenin) - Mushrooms (vitamin D and beta glucans) - Onions, apples (quercetin) - Peanuts (resveratrol ... LOX inhibitos) - Super greens - chlorella, spirulina, barley greens - Raspberries, strawberries, walnuts (ellagic ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Nov 3, 2006
3:23 pm
3285 Re: TB (tuberculosis) & more-raw onion & garlic,Sunshine,more
... coagulant (blood-thinning) activity. Contains the antioxidant beta carotene. Milk. Milk fat promotes cancer and heart disease ... leukemia in China and breast cancer in Japan. Extract (sulfated B-glucans) has been declared by Japanese scientists more effective as ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Sep 3, 2006
8:45 pm
3172 Re: Swollen glands,parasites,'de-stinking' garlic,lots more
Cold and Flu Season Essentials; Immune Support (More Garlic "De-Stinker" advice); allicin- breaking biofilms from bacteria, parasites, virus, etc. = http://www.ralphgolanmd.com/coldandfluseason.htm Dr. Golan's Articles ORDER NOW!CLICK HERE TO VIEW DR ...
Lee and Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Aug 4, 2006
5:18 pm
3003 Xylanase digestive enzyme we don't naturally have-Kombucha "Mushroom"?
... 2003) Page 1 (5) MIXED XYLANASE, ?-GLUCANASE Mixed beta-Glucanase and xylanase enzyme preparation from Humicola insolens ... Trichoderma longibrachiatum (formerly reesei) corn, barley, wheat, wheat bran, rye, milo: breaks down cellulose ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jun 9, 2006
8:53 pm
1976 More Alphabetical Lists of Foods and Herbs and Health Properties,Flu,etc.
... them to become sexually charged. At one time in Hawaii, women were forbidden to eat the male fruit on pain of death. [Air +] Barley is the oldest of the Seven Sacred Grains of mankind and was cultivated in Jordan around 10,000 BC. The grain was sacred to various ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Sep 23, 2005
11:20 pm
1714 Beta Glucan-colds,flu,cancer,immune system-from yeast cell walls,oats,more
... sugar (polysaccharide) derived from the cell wall of baker's yeast, oat and barley fiber, and many medicinal mushrooms, ... www.vitacost.com/science/hn/Supp/Beta_Glucan.htm - 61k - Beta-1,3-glucans Topic At that time a crude preparation containing ...
 
1524 Medicinal Value of Whole Foods
... coagulant (blood-thinning) activity. Contains the antioxidant beta carotene. Milk. Milk fat promotes cancer and heart disease ... leukemia in China and breast cancer in Japan. Extract (sulfated B-glucans) has been declared by Japanese scientists more effective as ...
IBAngelofLight@...
ibangel22
Jun 28, 2005
10:23 pm
1495 Re: glutathione, watermelon and LOTS MORE GREAT FOOD INFO, antioxidants, etc.
... coagulant (blood-thinning) activity. Contains the antioxidant beta carotene. Milk. Milk fat promotes cancer and heart disease ... leukemia in China and breast cancer in Japan. Extract (sulfated B-glucans) has been declared by Japanese scientists more effective as ...
CINDY
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jun 24, 2005
11:42 am
1493 glutathione, watermelon and LOTS MORE GREAT FOOD INFO, antioxidants, etc.
... coagulant (blood-thinning) activity. Contains the antioxidant beta carotene. Milk. Milk fat promotes cancer and heart disease ... leukemia in China and breast cancer in Japan. Extract (sulfated B-glucans) has been declared by Japanese scientists more effective as ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jun 23, 2005
10:36 pm
1163 Glutathione-from Barley (Grass)-more about Barley (probably growing in your back yard!)- apparently a SUPER FOOD, esp. when green and sprouted!
... lower blood cholesterol levels. In addition, barley's dietary fiber is high in beta glucan, which helps to lower cholesterol by binding ... that you may find. After rinsing, add one part barley to three and a half parts boiling water or broth ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Apr 6, 2005
4:04 pm
1050 Re: Natural ways to lower cholesterol
... percent. Minimal side effects have been reported so far. Suggested dose: 10-20 mg daily. beta glucans, derived from yeast and grains like oats and barley, is a soluble-fiber component that inhibits cholesterol absorption in the GI tract. A study ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Mar 2, 2005
1:27 pm
811 Araak tree or Peelu tree-rids teeth, mouth of bacteria, plaque, germs,decay
... Avocado Baical Skullcap Banaba Leaf Baneberry Barberry Barley Basil Bay Bayberry Bean Bearbind Beech Flr. Bee Pollen ... Beet Root Belladonna Bentonite Clay Benzoin Bergamot Beta carotene Beta glucan Beta sitosterol Beth root Bifidobacterium Big sagebrush ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Dec 19, 2004
10:36 pm
790 Medicinal Benefits of Whole Foods-Alphabetical List of Some good foods
... coagulant (blood-thinning) activity. Contains the antioxidant beta carotene. Milk. Milk fat promotes cancer and heart disease ... leukemia in China and breast cancer in Japan. Extract (sulfated B-glucans) has been declared by Japanese scientists more effective as ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Dec 12, 2004
8:01 pm
703 natural immune system boosters- bee pollen for Interferon, lots more
... contain polysaccharides, especially Lentinan, powerful compounds that help in building immunity. They are a source of Beta Glucan. They also have a protein called lectin, which attacks cancerous cells and prevents them from multiplying. They also ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Nov 10, 2004
3:59 pm
7 Wild Yam plants to order; "Triple Green" Ingredients
... Strawberry Powder 1125mg * Soya Lecithin(non GMO) 300mg * Oat Beta Glucan 1500mg * Apple Fiber Pectin 100mg * Brown Rice Bran 50mg ... Lactobacillus Rhamnosus(13 Billion Total) 100mg * Sprouted Barley Malt 250mg * Quercetin 75mg * Red Grape Skin Extract 75mg ...
===========================
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#6391 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Wed Aug 6, 2008 3:41 am
Subject:: barley,beta glucan (whole oats)-gout,arthritis,Heart,Diabetes,lower ch olesterol,excretes toxins,more
cheyennecin
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What is Gout | Causes of Gout

These come in many types and usually include barley grass, wheat grass, spirulina, ... Many people who suffer from gout, gouty arthritis and other forms of ...
www.womens-health-questions.com/gout.html - 20k -

Gout Causing Foods / Gout Protecting Foods / Gout Diet / Purines ...

Goutcure.com has been helping thousands of gout sufferers since 1998 who are serious .... Barley malt syrup, Barley, Bran, Cashews, Cereals (unrefined with ...
www.goutcure.com/goutcausfood.html - 24k -
[PDF]

Purine-Restricted Diet (Gout)

File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML
Potatoes; rice; barley; spaghetti,. macaroni, and other pastas; limit. use of higher-fat foods ... causes symptoms that feel like arthritis. Purine is ...
www.stronghealth.com/services/primarycare/pdf/Restrictgout.pdf -

Primary Care - Believe in Better Health Toolkit - Purine ...

A low-purine diet is recommended for individuals with gout and ... in the small joints or soft tissues, and causes symptoms that feel like arthritis. ...
www.stronghealth.com/services/primarycare/toolkitfiles/restrictgout.cfm - 21k

Chapter Barley of The Complete Herbal by Culpeper

Barley in all the parts and compositions thereof (except malt) is more cooling than ... it eases the pains of the gout; barley-flour, white salt, honey, ...
www.bibliomania.com/2/1/66/113/20940/1.html - 11k -

Barley Helps Gout

Hippocrates, Galen and Sydenham supported and wrote about the use of barley water and barley bread as beneficial for treating Gout. ...
www.gout-aware.com/barley-helps-gout.html - 26k -

The Gout Blog by Gout Aware

This Gout blog covers Gout and Arthritis,the culprits of a bad diet and dietary habits, ... Barley helps Gout. Permalink -- click for full blog post ...
www.gout-aware.com/Gout-blog.html - 35k -

Diet Therapy, Gout, Arthritis, conventional treatments ...

gout, Food and diets can be controlled to realize a positive benefit for those suffering ... or another grain, such as barley, can be added to the broth. ...
holisticonline.com/remedies/arthritis/arth_gout_diet.htm - 25k -

A (very) short history of diets for gout -- Snaith 43 (8): 1054 ...

Hippocrates, Sydenham and Galen advocated barley water and barley bread for gout. Is there something undiscovered here? Their health beliefs may have been ...
rheumatology.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/43/8/1054 -

VitaMaker.com - Gout Arthritis - Celadrin - Vitamin C - Vitamin-C ...

VitaMaker Spacer, Home > Conditions A-Z > Gout Arthritis. Gout Arthritis. More Conditions A to Z Conditions A-Z .... Barley Green (BarleyGreen) ...
www.vitamaker.com/gout.html - 143k
 
 
=========================

Barley Foods

A food made from eligible barley sources must contain at least 0.75 grams of beta-glucan soluble fiber per serving. Health claim CFR 101.81 is based on ...
www.idahobarley.org/barleyfoods.htm - 33k - Cached - Similar pages
[PDF]

Idaho Barley Newsbrief July 2008.pub (Read-Only)

File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML
Jul 25, 2008 ... American infrastructure and jeopardize reliable barley sources which. have helped assure AB’s long-time financial success. ...
www.idahobarley.org/Newsbrief/Idaho%20Barley%20Newsbrief%20July%202008_pub.pdf -

WHFoods: Barley

This chart graphically details the %DV that a serving of Barley provides for each of the nutrients of which it is a good, very good, or excellent source ...
www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tname=foodspice&dbid=127 - 60k -

Evaluation of barley characteristics that are associated with ...

Eight barley sources were selected for evaluation. Initially, 32 sources of ... The eight sources of barley selected for evaluation were of 6 varieties, ...
findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa4035/is_200308/ai_n9242187 - 46k -
[PDF]

Barley Facts 07.wrk

File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML
pearl barley. •. sieved barley meal. Does the FDA specify fiber content of the. qualifying barley sources? Yes. Dehulled and hulless whole grain barley ...
www.barleyfoods.org/BarleyFacts-FDA.pdf -

Effect of Steam Processed Barley, Source of Protein and Fat on ...

Effect of Steam Processed Barley, Source of Protein and Fat on Intake and Utilization of Starter Rations by Dairy Calves. D. E. Waldern1 and L. J. Fisher ...
jds.fass.org/cgi/content/abstract/61/2/221?ck=nck -
[PDF]

NOTICE OF RELEASE OF JACKSON-FRAZIER GERMPLASM MEADOW BARLEY ...

File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML
Germplasm is released as a source identified class of certified seed and plants, natural. track. Origin: Seed of Jackson-Frazier Germplasm meadow barley was ...
www.plant-materials.nrcs.usda.gov/pubs/orpmcrn7176.pdf -

Sources of powdery mildew resistance in a wild barley collection

barley sources of resistance to powdery mildew. sions were fully resistant in the field or showed. characteristic nonvirulent pathogen traces up to 1 % ...
www.springerlink.com/index/XWHT6221646L656T.pdf -

New Sources of Resistance to Greenbug in Barley -- Porter and ...

These new sources of resistance to greenbug biotype G in barley should prove useful in the development of new greenbug-resistant barley cultivars. ...
crop.scijournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/44/4/1245 -

The Alberta Barley Commission -- your source for information about ...

The Alberta Barley Commission is a member-driven organization that represents Alberta’s 17000 barley producers. Barley is one of the building blocks of ...
www.albertabarley.com/barley/education/barley_sources.html - 52k -
 
==================
 

Beta Glucan

Beta Glucan, the Difference. ... The source is defined as to what the Beta glucan is derived from, ... Discover why Food Matrix is Americas #1 vitamin. ...
www.beta-glucan-info.com/beta-glucan.htm - 36k - Cached - Similar pages

Beta Glucan and Immune Support

Beta Glucan, Discover its Purpose and the Difference in Beta Glucan Products through ... It is an all-natural, food source derived dietary supplement. ...
www.beta-glucan-info.com/ - 42k - Cached - Similar pages

Oat Beta Glucan - Essential Supplements from Flora Health Canada

A typical diet usually contains about 1.25 grams of oat beta-glucan, obtained from a variety of food sources. That still leaves a "glucan gap" of about 1.75 ...
www.florahealth.com/flora/home/Canada/products/1479.htm - 69k - Cached - Similar pages

Barley Beta-Glucan Fiber Lowers Coronary Heart Disease Risk

May 20, 2008 ... Barley Beta-Glucan Fiber Lowers Coronary Heart Disease Risk. ... Intestinal bacteria use soluble fibers as food sources. ...
www.naturalnews.com/023272.html - 37k - Cached - Similar pages

BGLife™ - A rich source of Beta-Glucan

Barley is superior to other grains because it’s a source of beta-glucan soluble ... Governor Otter Supports BGLife Food Barley Health Benefits and Economic ...
www.bglifebarley.com/ - 12k - Cached - Similar pages

More support for beta-glucan's anti-diabetes benefits

Jan 3, 2007 ... "Consumption of food sources containing adequate levels of beta-glucan and RS should reduce the rise of type 2 diabetes." ...
www.nutraingredients-usa.com/news/ng.asp?id=73027-beta-glucan-resistant-starch-diabetes - 57k -

Beta Glucans

Beta Glucan Food Sources. Beta glucans are found in several different sources. ... Oat beta glucans are the only source approved by the FDA to lower ...
www.supplementnews.org/beta-glucan/ - 111k -

ThirdAge: Beta-Glucan

Different food sources contain differing amounts of the various chemical constituents collectively called beta-glucan. Grains primarily contain beta-1 ...
www.thirdage.com/ebsco/files/104429.html - 47k -

Featured Nutrient: Beta-glucan : Eating Well on Healthline

Food Sources of beta-glucan:. Since food composition tables don't differentiate between different types of fiber, no reliable data is yet available for ...
www.healthline.com/eatingwell/etw-featured-nutrient-beta-glucan - 42k -

Life Enhancement:: Lowering Cholesterol with Beta-Glucan-Rich Barley

*Since 1997, the FDA has allowed a food-industry claim regarding the ability of beta-glucan soluble fiber from whole oat sources to reduce the risk of ...
www.life-enhancement.com/article_template.asp?ID=1854 - 31k -
======================\
 

Joints, Joint Pain, Joint Relief, Joint Health, Osteoarthritis ...

... arthritic pain, osteoarthritis, other forms of arthritis, gout, ... plus Swedish flower pollen extract, beta glucans & Chinese wolfberry; -- all amazing ...
www.reallywell.com/joint.htm - 35k -

30 selected items - PubMed Results

Cell wall beta-glucan derived from Candida albicans acts as a trigger for autoimmune ... osteoarthritis, chondrocalcinosis and gouty arthritis at age 79. ...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14647385,16087382,15781585,9652497,15314695,17227914,16869010,16977380,176668... -

Immune System Breakthrough...

Beta 1,3/1,6 Glucan is particularly effective against arthritis. One theory is that the toxins which are excreted from undetected internal infections ...
www.immunecentral.com/templates/info_template.cfm/1453/70/1 - 21k - Cached - Similar pages

Gout

Gout, gout symptoms and remedies for gout arthritis treatment. ... Bee Pollen, Bee Propolis, Beta Glucan, Beta Carotene, Betaine HCL, Bifidobacterium ...
www.supplementnews.org/gout/ - 94k -

Gout | Mr Cabbage Head

Relevant tags: arthritis, blood pressure, gout, heart disease, pH balance, salt .... in water (known as beta-glucan) and some that does not dissolve. ...
www.mrcabbagehead.com/tag/gout/ - 54k -

DermaMed - Welcome

Gout: is a type of arthritis caused by increased levels of uric acid in the body .... Beta Glucans Barley: It is alcohol extract of soluble barley fibers. ...
www.dermamed.com/tech_docs/arthritis/arthritis_lit.asp - 54k -

 

Because of its high beta glucan content, higher than both Reishi and Shiitake ... headache, double vision, blood pressure, arthritis,rheumatism, gout, ...
www.healthmarvels.net/product.html  - 37k -

Health Products

Beta Glucan is a unique polysaccharide composed of glucose molecules extracted and .... supports gout, arthritis, rheumatism; natural source of iron. ...
iamzenjen.tripod.com/id9.html - 84k -

 

Beta glucan is only significantly available from the well-pressed or very finely ... which is generally difficult to dissolve and which leads to gout, ...
www.gaiaresearch.co.za/kombucha.html  - 65k -

Beta-Glucan Information

Beta Glucan is an extremely potent, immune activating substance taken from the ... The extraction is so pure that consumption of Beta-Glucan is harmless, ...
www.healthguidance.org/entry/1340/1/Beta-Glucan-Information.html - 84k -
===================
 
 
===========================
 
 
Barley for malt
791 x 1181 - 568k - jpg
www.assuredukmalt.com
 
 
Although barley is a major food crop ...
300 x 305 - 18k - jpg
www.hgca.com
 
 
 

#6390 From: "CINDY" <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Wed Aug 6, 2008 1:36 am
Subject:: Re: Folk Meds,Cancer Treatments,Herbal Medicine Wheel
cheyennecin
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I just scanned the last message, and in "Herbal Medicine Wheel", saw
the Indian new age pagan ritualistic scam stuff, and even in previous
message(s) there are some cultish inclusions I missed upon original
posting(s). Just reminding you to discern! --"Cheyenne Cin" (Cindy)
===


--- In FoodHerbHealth@..., "Lee and Cindy"
<leeandcindy@...> wrote:
>
>   Folk Medicine For Natural Healing Of Different Ailments!Folk
medicine is traditional healing practice which is used for
alleviating illness and injury and provides aid while giving birth to
child.
> It is not a scientific medicine but folk medicine is more formal
and systematic medicine.

> ==== don't try to join Rapture Imminent Group-can't get new members
in!
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>

#6389 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Wed Aug 6, 2008 1:31 am
Subject:: Folk Meds,Cancer Treatments,Herbal Medicine Wheel
cheyennecin
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Folk Medicine For Natural Healing Of Different Ailments!

Folk MedicineFolk medicine is traditional healing practice which is used for alleviating illness and injury and provides aid while giving birth to child.

It is not a scientific medicine but folk medicine is more formal and systematic medicine.

Folk medicine uses many plant derived remedies and by using folk medicine, you can keep your self away from modern medical services.

Folk medicines are available for curing both physical and mental illness.

You can use plant or tree roots, fruits, insects, and food items for treating cancer, malaria, warts, sore throats to arthritis, impotence, high blood pressure and infected wounds.

Folk medicine from different plants:

Some plants are also used as folk medicines. The below folk remedies are used for treating many physical disorders.

  • Chokecherry plant as remedy: It is used for treating pneumonia. It also treats cold, cough and clears your throat. You can use it by boiling chokecherry plant bark and make it as tea.
  • Juniper plant as remedy: It is used for treating kidney ailments. You can use it by crushing berries and mix it in tea and consume.
  • Labrador plant as remedy: You can use the leaf of Labrador plant for having relief over cold, flu and stomach upset. First you have to dry these leaves and make it into tea. Use this mixture as folk remedy.
  • Dandelion plant as remedy: This plant leaves are boiled freshly and used as the blood purifier.
  • Balsam plant as remedy: You can use the sap of balsam fir for healing a cut by spreading sap over the cut.
  • Haw thorn bush as remedy: It is used for treating sore throat. This is used by boiling the bush and gargling with liquid.

Many plants synthesize the substances and are used for maintaining health condition. All the above remedies are folk remedies which are used for treating different physical disorders.

Natural Folk medicine as herbal medicine:

  • Fresh steaks and poltice is used for treating infected wounds.
  • Molasses is used for treating sore throat and used for treating baby’s teeth problem.
  • Fresh cucumber and wet bag tea is used for treating bad eye.
  • Garlic is used for reducing high cholesterol and high blood pressure.
  • Juice from nim leaves is used for curing malaria.

Natural folk medicines are safe to use as they will not cause any side effects and chemical reactions. These are also called as home remedies.

These remedies are used for curing different ailments such as abdominal pain, chest pain, blood pressure, blood poisoning, anemia, arthritis, bone crackling, burning tongue, bladder infection, diarrhea, dermatitis, dehydration, dry skin, ear ache, eczema [Eczema Treatment] and many other skin diseases and physical disorders.

Different methods of folk medicine used in treatment with the help of herbs, animal parts, ceremony, conjuring, magic, witchcraft and many other means are used. This treatment is done apart from medical science.

Folk medicine is simple and easy to use. There are no risks and side effects involved in taking this medicine.

 
=========================
 

Cancer Treatments

 

 

There are a number of cancer treatments that have a history of success, without the toxicity of the so-called conventional treatments.

Also see this article from DietNet covering approaches to healing cancer.

This article is a good summary of natural treatments for cancer. It was sent to us, and unfortunately we don't know who wrote it. But the important thing is not who wrote it, but if it checks out, and it does!

"If I had cancer, I would do the following things:

I would do blood electrification with our Black Box to clear the blood of any microbes (bacteria + virus) that might be contributing to cancer. Various researchers have noticed that cancer patients have tube or worm like bacteria in their blood. This creature is either inside or on the outside of red blood cells and may not be visible unless the blood is traumatized by pressing down on the cover glass with a toothpick or other instrument. Then large numbers of them appear and swim around. This has been called Siphonospora polymorpha, Leptotrichia bucallils Robin, or other names. Enderlein considered this to be the 'ascit', an advanced and dangerous stage of mucor racemosus, a normal creature found in everyone's blood. See Michael Coyle's book 'Advanced Applied Microscopy for Nutritional Evaluation and Correction' for more on this.

I would use one of our Rife devices to apply anti-cancer frequencies to my body to kill the cancer viruses that everyone has thanks to contaminated polio vaccines.

I would take one of the products, MGN-3 or Transfer Factor Plus, which have proven to double or triple peoples immunity (natural killer cells which destroy cancerous cells)! Strengthening the immune system in a natural way is very very important when fighting cancer. (The immune boosting drugs, Interferon or Interleukin 2, have severe side effects ranging from nausea and vomiting to kidney failure. There have been many patients who have died as a result of these side effects.)

I would take the advice of Donald Kelley DD who says that cancer can be dissolved in the body with extra pancreatic enzymes. He says that cancer protects itself from the immune system with a protein shell around the tumors that can be dissolved with these enzymes. He recommends eating little or no animal source protein (which needs lots of pancreatic enzymes for its digestion). Either Full Spectrum formula by HEC, or Enzyme Solution by Family Solutions will work fine. Take 2 just before each meal and 3 once a day on an empty stomach. If this does not eliminate gas and heartburn, try adding betaine hydrochloride at the end of each meal. Start with one per meal.

I would eat apricot kernels daily in order to obtain vitamin B-17 which is known to kill cancerous cells. I would take 1 kernel for each 10 pounds of my body weight (throughout the day). Eskimos with B-17 in their diets never get cancer. Laetrile (a purified version of B-17) has been successfully administered to cancer patients in clinics in Mexico for decades now.

I would make a super strong blood purifying tea to aid the body with its detoxifying of cancer metabolic byproducts (waste) and also to aid in getting out any toxemia that contributed to creating the cancer in the first place. (only toxins and viruses cause cancer). Essiac is one formula invented by the natives in Canada and has been found effective when prepared properly. But I've heard that many versions of it found in health food stores are not made with the original proportions. One tea that I highly recommend is by Jason Winters. He went all around the world asking the herbal medicine men what to use for cancer. He was told of 3 herbs that had a good track record of reversing cancer. He started making and selling it as "Jason Winters Tea". A person should drink half a gallon daily for every 100 lbs of their weight. Here is the recipe:
32oz water, 1/8 cup Burdock, 1 tsp Licorice root.
Put herbs in water and bring to boil. Then turn down heat and cook for 15 minuts.
Then turn heat very low and add: 1/4 cup Red Clover, 1 tsp Chaparral.
Cover and cook for 15 minutes.

I would take colloidal silver daily because Peter Lindemann reported "I have spoken to two women who claim to have cured themselves of breast cancer with colloidal silver. They were both diagnosed by biopsy. After the diagnosis, they took 2 teaspoons of colloidal silver a day until their surgery. One took a home-made product, the other took a silver protein product. In both cases, the biopsy of the removed breast tissue and lymph nodes was cancer free."

I would take at least 1 tbsp daily of cold processed Flax Seed Oil which is known to help reverse cancer. I would read "Fats & Oils by Udo Erasmus" also to learn about good oils and bad (99% of which are sold in health food stores). He says that any oil which has been exposed to light, oxygen, or heat (above 350 degrees) will contain trans-fatty acids which can contribute to cancer. Originally before exposure they were essential fatty acids which are essential to good health. So now only oils processed especially to avoid light/heat/air are recommended by him. Spectrum Naturals and Arrowhead Mills both produce oils this way. (make sure it says so on the label). They are in black plastic bottles.

I would buy a vegetable juicer and start making and drinking juice made from carrots, celery, and spinach. This combination is cleansing and provides enzymes and pure bio-available water that is many times more life enhancing than tap water or any bottled water. It's important for the immune system and also to help clean out cancer-causing toxins in the body. When not drinking juices, I would drink steam distilled water.

I would eat only food that is prepared from fresh food (hopefully grown without pesticides) which would include lots of vegetables (as much raw as possible, especially green leafy ones) and whole grain bread (hopefully home-made). I would eat light foods so that most of the body's energy would go to the immune system instead of to the stomach. I would start the day with cleansing fruits such as grapefruit, orange, lemon, pineapple, apples, and especially grapes. (I've heard of a grape cancer cure where only grapes are eaten the first half of every day and thereafter some grape juice is drank every 15 minutes). Wait 15 minutes for the fruits to exit the stomach before eating any solid food.

I would stop using personal care products that contain cancer causing chemicals and switch to brands that are truly natural.

I would try to breathe fresh air and walk some every day to promote good blood and lymph circulation. I'd try to get some sunshine on my skin every day (on all of it if possible). Cancers hate full-spectrum light (from sunshine or Ott lights). A tumor-susceptible strain of mice lived more than twice as long under full-spectrum as under standard lighting, and rats exposed to full-spectrum light had significantly lessened tumor development. Terminal cancer patients that Dr. Ott knew of personally got well in a rocking chair in the sunshine. Dr. Jane Wright, directing cancer research at Bellevue Memorial Medical Center in New York City in 1959, was fascinated by Ott's ideas. So she instructed progressive-tumor patients to avoid artificial lights and stay outdoors as much as possible that summer. They were not to wear sunglasses or prescription lenses, which block UV light. By that fall, the tumors in 14 of 15 had not grown, and some patients got better; the one whose condition deteriorated sat outdoors but wore prescription lenses.

I would stop drinking fluoridated city water and stop using fluoridated tooth paste. Over half of the U.S.A. population is drinking fluoridated water, which is now linked to cancer and arthritis. Bone cancer has been linked to fluoride in a 10 year study by the National Toxicology Program of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. This sensational news was disclosed in an exclusive report in Medical Tribune, December 28, 1989, but ignored by the mass media. Also, Proctor and Gamble, the maker of Crest (a fluoride toothpaste), presented studies to the U.S. Public Health Service, showing that fluoride tested positive as a cancer-causing agent at the lowest concentrations used. According to Charles Eliot Perkins, a research chemist sent to Germany to take charge of the I.G. Farben Chemical Industries after World War II, repeated doses of fluoride were used to make people submissive to the government. He wrote, "In the rear occiput of the left lobe of the brain, there is a small area of brain tissue that is responsible for the individual's power to resist domination. Repeated doses of fluorine will in time gradually reduce the individual's power to resist by slowly poisoning and narcotizing this area of brain tissue and make him submissive to those who wish to govern him." I was told the scheme by a German chemist who was an official of the I.G. Farben Chemical Industries and prominent in the Nazi movement of the time. (The Fact Finder, Box A Scottsdale, AZ 85352)

I would establish better communication with God and use all that he makes available to me to create a better tomorrow full of health and good attitudes. I'd try not to dwell on bad happenings in the past (some say cancer is just a bodily manifestation of something mentally that is "eating at you"). I'd read books by Louise Hay and follow her suggestions on how to change on the inside. (She overcame cancer metaphysically).

I'd spend less time in front of the TV and computer, and more time under a tree, caring for plants, and playing with children. TV's and computers put out negative energy, plants radiate good energy, and childrens care-free happiness is definitely life enhancing. I would also throw away my microwave oven which leaks out very deadly energy and makes the food cancer causing.

I would go to a health food store and get:

1) Cat's claw (uncaria tomentosa - it is the bark of a South American tree). It is shown to boost cancer-fighting immune cell production and might help slow growth and lower chances of metastasis. Take up to triple or more directed dosage after building up slowly. Use a guaranteed potency version like Now 5000.
2) Biochem Para-Protect Factors by Nature's Life. After building up slowly, take double recommended dosage for three weeks, then once per week afterward.
3) Pau d'arco, also known as taheebo. Buy in bulk and make tea, or in capsules and use at many times the recommended dosage for three weeks, then recommended dosage afterwards. The recommended dosage for therapeutic effect is 20g per day, taken in tea form if desired.
4) Vitamin C. Take from one or more grams at every meal, or up to 20g per day in divided doses. If it causes diarrhea or stomach upset, take less.

If there are any elimination problems, add more fiber to the diet, preferably flax seeds, or take something like Nature's Secret AM/PM Cleanse, Solaray Tetracleanse, Perfect 7, etc.

I would try to eat vitamin B17 (nitriloside) rich foods more often. These include lentils, lima beans, mung-bean sprouts, alfalfa sprouts, some peas, vicia fava, buckwheat, barley, chickpeas (garbanzo beans), and millet. All berries contain nitrilosides, such as huckleberry, Oregon grape, blackberries, wild strawberry, chokecherries, and especially black raspberries. The richest source that is easily available year round is currants (Sunmaid has dried ones and they are sold near the raisins.) Red grapes provide some as well as some good antioxidants, especially if seeded ones can be found (eat the seeds, too, chewing them well). These foods, combined with pancreatic enzymes, could be very effective in treating many forms of cancer, especially tumors.

I would take a good source of polysacharrides. These are immune stimulants which can be very helpful in the treatment of cancer, and are found in the following. Choose one or more:

  • Reishi mushroom. Can be found in some supermarkets, use like regular mushrooms. They are also available encapsulated in herb shops.
  • Maitake mushroom. Harder to find than reishi, but a much better source of polysacharrides and other compounds. The D-Fraction is thought to be the most active component.
  • Astragalus. A good source for the money, it often costs less than $5 per 100 capsules. Also a rich source of selenium, a very important immune factor and antioxidant.
  • Bovine cartilage. The most concentrated source of polysacharrides, but it is expensive.
  • Shark cartilage. Contains a few, but not nearly as much as the others, and it is very expensive.
  • Aloe juice. An inexpensive source which is especially helpful during chemo and radiation to heal internal ulcerations.

If there were any pets in the household, they would be taken to a vet and thoroughly de-parasitized. Droncit is a prescription remedy that reportedly kills all varieties of tapeworms in dogs and cats with no side effects. Then, get them the prescription for Interceptor, a once-a-month chewable which kills heartworms, roundworms, hookworms, and whipworms. If they can be kept outside then that would be better because parasites are easily transferred from pets and can contribute to an undesirable inner condition that is ripe for cancer.

I would then read the book "The Cure for all Diseases" by Hulda Clark (getting the most recent edition which only comes shrink-wrapped and not any of her older books, like "The Cure for all Cancers" since the newer book has many useful and money-saving updates). In this book she explains the whys and hows of eliminating toxins from your environment and foods (and make-up). Following her advice, I would avoid foods and health care items which contained isopropyl alcohol or any potential petroleum byproduct like propylene glycol, isopropanol, petroleum jelly, etc. These are strong catalysts for cancer. Also, according to Clark, the toxins from a common mold in apple juice (usually worse in organic products according to her) can greatly hamper the immune system (killing immune cells directly) as well as stimulate growth of tumors. High doses of vitamin C (3-10 gm) can be used to overcome the problem (it will help detox mold toxins in the liver).

I would take IP6 (inositol hexaphosphate) and Inositol. There is good lab evidence as well as reports coming back from cancer patients that IP6 is able to prevent, inhibit, and reverse cancer. This material is found in food and is not toxic in even very large doses. If you have a product that contains both IP6 and Inositol, take 3000mg twice a day on an empty stomach. If you weigh much more than 150 pounds, take 4000mg twice a day. If your product does not contain both items, take about 2400mg of IP6 and 600mg of Inositol twice a day. If you weigh much more than 150 pounds, take 3200mg and 800mg.

I would do things to kill internal parasites. Vaxa makes a very good product called 'Parasitin' which kills all kinds of single cell parasites plus worms including tapeworms. 'Clear' is also excellent. Or, the Hulda Clark program using cloves, wormwood and black walnut can be used."

From the website - http://www.excel.net/~jaguar/whattodo.html
Philip Day's website - http://credence.org/

Return to the apricot kernels page

 

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The Herbal Medicine Wheel

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used it to cure their babies of colic. Many of us moderns feel that primitive medicine must be based. on natural wisdom, but often this was far from the ...
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Page 1
The Herbal
Medicine Wheel
an unpublished book by
Gary J. Lockhart
(1942–2001)
© copyright 1983 by Gary J. Lockhart
edited and PDF of part placed online
by Arthur Lee Jacobson in 2007
INTRODUCTION
“I pray, O Thou Master of kindness and mercy, open my eyes that I may discover
the secrets of Thy wonderful deeds and that I may know the peculiar curative pow-
ers which Thou has placed in herbs and minerals, in seeds and flowers, in roots and
leaves, in wood and fruit, in wines and oils in water and in other liquids in living
organisms which are in the heavens above and in the waters under the earth in
simple and composite structures and that through them, I shall tell of Thy might to
all generations in whom Thy greatness shall come . . . .”
The Treasure of Life Joseph Zahalon published in Venice in 1665
The Herbal Medicine Wheel is a record of the history and ideas
behind humanity’s use of plants. The first part is a description of the
world’s medicinal systems in relationship to plants. The second part
concerns the ideas behind the major uses of plants. The third part is
an extensive bibliography of plants arranged by botanical names. The
fourth part is an ethnobotanical bibliography by country.
Pythagoreas, a mathematician and spiritual leader of the sixth
century before Christ, is said to have written the first herbal, which is
now lost. Three centuries later Theophrastus put together a book on
the uses of plants. This was followed by the herbal of Dioscorides and
the writings of Pliny around +70. There was little updating of their
ideas until the herbals of John Parkinson and Nicholas Culpeper came
along 1600 years later. Many herbals in existence today, continue to
echo ideas that have been circulating for 2,500 years.
In the eastern world the first herbal of China was said to have
been written around -3000. In actuality, the art of writing was not
developed enough to convey detailed thought until about -500. The
Chinese ideas that influenced medical thought may be very ancient,
but the central themes began to come together around the time of
Christ. The original writings deal with the philosophy of healing, and
have little information on plants. The vast wealth of herbal lore was
gradually added as the system spread into the hundreds of tribal units
throughout India.
In order to understand plants, it was necessary to understand
their relationship with each other, and proper ways of identification
and classification. Joachim Jung taught school in Hamburg, Ger-
many, until his death in 1657. He published nothing in his lifetime,
perhaps because he could have been accused of heresy. He wrote the
Doxoscopiae, which was published in +1662 and the Isagoge Phytoscop-
ica published in 1679. He described the simple, compound, opposite
and alternate leaf formations. He named the flower parts: perianth,
stamen and style. He discovered the nature of the composite flowers
such as the dandelion. He distinguished plants by their flowers and
gave two names to each plant.
The English botanist John Ray worked with Jung’s ideas and gave
the concept of species its first clear definition. He classified flower-
ing plants by their petals, flowers and fruits. When Linnaeus visited
England, Ray shared his new classification with him.
Linnaeus added his knowledge of the sexual nature of plants to
these ideas. By working with a greater variety of plants and a better
understanding of plant parts, he constructed a tree of plant relation-
ships. In 1753 he presented the fruits of his knowledge in Species
Plantarum. This became the textbook for classifying plants through-
out the world.
A century later there was an explosion in the knowledge of plants
for both medical and economic uses. Botanists traveled by ships and
sought economically useful plants to enrich their countries. They now
had the descriptive tools to understand the relationships between
plants.
The growing power of the science of chemistry made the isolation
and study of chemical components easier. Chemists isolated mor-
phine in +1803, quinine in 1819, atropine in 1831, cocaine in 1860,
pilocarpine in 1875, lobeline in 1921 and reserpine in 1931. Chemi-
cal analysis and testing on animals led to an understanding of how
these drugs worked.
The discovery and use of medicinal plants reached a high point
in the United States around +1880. The West was won, and explor-
ers sent back new information on medicinal plants. Hardly a week
went by without a medical journal reporting on a new plant. Doctors
learned to rely on the indigenous plants, instead of the traditional
European drugs.
By 1900 the situation was changing quickly. Abbot Pharma-
ceutical company had large ads proclaiming “pure alkaloids.” The
ads stated that any doctor using herbs was old fashioned and out of
touch. New operations and synthetic drugs became the trademarks of
the twentieth century. In 1910 Abraham Flexner issued a report that
reformed medical schools. Schools with an unorthodox curriculum
were put out of business.
By 1970 things were beginning to shift towards natural medicine
again. The powerful new drugs were extremely costly, and often less
effective than medical advertisers claimed. There were disturbing side
effects, which could not be ignored. A new awareness was growing
that medicine had become artificial and impersonal. With the change
in consciousness that was labeled “New Age,” we began to look at
“Old Age” knowledge once again. It is my belief that the wise use of
the past will provide tools for the present, and stepping-stones to the
future.
Contents
Introduction
9 Coloring the World
1 The Tribal Tradition
10 The Bones of Plants
2 Herbal Systems of the East
11 The Dark Side of Herbs
3 Chinese Herbal Medicine
12 The Sacred Herbs
4 Herbal Traditions of the West
13 The Lesson of the Oracle
5 The Herbs of Samuel Thomson
BIBLIOGRAPHY
6 The Subtle Energy of Herbs
14 Ethnobotanic Country Bibliography
7 The Herbs of Longevity
15 Common and Scientific Name Index
8 The Power of Odor
16 Bibliography of Herbs
1. THE TRIBAL TRADITION
Socrates: “I mean this: when a carpenter is ill he asks the physician for a rough and
ready cure; an emetic or a purge or a cautery or the knife;—these are his remedies.
And if someone prescribes for him a course of dietetics, and tells him to wrap his
head up and keep it warm, he replies at once that he has no time to be ill, and
that he sees no good in a life that is spent in nursing his disease to the neglect of
his customary employment. He therefore bids goodbye to this sort of physician,
resumes his ordinary habits, and either gets well, lives and does his business, or if
his constitution fails, dies and is rid of his troubles.”
Glaucon: “Yes, that’s the proper sort of medicine in his state of life.”
The Republic book III Plato -370
In north central Wyoming there is a great medicine wheel made
from stones. When the first white settlers moved into the area they
were curious about the big stone wheel. Nobody knew its purpose or
time of building. Scientific studies have tried to link the stone spokes
to the alignments of the planets. The twenty-eight spokes probably
correspond to the twenty-eight poles of the medicine lodge in the sun
dance ceremony. The number reflects an approximation of the lunar
days of the month. The ceremony was a thanksgiving to the creator,
and a time of fasting, sweating and prayer.
There are a number of medicine wheels in Alberta, Canada. In
that area tribal memory asserts that they were built as memorials for
powerful chiefs or medicine men.
Long before a lost Italian on a borrowed Spanish ship blundered
onto these shores, the Americas were the home of millions of people.
The “Empire civilizations” were the Aztecs of the Central Valley of
Mexico, the Maya of Central America and the Incas, who spread over
the entire western backbone of the South American Andes.
There were about 2,000 tribes that occupied North and South
America, and they lived in territories with a radius of 20 to 300 miles.
We know from studies by anthropologists that each tribe had from
50 to 400 plants that were used for medicinal purposes. If only 10 of
these were unique to each tribe, then some 20,000 plants must have
been used as medicine. Hundreds of lists of plants for the tribes exist.
In the far north, the shaman had the medical monopoly. Because
of the cold and isolation, tuberculosis and epidemic diseases were
almost unknown. Many of these people did not live to an old age, for
life was severe in the frozen north. When food was short, often the
older people went out in the cold, for this meant survival for the next
generation.
There are few plants in the area, and healing was done largely
with ceremonies. The most common complaint was pain and bleed-
ing from the lungs, because of the long hunts in the bitter cold. These
people used soup of willows for pain and bleeding. Willows contain a
crude form of aspirin, vitamin C and bioflavanoides. In the southern
Eskimo territories, Labrador tea Ledum palustre was used for influ-
enza. The puffball mushroom was used to stop bleeding.
The eastern provinces of Canada consisted of small bands of
Indians with little close contact. When Jacques Cartier’s men were
wintering at Stadacona along the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1535-36,
they cured their scurvy after Indians told them to drink a tea of the
“amedda” tree. Historians have debated whether this was arborvitae
Thuja occidentalis, or hemlock needles Tsuga canadensis. All green
plants contain vitamin C.
Other remedies recorded for Eastern Canada were sweet flag
Acorus calamus for cholera, and chokecherry bark Prunus virginiana or
P. serotina for diarrhea. Sweet fern leaves Comptonia peregrina leaves
were rubbed on the skin for poison ivy. The bloodroot Sanguinaria
canadensis was used for bleeding, because of its red juice.
On the northwest coast of Canada there was a lack of medical
plants. This was damp rain forest country, and the one plant which
became a cure-all was the “devil’s club” Oplopanax horridus. The com-
mon name is a reminder of the long irritating thorns of this member
of the ginseng family. The plant was extensively traded throughout
the Northwest. Medical reports indicate that it can control diabetes,
when taken as a tea. There is one record of a dying cancer patient be-
ing cured by it.
The Makah tribe along the western Washington coast used the
devil’s club as a good luck plant. After removing the thorns, the
bark of a foot-long root was taken as a purgative during the lengthy
purification rituals. At one time the tribal gamblers used it, for it was
said to enable them to see through the cedar bark bags in which the
gambling sticks were hidden.
In the New England area, there are about eight major tribal
groupings of Algonquin Indians. The early English settlers found
them to be trusting and trustworthy. They were superstitious, but
probably no more so than many English country folk. The settlers
spoke of them as strong, brave, healthy, and long-lived.
These Indians did have problems with malaria, parasites and ear-
aches. They also had eye problems due to the smoke in poorly venti-
lated lodges. Each community had herb doctors that were able to take
care of most simple problems. They generally used a single herb for a
single problem.
The only remedies the settlers had were those imported from
England. They were quick to adopt sassafras, boneset, dogwood,
lobelia and may apple from the Indians. Most of these plants were not
strongly curative of the medical problems—but they were as active as
any English medicines.
During the years 1612-19 smallpox and yellow fever swept over
New England from the ships of the explorers. More than nine out of
ten Indians were believed to have been killed by these diseases, and
the once powerful tribes became a handful of survivors. Governor
John Winthrop wrote in 1634 about the epidemics and added: “So
the Lord hath cleared our title to what we possess.”
In New England, the Iroquois nation was the predominate con-
tact of the early settlers. They originally lived in Canada, but left their
warring Adirondack neighbors and migrated into western New York.
They split into five bands known as the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga,
Cayuga and Seneca. They were jointed by the Tuscarora from North
Carolina. From this “League of six nations” came several ideas which
were written into the U.S. Constitution.
Their medicine men seemed to be especially skillful in removing
bone and bullet fragments from wounds. The wounds were cleansed
with the juice of corn stalks and a poultice of boiled corn tassels.
Cedar bark leg splints were applied to broken bones. An area was left
open over the site of the injury to apply herbal salves.
John Lawson published History of North Carolina in 1714. “We
had a planter in Carolina who got an ulcer in his leg which had
troubled him a great many years; at last he applied himself to one of
these Indian conjurers, who was a Pamticough Indian. Now, I am not
positive whether he washed the ulcer with anything before he used
what I am now going to speak of. This was nothing more than the
rotten bloated grains of Indian corn beaten to a powder, and the soft
down growing on a turkey’s rump. This dried up the ulcer immedi-
ately.”
John Wesley did missionary work in Georgia in the 1730’s. He
remarked: “If any are sick, or bit by a serpent or torn by a wild beast,
the fathers immediately tell their children what remedy to apply. And
it is rare that the patient suffers long; those medicines being quick, as
well as generally infallible.”
The French historian Page du Pratz told the story of a French
trader who lived among the Natchez. He had crippling pain in his
thigh which western doctors couldn’t correct. A Natchez medicine
man cured it in eight days with a poultice. The trader developed an
eye infection and was advised to have it cauterized, which is exceed-
ingly painful. Instead he went to a Natchez doctor who cured his eye
quickly.
The Osage Indians had the legend that their most powerful herb
“man medicine” Cucurbita foetidissima = C. perennis was revealed to
them by a talking buffalo. They used it for nearly everything. It was
believed to give people the power to reach old age.
The largest band of friendly Indians to the south were the Chero-
kees. They believed that Esaugetush Emissee, the “Master of Breath”
had sent good medicines, but Anisgina, the bad spirit, caused disease
and death. According to their legends, animals and humans were once
brothers. Then Anisgina invented weapons and people used them
against animals. As a result the great white bear called a council of the
animals. Since animals couldn’t make weapons, each animal sent a
disease to humanity.
Ginseng called the plants together, and each offered a remedy
for a disease. The first medicine man was told all the remedies, but if
he forgot, all he had to do was walk in the woods and the appropri-
ate plant would nod. Because ginseng was the first plant that offered
itself, it was also the greatest. The medicine man would always bypass
the first three ginseng plants, and then leave red or white beads when
he dug up the fourth.
There are two remaining native American Indian medicine books.
In 1914 the Ritual of the Bacabs was found in the Yucatan. This book
is about the healing rites and herbs of the Mayas. Most of the herbs
cannot be identified. The Bacabs are healing deities. The book speaks
of the evil winds, which cause the disease such as the “tancas-ki”
—the seizure wind, and “coc-ki” —the asthma wind. The Mayas had
a supreme God called Hunab Ku, of whom there was no image.
The Cherokee were the only North American Indians to leave a
written herbal. It is called the Swimmer Manuscript after the name of
the medicine man who put his formulas into the Cherokee language.
Herbal medicine is only a minor part of the book; most of it is com-
posed of chants, songs and magic.
The favorite medicines of the Cherokee were the calamus Acorus
calamus and goldenseal Hydrastis canadensis. Calamus was used for
colds, colic, heartburn, fevers and indigestion. The smell of it was said
to ease tension and calm nerves. Some other common remedies were
rosin weed Silphium laciniatum, senna Senna marilandica and slip-
pery elm bark Ulmus rubra. St. John’s wort Hypericum frondosum was
chewed for diarrhea. Since it produces a dark red color when chewed,
this juice was used to paint the stick balls used in games.
In 1798 Benjamin Barton wrote about the use of goldenseal by
the Cherokees and it passed into the medicine of the settlers. Berber-
ine is the yellow coloring matter, and medical science has found it a
strong antibiotic. Captain Meriwether Lewis, of the Lewis and Clark
expedition, mentioned that it was used for eye infections.
Although there were dozens of food plants, the major food of
the North American Indians was corn Zea Mays. Corn by itself is an
unbalanced food, because it contains very little of the amino acid
lysine. In the Northwest no cereal grains were available. Camas bulbs
Camassia quamash furnished the principal foods. In the dry country
of California, the main Indian food was acorns, soaked in water to
leach out the bitter tannins.
None of the native people used alcoholic drinks on a regular basis.
The Apache prepared a yeast beer from corn soaked in water called
“tulapi” or “tizwin.” The Pima Indians made a beverage from the pear
cactus fruits known as “navait.” Their neighbors, the Maricopa, made
a wine from the giant saguaro cactus flowers. This was never done
on a regular basis and the beverages had to be drunk quickly, or they
would turn into vinegar due to the lack of packaging to exclude air.
A number of herbs were used to give courage or protection. Some
of these may have blocked the adrenaline flow, and consequently the
fear reaction. The Seminole people chewed the top of “spirit weed”
Lachnanthes caroliniana to give them boldness and fearlessness of
speech. The Cheyenne made a strong gray medicine from Anaphalis
margaritacea. The fruits were chewed and rubbed over the body to
give strength, energy and protection against danger in battle. Pana-
mint Indian medicine men drank of tea of Thamnosma montana, so
they would become crazy like coyotes.
Most of the cultures south of the Mexican border used some
form of psychoactive drugs in diagnosis and treatment. The Maztec
Indians of Mexico used the diviner’s sage Salvia divinorum for curing
and divination. This curious mint does not grow in the wild. The sick
person or the shaman eats from 20 to 80 crushed leaves. During the
visions that result, you are supposed to see inside the body, to see the
origin of the illness. The herb gave them the visionary experience of
seeing the tree of heaven with all of the healing herbs around it.
The Cheyenne people of Wyoming called the shrubby cinquefoil
Pentaphylloides floribunda “contrary medicine.” They had a contrary
or protective dance in which the powdered dry leaves were rubbed
over the hands to protect them from injury when they were thrust
into a kettle of boiling soup! The Omaha medicine men applied the
macerated roots of the purple coneflowers Echinacea angustifolia to
their hands. This is a local anesthetic, and they could briefly put their
hands into boiling water.
In 1885 Echinacea came to the attention of the medical profession
as the chief ingredient of “Meyer’s Blood Purifier.” It soon gained a
reputation as the remedy to use for blood poisoning, gangrene, infec-
tions, rabies, smallpox and snake bites.
In 1920 echinacea was given a thorough scientific investigation. It
was given orally or by injection of animals before they were exposed
to disease. Alcohol and water solutions of the herb were used, and
it was given immediately or days before the animals was exposed. It
did not protect guinea pigs against snakebite, tuberculosis, anthrax or
blood poisoning. Humans could react differently, but it appears that
the herb is less valuable than most people believe. It is now known
that the herb does stimulate the immune system and the synthesis of
cartilage.
The Creek Indians of Florida were the originators of the celebrat-
ed black drink Ilex vomitoria. Before a meeting of the tribal council
the leaders drank a tea from seashells. If any of the men vomited they
were considered unfit for military duty. The only thing the war parties
carried was gourds full of black drink. It was believed to help them go
days without food.
The Hopi of the dry Southwest have more information written
on their ceremonies and prophesies than any other American Indian
tribe. The people are famous for their ability to grow corn and veg-
etables on very arid desert land. They use 100 out of the 275 plants in
their area for food and medicine.
Edmund Nequetewa was a Hopi doctor who knew the traditions
and could express himself in English. Before he died in 1969 his
knowledge was studied. His favorite herb was a tea of geranium roots
Geranium caespitosum var. fremontii. He used it for sores, diarrhea and
stomach conditions. He believed it would cure cataracts and he put it
into eyes with an eyedropper. He administered the sand sage Arte-
misia filifolia for constipation and the common sagebrush for stomach
gas. He once used Penstemon eatonii to shrink a tumor on a Navaho
woman. When she refused to pay him, he stopped treating her. The
tumor returned and killed the woman.
Several Indian plants deserve special consideration. During the
great flu epidemic of 1918 both young and old died. The newspapers
of Quebéc had stories describing the curing power of “poglus” Hera-
cleum maximum. The Huron tribe used a tea of the roots to prevent
the flu, and to cure it if necessary.
There are several studies of native medicine in the area of Seattle.
The lowest class of healers used herbs, although they claimed to
receive their inspiration for the use of the herb from their guardian
spirit. When the Indian boys were about ten years old, they were sent
into the woods to find a guardian spirit (tamanamus). After days of
sweating, fasting and praying, a guardian spirit appeared to them and
they returned to the tribe. If the spirit was an eagle, you wore eagle
feathers and claws. If it was a deer, you wore hooves and antlers with
your dress.
The Snohomish people claimed to have only three diseases before
the appearance of the settlers. The meaning of these names is very
general, but they were broadly categorized into English as carbuncles,
neuralgia, and tumors. The main cause of disease was bad spirits. To
cure the problem, you had to drive out the spirit. This could be done
by beating up the person, so the spirit would want to leave, or shout-
ing and drumming loudly, to frighten away the spirit.
Other causes of diseases were power projection known as shoot-
ing the “tamanamus.” A mysterious being called the “swaht-I-uck-tid”
took men’s souls away from them. Then the medicine man tried to
coax the soul back with dances and songs.
A wide variety of herbs, animal parts and insects were used as
remedies. Diarrhea was treated with blackberry roots, Oregon grape
root tea and by chewing the leaves and flowers of Indian arrow wood
Holodiscus discolor.
There was a strong belief in cleansing the body by taking vomit-
ing herbs and laxatives. Whole tribes overdosed on devil’s club to
vomit and purge. The wild cucumber Marah oreganus was also used as
a purge. These herbs were used as first aid, when people accidentally
consumed the death camus plant Zigadenus venenosus instead of the
edible camus.
Pyrola elliptica, pounded to a pulp, was applied for rheumatism.
Arthritics were thrashed with stinging nettles to cause inflammation
and cure their problem. Arthritis was also treated with moxibustion,
much like the Chinese and Japanese healers. The skin was dampened
with saliva and a cone of dry spruce bark was burned over it.
The most common wound treatments were made of deer oil and
bear grease. Many Indians chewed the tips of crab apple branches and
spit those on the wound. The mashed leaves of skunk cabbage were
applied to sores, bruises and fractures.
Nearly every Indian tribe used Acorus calamus root in the areas
where it grew. The Sioux called it muskrat root, and claimed that if
chewed regularly, it would cure diabetes. Many of the early settlers
used it to cure their babies of colic.
Many of us moderns feel that primitive medicine must be based
on natural wisdom, but often this was far from the truth. Maximilian
Bartels wrote a book on natural tribal medicine. “Among the Karoks
of California there are two kinds of Shamans —the root doctors
and the barking doctors. The latter (women mostly) squat like a dog
before the patient and bark for hours. The root doctor with potions,
poultices, etc., medicates the parts where the ailment is discovered.
They believe that witches cause a snake, frog, lizard, or other reptile
to fasten to the body and grow through the skin into the viscera. The
barking doctor first discovers the seat of the disease and then sucks
until the blood flows. She then takes an emetic and vomits up a frog,
which she pretends came from the patient.”
In earlier years, it was no easy matter to be a medicine man. If
you lost a number of patients, you might have your eyes put out or
your skull crushed with rocks. The Seviche Tribe of Arizona had a tra-
dition that the “doctor” had to specify in advance the number of days
the patient would be cured. If he failed three times, he was executed.
One chief, who became a medicine man around 1860, wasn’t very
good at predicting the healing time. He announced that he was bullet
proof, provided that he was allowed to put his magic on the bullets.
He split the bullets in half and put a piece of paper between them.
When the gun fired the halves separated and went around him. He
got away with the trickery, but lost his influence when the secret was
discovered.
A medicine man had to be a psychic healer or at least a good
showman. Many early travelers witnessed the act of sucking on the in-
jury. Several psychic healers were said to be able to remove fishbones
stuck in the throat and heal others by sucking out the illness.
In 1867 the Cheyenne and Sioux met at Rosebud, South Dakota.
White Bull, a Cheyenne medicine man, was completely tied up with
ropes and bowstrings by men who swore that he would never get
loose. Then he was placed in a pit in a sitting position. A huge rock
was tumbled end over end to seal the pit and four large rocks were
placed on top. A lodge of skins was draped over the fortress.
A large crowd watched as a woman called to everyone to sing a
medicine song to aid White Bull. A voice beside her asked who was
in danger. When she turned to answer, she realized that it was White
Bull. The crowd entered the lodge and found that the great rock was
pushed aside and the rope and bowstrings were still in the pit.
The Pawnees had a medicine man who planted a kernel of corn,
watered it and joined the watching crowd. The corn emerged, ma-
tured and produced another ear of corn before their eyes. Several gen-
erations before this, a young Pawnee woman would produce plums
or choke cherries in the middle of winter when a branch was brought
into the medicine lodge. The last person to duplicate this psychic feat
was Chief Red-Fish, who died in 1928. These psychic feats are far
more interesting than bending spoons or starting stalled watches. Ma-
jor Frank North who was in charge of the U.S. Army’s Pawnee Scouts
witnessed these psychic feats.
A substantial part of psychic healing belongs to the field of the
placebo effect. A number of studies indicate that about 34% of people
with common illnesses will be cured or helped by receiving a pill with
nothing in it. Belief is the basis of the cures of many tent preachers.
When I was a college student in Iowa City, an evangelist wrote to the
hospitals and asked the doctors to send him the cases with psychoso-
matic disorders. In the emotional atmosphere of revival meetings with
showmanship and bell ringing, the mental block might be overcome
and the person healed.
It is wonderful to think that Christ figures can wander around
laying on hands and healing people. We all want miracles when we
are sick, yet we don’t think of a miracle as our keeping a positive men-
tal attitude, or going on an exercise program, or eating a healthy diet.
It is just as much of a miracle to be healed with herbs and diet as any
religious experience. This may be what we really need, and often we
can create real miracles.
The Apache Indians had the idea of an undifferentiated super-
natural power flowing through the universe. The power could come
to the individual through a vision in the form of a bird, plant, animal
or heavenly body. At the same time the individual received songs,
prayers and dances that he could use in the healing ceremonies.
The Apache shaman cannot cure all cases, and recognized seri-
ous organic illness. In those cases he might tell the patient, “You
have waited too long to call me.” The shaman works by “tracing” the
patient to find the problem. There is an Apache saying: “You cannot
hide anything from a shaman. They know everything you have done,
and every place you have been from the beginning.”
The shaman arranges a special four-day healing ceremony. The
snake, bear, coyote and owl are symbols of the problem, and they
became part of the ceremony in an attempt to remove the evil of the
disease. The medicine man will appeal to the power to find out why
the patient was afflicted. Was it a taboo, witchcraft, or a lack of regard
for tribal traditions and customs? Often he interrupts the ceremony
to give the patients herbs.
The neighbors of the Apache, the Navaho, held great “medicine
sings.” The singer would collect herbs and ceremonial objects for sev-
eral days. The ceremonies begin at sunset and last until 2 A.M. These
would go on for about a week. The medicine man does most of the
singing, but on occasion all of the participants take part.
The ceremony begins with a bowl of sage leaves, pinyon pine nee-
dles and other bitters being passed around to everyone. Sand paint-
ings are made on the floor of the hogan. At the end of the ceremony,
these paintings are removed on a blanket and spread to the winds.
Indian medicine became a victim of its own mythology. After the
final wars of the 1880’s, the “fighting savages” were transformed into
“noble redmen,” possessed with the supreme virtues of nature. Medi-
cine peddlers saw dollar signs in selling Indian cure-alls. They used
the saying: “If it’s gonna work, you gotta get it from an Indian doc-
tor.”
When Buffalo Bill Cody introduced the Wild West Show, tre-
mendous crowds of the curious came to see the “vanishing Indians.”
This inspired the drug companies to set up a medicine show. The
greatest of these was the “Kickapoo Indian Medicine Company,”
produced by Doc Healy and Texas Charley. The show was set against
a teepee encampment with war dances, ceremonies and songs. An
Indian delivered an impassioned testimonial for “Sagwa” in Kicka-
poo, and the peddler translated it into English. Often what was said
was completely contrary, and the Indians backstage would burst out
laughing. The response was so good, that soon a hundred groups were
touring the country, and the promoters were kept busy recruiting real
Indians. In 1906 the “Pure Food and Drug Act” ended the era of the
Medicine show.
In the preconquest history of Mexico, the first botanic garden
was established by Netzahualcoyotl, the king of Texcoco. His botanic
garden was divided into trees, medicinal plants, fragrant plants and
dye plants. Mexico was divided into a series of tribes, and around the
year +1100 the Aztecs migrated southward into the valley of Mexico.
Through constant wars they conquered the entire valley of Mexico,
and reduced all other tribes to paying tribute. In +1467 Motecuzho-
ma I established the Aztec botanic garden at Huaxtepec, and brought
rare plants from all over Mexico.
The basis of the Aztec medicine system was a calendar of 20-day
cycles. Each calendar day was devoted to an organ such as the liver,
lungs, right eyes, etc. Aztec doctors judged problems by the time of
their origin and the day sign. They might also throw 209 kernels of
corn on a cloth and predict the course of the disease by the pattern.
They would do little rituals and then mold a mixture of corn-dough
on a guava leaf and throw it out on the nearest road. The first travel-
ers who found it sticking to his foot was supposed to get the disease.
With the conquest of Mexico by Hernando Cortez, many secrets
of Aztec medicine were lost. In 1552 the Badianus Herbal was written
by Martin de la Cruz and translated into Latin by Juan Badiano. It
was sent to King Charles I of Spain in hopes of obtaining support for
a Franciscan boy’s training school. There was opposition because the
other religious orders felt that the Franciscans were too sympathetic
to the Indian ways.
Another source of Mexican herbal tradition was the works of
Friar Bernardino de Sahagan (1629) who wrote about aspects of the
ancient Aztec culture. Philip Hernandez, the physician of King Philip
II spent six years in Mexico gathering material for his Natural History
of New Spain. The complete work described over 1,200 plants, but it
was lost in a fire. A rough draft of the notes for the book was edited
and published.
Two Mexican plants became known throughout the world. The
seeds of Theobroma cacao gave us chocolate and cocoa. When Cortez
returned to Spain after the Conquest, he told how Montezuma was
served this drink in golden goblets. Vanilla Vanilla planifolia comes
from an orchid with pods that look like pole beans. The beans are
cured to produce the flavor of vanilla.
There are many Mexican plants that might have a wider use in
medicine. The seeds of the white sapote Casimiroa edulis are known to
lower blood pressure and produce sleep. The fruit is generally too bit-
ter, but by selecting better tasting varieties, farmers can grow it. The
bark of the tree attracts cockroaches, who eat it and die. It is grown as
an ornamental in California and Florida.
Mexican herb vendors sell Nama stenocarpum to people with
stomach gas, so “the balloon on the inside goes down.” “Salvia de
bolita” is the Spanish name of Buddleja microphylla. It inhibits nasal
secretions, sweating and running noses. It acts like the antihistamine
preparations on the market.
It is ironic that a handful of South American plants are the best
known medical plants of the world, but most have not been inves-
tigated. In North America, a square mile of forest might have six
species of trees, but in the Amazon, the same area would have up to
300 species. In 1630 Francisco Lopez de Canizares learned of the use
of quinine bark to cure malaria. Despite large amounts of research
on synthetic drugs, quinine is still the best remedy. Ipecac Cephaelis
ipecacuanha was once used to treat amebic dysentery. It is sold in drug
stores primarily to induce vomiting.
England has only 1,500 native plants, New Zealand has 2,000
plants, but a small country like Costa Rica has 8,000 plants. The
entire area of North America has about 22,000 plants. A country
like Columbia on the northern part of the Amazon basin has 25,000
plants. The entire Amazon basin has well over 60,000 plants.
There are several secrets that the witch doctors of the Amazon
possess. They apply an herb to the roots of a decayed tooth, and a day
later the tooth loosens and falls out. William LaVarre was traveling in
Dutch Guiana among the Djuka people. A medicine man was stirring
a pot into which purple roots, lumps of whitish gum and dried leaves
were added. A boy with badly bent legs then placed his legs into the
hot solution. Then he was put on a table and his legs were straight-
ened out by hand.
The secrets are being lost at a rapid rate. Many of the tribes are
dying out because the natives have no resistance to Western diseases.
When the tribes convert to Christianity, they often adopt missionary
medicine and discard all of their previous medical knowledge.
Africa contains another vast herbal tradition. It is mixed with
incantations and witchcraft, which makes it difficult to sort out the
valuable plants. Many plants are associated with magic and are used
to drive the spirits out. The “I’ll-fix-you-root” is used for revenge.
Many herbs are known to be dangerous, especially those from the
Senecio, Heliotropium, Cynoglossum and Trichodesma genera. One of
the problems in African countries has been to stop people from using
dangerous herbal medicines.
Many African medicines are based on magic. A tall man is treated
with a tall plant or tree. Someone who lives far from a village will use
an isolated plant. An unkind person would be treated with a bitter
plant and a hairy man will be treated with a hairy plant.
The herbalists of Nigeria pass on their traditions, but they believe
in the “mirror world,” in which their ancestors appear to them during
sleep. When they have difficult cases, their ancestors show them the
right plants in dreams. The Nigerian newspapers reported a case in
which a man consulted many Western specialists. He was sent home
to die, but as a last resort he consulted an herbalist. Ezenduka gave
him herbs, which he obtained from the “mirror world,” and the man
was cured. The entire tribal tradition contains numerous stories of
magic, mystery and possible usefulness.
In the visions of the Sioux medicine man Black Elk several mys-
tery herbs are mentioned. He encountered the grandfathers of the six
directions —this included the earth and the sky. Two of the grandfa-
thers represented herbs. The grandfather of the wintery north where
the white giant lives, gave him an herb of power that fattens a sick
and starving horse.
The grandfather of the earth, slowly became a boy with Black
Elk’s face. The troubled future of his people was represented as a bro-
ken hoop, and a dying holy tree. The hope of the vision was: “From
the same good spirit [his people] must find another strength. It will
be the herb of understanding that bears four blossoms on a single
stem —blue, white, red and yellow, the colors of the four directions.”
Many ethnic groups in India have their own tribal systems apart
from the main medical systems. Peter Hembron gathered the tribal
systems into a codified system known as “Adivasi Ausahd” meaning
“Tribal Medicine.” He called the system “Horopathy.”
The ethnobotany of the tribal tradition may reveal new forms of
healing which could benefit modern day illness. We have hardly done
a serious look at the medicinal plants used by the tribal peoples. The
strength of the healing rituals went beyond herbs; it used psychother-
apy in a way which individuals felt related to them.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The journals in this bibliography are listed in alphabetical order. Most
large medical libraries shelve them in this manner. All foreign titles
of articles have been translated for the benefit of my English readers.
The authors of books are listed after the journals.
1. THE TRIBAL TRADITION
American Anthropologist 7:37, 1905 “Some Cheyenne Plant Medicines” G.B. Grinnell
American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education 10:227, 1946 “Pre-Columbian Healers of Latin
America” G.S. Gittinger
Ciba Symposia 4:1190, 1942 “Primitive Theories of Disease” S.L. Rogers
Emery University Quarterly 17:86, 1961 “Patent Medicines and Indians” J.H. Young
Journal of Ethnopharmacology 7:287, 1983 “Ethnopharmacology of Ska Maria Pastora Salvia
divinorum” L.J. Valdes III et al.
Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association 25:138, 1936 “Medical Practices of the New
England Aborigines” W.T. Bradley
Medical Herald and Physical Therapist 51:327, 1932 “Medicine and Medicinal Practices Among
the Indians of the Northwest” A.C. Jones
Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Quarterly 60:331, 1951 “Materia Medica and Therapy
Among the North American Forest Indians” A.C. Mahr
Reader’s Digest 37:July/10, 1940 “Bone Bending in the Jungle” W. LaVarre
St. Louis Courier of Medicine 21:138, 1936 “Some Medical Customs, Beliefs and Practices of the
Snohomish Indians of Pugit Sound” C.M. Buchanan
St. Louis Medical and Surgical Journal 16:389, 1858 “Medicine Among the Indians”T. Kennard
Hilger, M. Inez Huenun Namku: An Araucanian Indian of the Andes Remembers the Past Normal:
University of Oklahoma Press, 1966
Mooney, James The Swimmer Manuscript Washington C.D.: Smithsonian Institution, 1932
Roys, Ralph Ritual of the Bacabs Normal, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma, 1965

 


#6388 From: Lee & Cynthia <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Wed Aug 6, 2008 12:32 am
Subject:: Re: HERBS-A to Z;What Each Herb is Good For,more(Agrimony to Yucca)etc.
cheyennecin
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Native Medicinal Plants eLearning

Native Medicinal Plants

 

 

TRADITIONAL NATIVE HERBAL REMEDIES

ASTHMA
Skunk Cabbage.Used by the Winnebago and Dakota tribes to stimulate the removal of phlegm in asthma. The rootstock was official in the U.S. Pharmacopoeia from 1820 to 1882 when it was used in respiratory and nervous disorders and in rheumatism and dropsy. Mullein.Introduced by Europeans. The Menominees smoked the pulverized, dried root for respiratory complaints while the Forest Potawatomis, the Mohegans, and the Penobscots smoked the dried leaves to relieve asthma. The Catawba Indians used a sweetened syrup from the boiled root, which they gave to their children for coughs.

BACKACHE
Arnica.
Gentian.
The Catawba Indians steeped the roots in hot water and applied the hot fluid on aching backs.
Horsemint.
The Catawba tribe crushed and steeped fresh horsemint leaves in cold water and drank the infusion to allay back pain. Other tribes used horsemint for fever, inflammation, and chills.

BRONCHITIS
Creosote Bush.
A tea of the leaves was used for bronchial and other respiratory problems.
Pleurisy Root.
The Natchez drank a tea of the boiled roots as a remedy for pneumonia and was later used to promote the expulsion of phlegm,
Wormwood.
The Yokia Indians of Mendocino County used a tea of the boiled leaves of a local species of wormwood to cure bronchitis.

BURNS
Yellow-Spined Thistle.
The Kiowa Indians boiled yellow-spined thistle blossoms and applied the resulting liquid to burns and skin sores.

CHILDBIRTH
To Speed Childbirth:
Partridgeberry.
The Cherokee used a tea of the boiled leaves. Frequent doses of the tea were taken in the few weeks preceding the expected date of delivery.
Blue Cohosh.
To promote a rapid delivery, an infusion of the root in warm water was drunk as a tea for several weeks prior to the expected delivery date.
To Speed Delivery of the Placenta:

American Licorice.
A tea was made from the boiled roots.
Broom Snakeweed.
Navajo women drank a tea of the whole plant to promote the expulsion of the placenta.
To Stop Post-Partum Hemorrhage:

Buckwheat.
Hopi women were given an infusion of the entire buckwheat plant to stop bleeding.
Black Western Chokecherry.
Arikara women were given a drink of the berry juice to stop bleeding.
Smooth Upland Sumac.
The Omahas boiled the smooth upland sumac fruits and applied the liquid as an external wash to stop bleeding.
To relieve the Pain of Childbirth:

Wild Black Cherry.
Cherokee women were given a tea of the inner bark to relieve pain in the early stages.
Cotton.
The Alabama and Koasati tribes made a tea of the roots of the plant to relieve the pains of labor.

COLDS
Boneset.
Boneset tea was one of the most frequently used home remedies during the last century. The Menominees used it to reduce fever; the Alabamas, to relive stomachache; the Creeks, for body pain; the Iroquois and the Mohegans, for fever and colds.

COLIC
Catnip.
The Mohegans made a tea of catnip leaves for infant colic

CONTRACEPTIVES
Ragleaf Bahia.
The Navajos, who called the Ragleaf bahia herb twisted medicine, drank a tea of the roots boiled in water for thirty minutes for contraception purposes.
Indian Paintbrush.
Hopi women drank a tea of the whole Indian paintbrush to "Dry up the menstrual flow."
Blue Cohosh.
Chippewa women drank a strong decoction of the powdered blue cohosh root to promote parturition and menstruation.
Dogbane.
Generally used by many tribes, a tea from the boiled roots of the plant was drunk once a week.
Milkweed.
Navajo women drank a tea prepared of the whole plant after childbirth.
American Mistletoe.
Indians of Mendocino County drank a tea of the leaves to induce abortion or to prevent conception.
Antelope Sage.
To prevent conception, Navajo women drank one cup of a decoction of boiled antelope sage root during menstruation.
Stoneseed.
Shoshoni women of Nevada reportedly drank a cold water infusion of stoneseed roots everyday for six months to ensure permanent sterility.

COUGHS
Aspen.
The Cree Indians used an infusion of the inner bark as a remedy for coughs.
Wild Cherry.
The Flambeau Ojibwa prepared a tea of the bark of wild cherry for coughs and colds, while other tribes used a bark for diarrhea or for lung troubles.
White Pine.
The inner bark was used by Indian people as a tea for colds and coughs.
Sarsaparilla.
The Penobscots pulverized dried sarsaparilla roots and combined them with sweet flag roots in warm water and used the dark liquid as a cough remedy.

DIABETIES
Wild Carrot.
The Mohegans steeped the blossoms of this wild species in warm water when they were in full bloom and took the drink for diabetes.
Devil’s Club.
The Indians of British Columbia utilized a tea of the root bark to offset the effects of diabetes.

DIARRHEA
Blackcherry.
A tea of blackberry roots was the most frequently used remedy for diarrhea among Indians of northern California.
Wild Black Cherry.
The Mohegans allowed the ripe wild black cherry to ferment naturally in a jar about one year than then drank the juice to cure dysentery.
Dogwood.
The Menominees boiled the inner bark of the dogwood and passed the warm solution into the rectum with a rectal syringe made from the bladder of a small mammal and the hollow bone of a bird.
Geranium.
Chippewa and Ottawa tribes boiled the entire geranium plant and drank the tea for diarrhea.
White Oak.
Iroquois and Penobscots boiled the bark of the white oak and drank the liquid for bleeding piles and diarrhea.
Black Raspberry.
The Pawnee, Omaha, and Dakota tribes boiled the root bark of black raspberry for dysentery.
Star Grass.
Catawbas drank a tea of star grass leaves for dysentery.

DIGESTIVE DISORDERS
Dandelion.
A tea of the roots was drunk for heartburn by the Pillager Ojibwas. Mohegans drank a tea of the leaves for a tonic.
Yellow Root.
A tea from the root was used by the Catawbas and the Cherokee as a stomach ache remedy.

FEVERS
Dogwood.
The Delaware Indians, who called the tree Hat-ta-wa-no-min-schi, boiled the inner bark in water, using the tea to reduce fevers.
Willow.
The Pomo tribe boiled the inner root bark, then drank strong doses of the resulting tea to induce sweating in cases of chills and fever. In the south, the Natchez prepared their fever remedies from the bark of the red willow, while the Alabama and Creek Indians plunged into willow root baths for the same purpose.
Feverwort.
The Cherokees drank a decoction of the coarse, leafy, perennial herb to cure fevers.

HEADACHE
Pennyroyal.
The Onondagas steeped pennyroyal leaves and drank the tea to cure headaches.

HEART and CIRCULATORY PROBLEMS
Green Hellebore.
The Cherokee used the green hellebore to relive body pains.
American Hemp and Dogbane.
Used by the Prairie Potawatomis as a heart medicine, the fruit was boiled when it was still green, and the resulting decoction drunk. It was also used for kidney problems and for dropsy.

HEMORRHOIDS
White Oak.
The Menominee tribe treated piles by squirting an infusion of the scraped inner bark of oak into the rectum with a syringe made from an animal bladder and the hollow bone of a bird.

INFLAMMATIONS and SWELLINGS
Witch Hazel.
The Menominees of Wisconsin boiled the leaves and rubbed the liquid on the legs of tribesmen who were participating in sporting games. A decoction of the boiled twigs was used to cure aching backs, while steam derived by placing the twigs in water with hot rocks was a favorite Potawatomi treatment for muscle aches.

INFLUENZA
Native Hemlock (as opposed Poison Hemlock of Socrates fame).
The Menominees prepared a tea if the inner bark and drank it to relieve cold symptoms. A similar tea was used by the Forest Potawatomis to induce sweating and relieve colds and feverish conditions.

INSECT BITES and STINGS
Fendler Bladderpod.
The Navajos made a tea and used it to treat spider bites.
Purple Coneflower.
The Plains Indians used this as a universal application for the bites and stings of all crawling, flying, or leaping bugs. Between June and September, the bristly stemmed plant, which grows in dry, open woods and on prairies, bears a striking purplish flower.
Stiff Goldenrod.
The Meskwaki Indians of Minnesota ground the flowers into a lotion and applied it to bee stings.
Trumpet Honeysuckle.
The leaves were ground by chewing and then applied to bees stings.
Wild Onion and Garlic.
The Dakotas and Winnebagos applied the crushed bulbs of wild onions and garlics.
Saltbush.
The Navajos chewed the stems and placed the pulpy mash on areas of swelling caused by ant, bee and wasp bites. The Zunis applied the dried, powdered roots and flowers mixed with saliva to ant bites.
Broom Snakeweed.
The Navajos chewed the stem and applied the resin to insect bites and stings of all kinds.
Tobacco.
A favorite remedy for bee stings was the application of wet tobacco leaves.

INSECT REPELLENTS and INSECTICIDES
Goldenseal.
The Cherokee pounded the large rootstock with bear fat and smeared it on their bodies as an insect repellent. It was also used as a tonic, stimulant, and astringent.

RHEUMATISM
Pokeweed.
I
ndians of Virginia drank a tea of the boiled berries to cure rheumatism. The dried root was also used to allay inflammation.
Bloodroot.
A favorite rheumatism remedy among the Indians of the Mississippi region - the Rappahannocks of Virginia drank a tea of the root.

SEDATIVES
Wild Black Cherry.
The Meskwaki tribe made a sedative tea of the root bark.
Hops.
The Mohegans prepared a sedative medicine from the conelike strobiles and sometimes heated the blossoms and applied them for toothache. The Dakota tribe used a tea of the steeped strobiles to relieve pains of the digestive organs, and the Menominee tribe regarded a related species of hops as a panacea.
Wild Lettuce.
Indigenous to North American, it was used for sedative purposes, especially in nervous complaints.

THRUSH
Geranium.
The Cherokee boiled geranium root together with wild grape, and with the liquid, rinsed the mouths of children affected with thrush.
Persimmon.
The Catawba stripped the bark from the tree and boiled it in water, using the resulting dark liquid as a mouth rinse.

Source: American Medicinal Plants. NY: Dover Publications

 



Traditional Native Herbs and Their
Uses in Healing, Native Recipes

There are hundreds of herbs with dozens of uses in Native American medicine, no room here to list all of them. You can find books and internet resources for more detailed information on specific herbs used by specific tribes. Below is just a small sampling. As with all other forms of herbal medicine, get a checkup before treating yourself with herbs, research each carefully for possible side effects. Get in touch with Native Americans who might be well-versed in herbs and healing.
Traditional healing herbs

* Burdock ( Arctium lappa L. ). Naturalized in North America, from Asia and Europe, this plant grows from 2-5 ft.; can be found along roadsides and in all vacant lots. Hunters will remember Burdock burrs adhering to their clothes and being troublesome to their game dogs. The stems are stout with wide spreading branches carrying alternately elongated heart-shaped leaves. The purple flowers bloom in July and August, after which they dry out and the base becomes the troublesome burr. The root, which should be dug in the autumn or early spring, is thick, brownish-grey externally. with white pith-like tissue inside. The root and seeds have a sweetish taste, the leaves and stems being bitter.

Uses: Herbalists all over the world use Burdock. Such an effective and ultimate blood purifying plant has well earned the unpretending authentic value for which we know it is capable. The root and seed of Arctium lappa is a soothing demulcent, tonic, alterative; it slowly but steadily cleanses skin, soothes the kidneys, and relieves the lymphatic's; eliminates boils, carbuncles, canker sores, styes, felons, etc. Soothing to the mucous membrane throughout the entire system, and is also used for gout, rheumatism, scrofula, syphilis, sciatica, gonorrhea, and kidney diseases. Burdock is regarded as an excellent immune system strengthener, a tonic for the liver, kidneys and lungs as well as a blood purifier with the ability to neutralize poisons and cleanse the lymphatic system. Burdock contains proven anti-bacterial and anti-fungal as well as tumor-protective compounds. The leaves contain a substance which promotes bile secretion and may be included in liver and gall bladder formulas. An infusion or decoction of the root may be used as a skin wash for burns, ringworms. acne and rashes. A poultice using the leaf material will treat gout.

In the Orient, burdock root is used for its nutritive and strengthening qualities. In Hawaii it is known by the Japanese name 'Gobo root' and is used to increase strength and endurance and works even better when combined with other herbs. In China, where the seed pod is dried and used for coughs, colds, measles, boils and sore throats, burdock has been found listed as a useful medicine as early as 502 AD. Burdock has been used medicinally by many Native American tribes. Plains Indians adopted burdock for ceremonial use, and the Otos used a decoction of the root for pleurisy. Burdock root was an ingredient of a medicine used by Meskwaki women in labor. Flambeau Ojibwas used the root as part of a medicine for stomach pain, and supposed it to have a tonic effect. The Potawatomis made a burdock-root tea taken as a general tonic and blood purifier. Other tribes to use the root of burdock are the Creeks, Cherokees, Micmacs, Menomonee. Whites have used the root as an alterative in blood and skin diseases. EarthKeepers and their ancestors have been using Burdock in the Muscogee Tea™ for close to five hundred years with amazing results. Once used as a way to lift the spirits and connect to the heart by increasing the levels of joy one can experience for the conduct of ceremony, it is now referred to as a liver cleanse. We believe as the heart is the seat of love, compassion, joy, etc. the liver is the seat of sudden outburst of anger, resentment, bitterness and the like. So when the liver is on its way to optimum health the heart benefits by receiving cleaner blood flow, hence better sources of oxygen, the life force, hence more opportunity to feel the joy life has to offer. Burdock root is a major ingredient of the Muscogee Tea™.

Precaution: Burdock may have estrogen-like effects and therefore should be avoided during pregnancy.

 

* Rabbit tobacco (Gnaphalium obtusifolium). These annual herbs reach a height of 1 to 3 feet and have erect stems with brown, shriveled leaves persisting into winter and stems covered with feltlike hairs in summer. The leaves are 1 to 3 inches long, and alternate. The flowers, minute in whitish heads, appear in late summer to fall. Fields, pastures, and disturbed areas are the sites of this common native plant of the eastern United States. It is used to treat colds, flu, neuritis, asthma, coughs, and pneumonia. This is one of the most popular plants used by the Lumbee. The decoction is drunk hot, like most medicinal teas, and is said to cause profuse sweating.


* Poke (Phytolacca americana). Also a common native plant of the eastern United States, poke is a robust, perennial herb that reaches a height of 9 feet. It has a large white root; a green, red, or purple stem; alternate leaves up to 1 foot long; and white flowers in a drooping raceme. The fruit is a dark purple to black berry, round, soft, and juicy. Poke is found in waste areas, road sides, disturbed habitats, fields, and pastures. It is used to treat asthma, spring tonic, boils (risings), sores, intestinal worms in people or chickens, cramps, and stomach ulcers. Poke is said to inhibit gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria and is listed as a parasiticide in the British Herbal Pharmacopoeia.


* Pine (Pinus echinata, P. palustris, P. virginiana). Pines are resinous evergreen trees with needlelike foliage leaves in bundles of two to five. The male and female reproductive structures are in separate cones on the same tree; the female cone matures to a large woody cone with winged seeds; pollen sheds in the spring. Pine is used to treat colds, flu, pneumonia, fever, heartburn, arthritis, neuritis, and kidney problems.


* Oak (Quercus laevis, Q. phellos). These deciduous trees have alternate, unlobed, or variously lobed leaves and minute flowers; the fruit is an acorn. Oak is used to treat kidney problems (including Bright's disease), bladder problems, virus, menstrual bleeding, diarrhea, sores, sprains, and swellings. It is also used as a booster for other remedies.


* Sassafras (Sassafras albidum). These deciduous, aromatic, small trees or shrubs have green twigs and--when mature--thick, furrowed bark. The leaves are 2.5 to 5 inches long; alternate; and either unlobed, lobed on one side, or three-lobed. Flowers are small and yellow in clusters at the end of twigs. The fruit is a dark blue, fleshy drupe on a bright red stalk and cup. This common native plant of fencerows, woodland borders, and old fields of the eastern United States is used to treat measles, chicken pox, colds, flu, and fever. It is also used as a "shotgun heart remedy," a blood purifier, and a spring tonic.


According to the Handbook of Northeastern Indian Medicinal Plants Native American Indians used about 25 percent of the flora of Maryland for medicinal purposes (Duke, 1986). A few examples of medicinal plant species in Maryland are as follows:

* Sheep Sorrel ( Acetosella vulgaris ). Sheep sorrel is a perennial plant that grows in rocky areas throughout the world with the exception of the tropics. The plant is common along roadsides in England and is sometimes cultivated in the United States. The whole plant can be used before the stem is hollow in the second year. The roots are woody, long and tapering. The furrowed or streaked stem grows one to two feet high. The edible leaves are attached to the stem by a slender leaf stalk and are green, the pigment indicating a high amount of chlorophyll. Leaves are ovate with two lateral teeth. Upper part is oblong and narrow. Green flowers with reddish tinge distinguish from the orange-red female flowers. Sheep sorrel seeds are shiny, black, three-sided small seeds resembling peppercorn. Harvest the plant early in the day or in late afternoon May through August before it flowers and goes to seed in September.

The whole herb when young and in its freshest state acts as a diuretic and blood cleanser. The herb improves liver, intestinal and bowel functions, prevents destruction of red blood cells and is used to break down tumors. The chlorophyll in sheep sorrel carries oxygen through the bloodstream which strengthens cell walls, helps remove deposits in blood vessels and allows the body to store and use more oxygen. Chlorophyll may also reduce radiation damage and restrict chromosome damage. The herb is smooth and acid while the root has astringent properties and contains a substance allied to crysophanic acid ( an iron-greening tannin diuretic ). Sheep sorrel is taken for inflammatory diseases, tumors, incipient cancers and urine and kidney diseases. The action is refrigerant, diaphoretic and diuretic.

*Slippery Elm ( Ulmus fulva ). Slippery elm can be found in northern and central United States and eastern Canada. It grows in moist woods and bottom land, along streams, as well as in dry soil. The rough branches and long, tough, hairy leaves help distinguish slippery elm which resembles a small tree and can grow up to sixty feet tall. The dark green or yellowish leaves are covered with yellow wool and have orange tips, while the bark is deeply furrowed. The pinkish white, fibrous inner bark contains the healing properties. The inner bark can be obtained whole or powdered. In its powdered state it is pale pink brown in color.

Slippery elm is good for nervous problems, stomach and intestines, sore throats and coughs. It contains inulin which helps the liver, spleen and pancreas. The herb promotes urination, disperses swelling and acts as a laxative. Chinese medicine listed the herb in 25 BC and noted that it is good for diarrhea, ulcers, soothing inflamed colon, small intestine and colon meridians. It has a sweet flavor with a neutral property. Indians used it as a demulcent, salve, and laxative. Some believe it may help diabetic conditions.

*Turkey Rhubarb ( Rheum palmatum ). Turkey rhubarb somewhat resembles the garden variety rhubarb (rheum rhaponticum) but medicinally is quite a bit stronger. A perennial, the herb is identified by its conical, fleshy root stock with yellow interior. The seven-lobed, heart-shaped or rounded leaves grow twelve inches in length and are attached by thick petioles to stems five to ten feet tall. Topping the hollow flower stem is a leafy panicle of greenish or whitish flowers. Turkey rhubarb is cultivated in China and Tibet for decorative as well as medicinal purposes.

Turkey rhubarb has been used for centuries for its dual action as a laxative and astringent as well as a purging treatment. In smaller doses it is used to treat diarrhea or to stimulate the appetite. Larger amounts yield a laxative effect. The herb stimulates the colon and abates distension while promoting bile flow, clearing stasis and restoring the stomach and liver. It has used as a stomach tonic to soothe digestion; to cleanse the liver; as an anti-tumor; and an aid for thermal burns, jaundice, sores and cancers. As a regulator, turkey rhubarb has both contractive and dilative properties that help regulate menstruation and eliminative processes. It is versatile in preparations as a balancing herb and anthelmintic In Chinese medicine, its properties are considered bitter and cold entering the stomach, colon, liver, spleen and pericardium meridians. Functions to drain heat and dampness, moves stools, cools blood, disperses and invigorates stagnant blood.

* Sweetflag or calamus (Acorus). The root has been used to treat flatulence, colds, coughs, heart disease, bowel problems, colic, cholera, suppressed menses, dropsy, gravel, headache, sore throat, spasms, swellings, and yellowish urine. Some tribes considered the root a panacea; others thought it had mystic powers.


* Bloodroot (Sanguinaria). This very poisonous plant is emetic, laxative, and emmenagogue. It has been used to treat chronic bronchitis, diphtheria, sore throat, uterine and other cancers, tetterworm, deafness, and dyspepsia; it has also been used as a pain reliever and sedative. In Appalachia it is carried as a charm to ward off evil spirits.


* Yellowdock. Contains anthraquinones of value in the treatment of ringworm and some types of psoriasis. Rumicin from the roots reportedly destroys skin parasites. The anthraquinones are proven laxatives.


* Coneflower (Echinacea, Rudbeckia). Echinacea (purple coneflower) reportedly increases resistance to infection, bad coughs, dyspepsia, venereal disease, insect bites, fever, and blood poisoning.


* Witch hazel. A proven astringent and hemostat (to stop bleeding).


* Lobelia (Lobelia cardinalis). Cardinal flower was used to indurate ulcers and to treat stomachache, syphilis, and worms. The leaf tea was used for cold, croup, epistaxis (nosebleed), fever, headache, rheumatism, and syphilis. Lobelia inflata (Indian tobacco) yields lobeline sulfate, used in antitobacco therapy. It is used as an antiasthmatic, an expectorant, and a stimulant for bronchitis; it also is used to treat aches, asthma, boils, croup, colic, sore throat, stiff neck, and tuberculosis of the lungs. Some smoked the herb to break a tobacco habit.


* Mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum). Early Native American Indians used the roots as a strong purgative, liver cleanser, emetic, and worm expellant. A resin made from the plant has been used to treat venereal warts and exhibits antitumor activity; it also is used for snakebite and as an insecticide for potato bugs.


* Wild cherry (Prunus virginiana). The bark has been used to treat sores and wounds, diarrhea, cold and cough, tuberculosis, hemoptysis, scrofula, sore throat, stomach cramps, and piles. Native American Indians treated snow blindness by leaning over a kettle of boiling bark "tea." Some smoked the bark for headache and head cold.


* White willow (Salix alba). The bark is astringent, expectorant, hemostatic, and tonic. It is used to treat calluses, cancers, corns, tumors, and warts. Salicylic acid (used to make aspirin) is found in white willow. Leaves and bark of different willows are used in a tea to break a fever. Some Native American Indians burned willow stems and used the ashes to treat sore eyes.


 

History of Herbal Medicine

Early humans recognized their dependence on nature in both health and illness. Led by instinct, taste, and experience, primitive men and women treated illness by using plants, animal parts, and minerals that were not part of their usual diet. Physical evidence of use of herbal remedies goes back some 60,000 years to a burial site of a Neanderthal man uncovered in 1960 (Solecki, 1975). In a cave in northern Iraq, scientists found what appeared to be ordinary human bones. An analysis of the soil around the bones revealed extraordinary quantities of plant pollen that could not have been introduced accidentally at the burial site. Someone in the small cave community had consciously gathered eight species of plants to surround the dead man. Seven of these are medicinal plants still used throughout the herbal world (Bensky and Gamble, 1993). All cultures have long folk medicine histories that include the use of plants. Even in ancient cultures, people methodically and scientifically collected information on herbs and developed well-defined herbal pharmacopoeias. Indeed, well into the 20th century much of the pharmacopoeia of scientific medicine was derived from the herbal lore of native peoples. Many drugs, including strychnine, aspirin, vincristine, taxol, curare, and ergot, are of herbal origin. About one-quarter of the prescription drugs dispensed by community pharmacies in the United States contain at least one active ingredient derived from plant material (Farnsworth and Morris, 1976).



Middle East medicine. The invention of writing was a focus around which herbal knowledge could accumulate and grow. The first written records detailing the use of herbs in the treatment of illness are the Mesopotamian clay tablet writings and the Egyptian papyrus. About 2000 B.C., King Assurbanipal of Sumeria ordered the compilation of the first known materia medica--an ancient form of today's United States Pharmacopoeia--containing 250 herbal drugs (including garlic, still a favorite of herbal doctors). The Ebers Papyrus, the most important of the preserved Egyptian manuscripts, was written around 1500 B.C. and includes much earlier information. It contains 876 prescriptions made up of more than 500 different substances, including many herbs (Ackerknecht, 1973).



Greece and Rome. One of the earliest materia medica was the Rhizotomikon, written by Diocles of Caryotos, a pupil of Aristotle. Unfortunately, the book is now lost. Other Greek and Roman compilations followed, but none was as important or influential as that written by Dioscorides in the 1st century A.D., better known by its Latin name De Materia Medica. This text contains 950 curative substances, of which 600 are plant products and the rest are of animal or mineral origin (Ackerknecht, 1973). Each entry includes a drawing, a description of the plant, an account of its medicinal qualities and method of preparation, and warnings about undesirable effects.



Muslim world. The Arabs preserved and built on the body of knowledge of the Greco-Roman period as they learned of new remedies from remote places. They even introduced to the West the Chinese technique of chemically preparing minerals. The principal storehouse of the Muslim materia medica is the text of Jami of Ibn Baiar (died 1248 A.D.), which lists more than 2,000 substances, including many plant products (Ackerknecht, 1973). Eventually this entire body of knowledge was reintroduced to Europe by Christian doctors traveling with the Crusaders. Indeed, during the Middle Ages, trade in herbs became a vast international commerce.



East India. India, located between China and the West, underwent a similar process in the development of its medicine. The healing that took place before India's Ayurvedic medical corpus was similar to that of ancient Egypt or China (i.e., sickness was viewed as a punishment from the gods for a particular sin). Ayurvedic medicine emerged during the rise of the philosophies of the Upanishads, Buddhism, and other schools of thought in India. Herbs played an important role in Ayurvedic medicine. The principal Ayurvedic book on internal medicine, the Characka Samhita, describes 582 herbs (Majno, 1975). The main book on surgery, the Sushruta Samhita, lists some 600 herbal remedies. Most experts agree that these books are at least 2,000 years old.



China and Japan. The earliest written evidence of the medicinal use of herbs in China consists of a corpus of 11 medical works recovered from a burial site in Hunan province. The burial itself is dated 168 B.C., and the texts (written on silk) appear to have been composed before the end of the 3rd century B.C. Some of the texts discuss exercise, diet, and channel therapy (in the form of moxibustion--see the "Alternative Systems of Medical Practice" chapter). The largest, clearest, and most important of these manuscripts, called by its discoverers Prescriptions for Fifty-Two Ailments, is predominantly a pharmacological work. More than 250 medicinal substances are named. Most are substances derived from herbs and wood; grains, legumes, fruits, vegetables, and animal parts are also mentioned. Underlying this entire text is the view that disease is the manifestation of evil spirits, ghosts, and demons that must be repelled by incantation, rituals, and spells in addition to herbal remedies.


By the Later Han Dynasty (25-220 A.D.), medicine had changed dramatically in China. People grew more confident of their ability to observe and understand the natural world and believed that health and disease were subject to the principles of natural order. However, herbs still played an important part in successive systems of medicine. The Classic of the Materia Medica, compiled no earlier than the 1st century A.D. by unknown authors, was the first Chinese book to focus on the description of individual herbs. It includes 252 botanical substances, 45 mineral substances, and 67 animal-derived substances. For each herb there is a description of its medicinal effect, usually in terms of symptoms. Reference is made to the proper method of preparation, and toxicities are noted (Bensky and Gamble, 1993).


Since the writing of the Classic of the Materia Medica almost 2,000 years ago, the traditional Chinese materia medica have been steadily increasing in number. This increase has resulted from the integration into the official tradition of substances from China's folk medicine as well as from other parts of the world. Many substances now used in traditional Chinese medicine originate in places such as Southeast Asia, India, the Middle East, and the Americas. The most recent compilation of Chinese materia medica was published in 1977. The Encyclopedia of Traditional Chinese Medicine Substances (Zhong yao da ci dian), the culmination of a 25-year research project conducted by the Jiangsu College of New Medicine, contains 5,767 entries and is the most definitive compilation of China's herbal tradition to date (Bensky and Gamble, 1993).


Traditional Chinese medicine was brought to Japan via Korea, and Chinese-influenced Korean medicine was adapted by the Japanese during the reign of Emperor Ingyo (411-453 A.D.). Medical envoys continued to arrive from Korea throughout the next century, and by the time of the Empress Suiko (592-628 A.D.), Japanese envoys were being sent directly to China to study medicine. Toward the end of the Muromachi period (1333-1573 A.D.) the Japanese began to develop their own form of traditional oriental medicine, called kampo medicine. As traditional Chinese medicine was modified and integrated into kampo medicine, herbal medicine was markedly simplified.



Herbal Medicine in the United States

In North America, early explorers traded knowledge with the Native American Indians. The tribes taught them which herbs to use to sharpen their senses for hunting, to build endurance, and to bait their traps. In 1716, French explorer Lafitau found a species of ginseng, Panax quinquefolius L., growing in Iroquois territory in the New World. This American ginseng soon became an important item in world herb commerce (Duke, 1989). The Jesuits dug up the plentiful American ginseng, sold it to the Chinese, and used the money to build schools and churches. Even today, American ginseng is a sizable crude U.S. export.


As medicine evolved in the United States, plants continued as a mainstay of country medicine. Approaches to plant healing passed from physician to physician, family to family. Even in America's recent past, most families used home herbal remedies to control small medical emergencies and to keep minor ailments from turning into chronic problems. During this period there was a partnership between home folk medicine and the family doctor (Buchman, 1980). Physicians often used plant and herbal preparations to treat common ills. Until the 1940s, textbooks of pharmacognosy--books that characterize plants as proven-by-use prescription medicines--contained hundreds of medically useful comments on barks, roots, berries, leaves, resins, twigs, and flowers.


As 20th-century technology advanced and created a growing admiration for technology and technologists, simple plant-and-water remedies were gradually discarded. Today, many Americans have lost touch with their herbal heritage. Few Americans realize that many over-the-counter (OTC) and prescription drugs have their origins in medicinal herbs. Cough drops that contain menthol, mint, horehound, or lemon are herbal preparations; chamomile and mint teas taken for digestion or a nervous stomach are time-honored herbal remedies; and many simple but effective OTC ache-and pain-relieving preparations on every druggist's and grocer's shelf contain oils of camphor, menthol, or eucalyptus. Millions of Americans greet the morning with their favorite herbal stimulant--coffee.


Despite the importance of plant discoveries in the evolution of medicine, some regulatory bodies such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)--the main U.S. regulatory agency for food and drugs--consider herbal remedies to be worthless or potentially dangerous (Snider, 1991). Indeed, today in the United States, herbal products can be marketed only as food supplements. If a manufacturer or distributor makes specific health claims about a herbal product (i.e., indicates on the label the ailment or ailments for which the product might be used) without FDA approval, the product can be pulled from store shelves.


Despite FDA's skepticism about herbal remedies, a growing number of Americans are again becoming interested in herbal preparations. This surge in interest is fueled by factors that include the following:


* Traditional European and North American herbs are sold in most U.S. health food stores. The same is true for Chinese and, to a lesser extent, Japanese herbal medicinals. Ayurvedic herbals are available in most large U.S. cities, as are culinary and medicinal herb shops called botanicas that sell herbs from Central and South America and Mexico. The reemergence of Native American Indian cultural influences has increased interest in Native American Indian herbal medicines.


* Pharmaceutical drugs are seen increasingly as overprescribed, expensive, even dangerous. Herbal remedies are seen as less expensive and less toxic.


* Exposure to exotic foreign foods prepared with non-European culinary herbs has led many Euroethnic Americans to examine and often consider using medicinal herbs that were brought to the United States along with ethnic culinary herbs.


* People increasingly are willing to "self-doctor" their medical needs by investigating and using herbs and herbal preparations. Many Americans--especially those with chronic illnesses such as arthritis, diabetes, cancer, and AIDS--are turning to herbs as adjuncts to other treatments.


The next section discusses the regulatory status of herbal medicine in various countries around the world, particularly in Europe and Asia, as well as in less developed countries. It is followed by an overview of promising European and Asian herbal medicine research and recommendations for making herbal medicine a more viable health care alternative in this country.



Regulatory Status of Herbal Medicine Worldwide

The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 4 billion people--80 percent of the world population--use herbal medicine for some aspect of primary health care (Farnsworth et al., 1985). Herbal medicine is a major component in all indigenous peoples' traditional medicine and is a common element in Ayurvedic, homeopathic, naturopathic, traditional oriental, and Native American Indian medicine (see the "Alternative Systems of Medical Practice" chapter).


The sophistication of herbal remedies used around the world varies with the technological advancement of countries that produce and use them. These remedies range from medicinal teas and crude tablets used in traditional medicine to concentrated, standardized extracts produced in modern pharmaceutical facilities and used in modern medical systems under a physician's supervision.



Europe

Drug approval considerations for phytomedicines (medicines from plants) in Europe are the same as those for new drugs in the United States, where drugs are documented for safety, effectiveness, and quality. But two features of European drug regulation make that market more hospitable to natural remedies. First, in Europe it costs less and takes less time to approve medicines as safe and effective. This is especially true of substances that have a long history of use and can be approved under the "doctrine of reasonable certainty." According to this principle, once a remedy is shown to be safe, regulatory officials use a standard of evidence to decide with reasonable certainty that the drug will be effective. This procedure dramatically reduces the cost of approving drugs without compromising safety. Second, Europeans have no inherent prejudice against molecularly complex plant substances; rather, they regard them as single substances.


The European Economic Community (EEC), recognizing the need to standardize approval of herbal medicines, developed a series of guidelines, The Quality of Herbal Remedies (EEC Directive, undated). These guidelines outline standards for quality, quantity, and production of herbal remedies and provide labeling requirements that member countries must meet. The EEC guidelines are based on the principles of the WHO's Guidelines for the Assessment of Herbal Medicines (1991). According to these guidelines, a substance's historical use is a valid way to document safety and efficacy in the absence of scientific evidence to the contrary. (App. C contains the complete WHO guidelines.) The guidelines suggest the following as a basis for determining product safety:


A guiding principle should be that if the product has been traditionally used without demonstrated harm, no specific restrictive regulatory action should be undertaken unless new evidence demands a revised risk-benefit assessment. . . . Prolonged and apparently uneventful use of a substance usually offers testimony of its safety.



With regard to efficacy, the guidelines state the following:


For treatment of minor disorders and for nonspecific indications, some relaxation is justified in the requirements for proof of efficacy, taking into account the extent of traditional use; the same considerations may apply to prophylactic use (WHO, 1991).


The WHO guidelines give further advice for basing approval on existing monographs:


If a pharmacopoeia monograph exists it should be sufficient to make reference to this monograph. If no such monograph is available, a monograph must be supplied and should be set out in the same way as in an official pharmacopoeia.


To further the standardization effort and to increase European scientific support, the phytotherapy societies of Belgium, France, Germany, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom founded the European Societies' Cooperative of Phytotherapy (ESCOP). ESCOP's approach to eliminating problems of differing quality and therapeutic use within EEC is to build on the German scientific monograph system (below) to create "European" monographs.


In Europe, herbal remedies fall into three categories. The most rigorously controlled are prescription drugs, which include injectable forms of phytomedicines and those used to treat life-threatening diseases. The second category is OTC phytomedicines, similar to American OTC drugs. The third category is traditional herbal remedies, products that typically have not undergone extensive clinical testing but are judged safe on the basis of generations of use without serious incident.


The following brief overviews of phytomedicine's regulatory status in France, Germany, and England are representative of the regulatory status of herbal medicine in Europe.


France, where traditional medicines can be sold with labeling based on traditional use, requires licensing by the French Licensing Committee and approval by the French Pharmacopoeia Committee. These products are distinguished from approved pharmaceutical drugs by labels stating "Traditionally used for . . ." Consumers understand this to mean that indications are based on historical evidence and have not necessarily been confirmed by modern scientific experimentation (Artiges, 1991).


Germany considers whole herbal products as a single active ingredient; this makes it simpler to define and approve the product. The German Federal Health Office regulates such products as ginkgo and milk thistle extracts by using a monograph system that results in products whose potency and manufacturing processes are standardized. The monographs are compiled from scientific literature on a particular herb in a single report and are produced under the auspices of the Ministry of Health Committee for Herbal Remedies (Kommission E). Approval of such remedies requires more scientific documentation than traditional remedies, but less than new pharmaceutical drug approvals (Keller, 1991).


In Germany there is a further distinction between "prescription-only drugs" and "normal prescription drugs." The former are available only by prescription. The latter are covered by national health insurance if prescribed by a physician, but they can be purchased over the counter without a prescription if consumers want to pay the cost themselves (Keller, 1991). OTC phytomedicines--used for self-diagnosed, self-limiting conditions such as the common cold, or for simple symptomatic relief of chronic conditions--are not covered by the national health insurance plan.


England generally follows the rule of prior use, which says that hundreds of years of use with apparent positive effects and no evidence of detrimental side effects are enough evidence--in lieu of other scientific data--that the product is safe. To promote the safe use of herbal remedies, the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Food and the Department of Health jointly established a database of adverse effects of nonconventional medicines at the National Poisons Unit.



Asia

In more developed Asian countries such as Japan, China, and India, "patent" herbal remedies are composed of dried and powdered whole herbs or herb extracts in liquid or tablet form. Liquid herb extracts are used directly in the form of medicinal syrups, tinctures, cordials, and wines.


In China, traditional herbal remedies are still the backbone of medicine. Use varies with region, but most herbs are available throughout China. Until 1984 there was virtually no regulation of pharmaceuticals or herbal preparations. In 1984, the People's Republic implemented the Drug Administration Law, which said that traditional herbal preparations were generally considered "old drugs" and, except for new uses, were exempt from testing for efficacy or side effects. The Chinese Ministry of Public Health would oversee the administration of new herbal products (Gilhooley, 1989).


Traditional Japanese medicine, called kampo, is similar to and historically derived from Chinese medicine but includes traditional medicines from Japanese folklore. Kampo declined when Western medicine was introduced between 1868 and 1912, but by 1928 it had begun to revive. Today 42.7 percent of Japan's Western-trained medical practitioners prescribe kampo medicines (Tsumura, 1991), and Japanese national health insurance pays for these medicines. In 1988, the Japanese herbal medicine industry established regulations to manufacture and control the quality of extract products in kampo medicine. Those regulations comply with the Japanese government's Regulations for Manufacturing Control and Quality Control of Drugs.



Developing Countries

Herbal medicines are the staple of medical treatment in many developing countries. Herbal preparations are used for virtually all minor ailments. Visits to Western-trained doctors or prescription pharmacists are reserved for life-threatening or hard-to-treat disorders.


Individual herbal medicines in developing regions vary considerably; healers in each region have learned over centuries which local herbs have medicinal worth. Although trade brings a few important herbs from other regions, these healers rely mainly on indigenous herbs. Some have extensive herbal materia medica. A few regions, such as Southeast Asia, import large amounts of Chinese herbal preparations. But the method and form of herb use are common to developing regions.


In the developing world, herbs used for medicinal purposes are "crude drugs." These are unprocessed herbs--plants or plant parts, dried and used in whole or cut form. Herbs are prepared as teas (sometimes as pills or capsules) for internal use and as salves and poultices for external use. Most developing countries have minimal regulation and oversight.



Research Base

The professional literature of Europe and Asia abounds with efficacy and safety studies of many herbal medicines. It is beyond this report's resources to investigate the validity of this vast literature. The following is an overview of some of the more promising research on herbal remedies around the world.



Europe

European phytomedicines, researched in leading European universities and hospitals, are among the world's best studied medicines. In some cases they have been in clinical use under medical supervision for more than 10 years, with tens of millions of documented cases. This form of botanical medicine most closely resembles American medicine. European phytomedicines are produced under strict quality control in sophisticated pharmaceutical factories, packaged and labeled like American medicines, and used in tablets or capsules.


Examples of well-studied European phytomedicines include Silybum marianum (milk thistle), Ginkgo biloba (ginkgo), Vaccinium myrtillus (bilberry extract), and Ilex guayusa (guayusa). Their efficacy is well documented. Herbs of American origin, such as Echinacea (purple coneflower) and Serenoa repens (saw palmetto), are better studied and marketed in Europe than in the United States. Below is an overview of recent research on these phytomedicines and American herbs.



* Milk thistle (Silybum marianum). Milk thistle has been used as a liver remedy for 2,000 years. In 1970s studies, seed extracts protected against liver damage and helped regenerate liver cells damaged by toxins (alcohol) and by diseases such as hepatitis (Bode et al., 1977) and cirrhosis (Ferenci et al., 1989). More recently, a 6-month treatment of milk thistle significantly improved liver function in 36 patients with alcohol-induced liver disease (Feher et al., 1990). Animal studies show that it may protect against radiation damage caused by x rays (Flemming, 1971), and it gave "complete protection" to rats against brain damage caused by the potent nerve toxin triethyltin sulfate (Varkonyi et al., 1971). European hospital emergency rooms use intravenous milk thistle extract to counteract cases of liver poisoning from toxins such as those in the Amanita phalloides mushroom.


* Bilberry extract (Vaccinium myrtillus). Bilberry extract is believed to help prevent or treat fragile capillaries. Capillary fragility can cause fluid or blood to leak into the tissues, causing hemorrhage, stroke, heart attack, or blindness. Less serious effects include a tendency to bruise easily, varicose veins, poor night vision, coldness, numbing, and leg cramping. Bilberry extract may protect capillaries and other small blood vessels by increasing the flexibility of red blood cell membranes. This action allows capillaries to stretch, increasing blood flow, and red blood cells can deform into a shape that eases their way through narrow capillaries.


European clinical trials have shown the effectiveness of bilberry extract for venous insufficiency of the lower limbs in 18-to 75-year-old subjects (Corsi, 1987; Guerrini, 1987). It has been used to treat varicose veins in the legs, where it significantly improved symptoms of varicose syndrome such as cramps, heaviness, calf and ankle swelling, and numbness (Gatta, 1982). These trials revealed no significant side effects, even at 50 percent over the normal dose. In two clinical trials, a standardized bilberry extract was given to 115 women with venous insufficiency and hemorrhoids following pregnancy. Both studies documented improvements of symptoms, including pain, burning, and pruritus, all of which disappeared in most cases (Baisi, 1987; Teglio et al., 1987).


* Ginkgo biloba extract. Though this oriental herb has a different traditional use in Asia, Ginkgo biloba is one of Europe's most lucrative phytomedicines (Duke, 1988). In Europe, ginkgo is used mainly against symptoms of aging. It is believed to stimulate circulation and oxygen flow to the brain, which can improve problem solving and memory. It was shown to increase the brain's tolerance for oxygen deficiency and to increase blood flow in patients with cerebrovascular disease (Haas, 1981). No other known circulatory stimulant, natural or synthetic, has selectively increased blood flow to disease-damaged brain areas. In a French study, "the results confirmed the efficacy of [ginkgo extract] in cerebral disorders due to aging" (Taillandier et al., 1988). In another experiment, those given ginkgo showed consistent and significant improvement over the control group on all tests, including mobility, orientation, communication, mental alertness, recent memory, and other factors (Weitbrecht and Jansen, 1985). A "digit copying test" and a computerized classification test confirmed the improved cognitive function related to use of this herb (Rai et al., 1991).


Ginkgo extracts also stimulate circulation in the limbs, reducing coldness, numbness, and cramping. In elderly people, ginkgo improved pain-free walking distance by 30 percent to 100 percent (Foster, 1990). It also lowered high cholesterol levels in 86 percent of cases tested and prevented oxygen deprivation of the heart (Schaffler and Reeh, 1985). The extract seems to affect neurons directly, as shown by a recent French study (Yabe et al., 1992). Another French study proved protection against cell damage, this time by ultraviolet light (Dumont et al., 1992).


A German study documented benefits of long-term ginkgo use in reducing cardiovascular risks, including those associated with coronary heart disease, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, and diabetes mellitus (Witte et al., 1992). By maintaining blood flow to the retina, ginkgo extracts inhibited deteriorating vision in the elderly. An adequate amount of extract may reverse damage from lengthy oxygen deprivation of the retina. The assessment by doctors and patients of the patients' general condition showed a significant improvement after therapy. These results show that visual field damage from chronic lack of blood flow is reversible (Raabe et al., 1991).


* Ilex guayusa (guayusa). In animal studies, a concentrated aqueous herbal preparation from guayusa leaves significantly reduced uncontrolled appetite, excessive thirst, and weight loss associated with diabetes (Swanston-Flatt et al., 1989). Although guayusa's active principles are not established, guayusa contains guanidine, a known hypoglycemic (blood sugar-lowering) substance (Duke, 1992b).


* Echinacea (purple coneflower). The subject of more than 350 scientific studies, most conducted in Europe, Echinacea seems to stimulate the immune system nonspecifically rather than against specific organisms. In laboratory tests, Echinacea increased the number of immune system cells and developing cells in bone marrow and lymphatic tissue, and it seemed to speed their development into immunocompetent cells (cells that can react to pathogens). It speeds their release into circulation, so more are present in blood and lymph, and increases their phagocytosis rate--the rate at which they can digest foreign bodies. Echinacea also inhibits the enzyme hyaluronidase, which bacteria use to enter tissues and cause infection. This inhibition helps wounds to heal by stimulating new tissue formation.


Echinacea exhibits interferonlike antiviral activity documented through extensive experiments in Germany. For example, in a double-blind, placebo-controlled study of 180 volunteers, Echinacea's therapeutic effectiveness for treating flu-like symptoms was "good to very good" (Braunig et al., 1992). Another study showed that orally administered Echinacea extracts significantly enhanced phagocytosis in mice (Bauer et al., 1988). Water-soluble Echinacea components strongly activated macrophages (Stimpel et al., 1984), enhanced immune system cell motility, and increased these cells' ability to kill bacteria. Other immune system cells were stimulated to secrete the disease-fighting tumor necrosis factor and interleukins 1 and 6 (Roesler et al., 1991). Another study showed that Echinacea polysaccharides increased the number of immunocompetent cells in the spleen and bone marrow and the migration of those cells into the circulatory system. The authors said these effects resulted in excellent protection of mice against consequences of lethal listeria and candida infections (Coeugniet and Elek, 1987).


* Saw palmetto (Serenoa repens). These berries have been used to treat benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH). The standardized extract was clinically evaluated as effective, has no observed side effects, and costs 30 percent less than the main prescription drug marketed in the United States for BPH (Champpault et al., 1984).


Another effective herbal drug for treating BPH is made from Prunus africanum and is widely prescribed in France. It is interesting to note that the U.S. government is funding a multicenter study on BPH treatment to find the most cost-effective criteria for surgical versus medical treatment. However, because the study includes neither saw palmetto nor Prunus africanum, it may not reflect the "state of the art" in clinical medicine worldwide.


China

Since the early 19th century, attempts have been made to understand the actions and properties of traditional Chinese medicine through scientific research. Nearly all of this work has been conducted during the past 60 years, primarily in laboratories in China, Korea, Japan, Russia, and Germany. It was also during this time that most of the drugs used in modern biomedicine were developed. It is therefore not surprising that most of the biomedical research into the effects and uses of traditional Chinese medicinal substances has attempted to isolate their active ingredients and to understand their effects on body tissues.


Several institutions and laboratories at the forefront of medicinal plant research in China are working to identify and study the active ingredients in traditional Chinese herbal remedies. Researchers at the Institute of Materia Medica in Beijing study the use of herbal remedies to prevent and treat the common cold, bronchitis, cancer, and cardiovascular disease and to prevent conception. The institute has isolated compounds such as bergenin from Ardisia japonica, traditionally used to treat chronic bronchitis, and monocrotaline from Crotalaria sessiliflora, used in folk medicine to treat skin cancer. Most of China's 5,000 medicinal plant species are represented in the institute's herbarium. Other Chinese research organizations with major programs on medicinal herbs are the Institute of Chinese Medicine, Beijing; the Institute of Materia Medica, Shanghai; the Institute of Organic Chemistry, Shanghai; the Municipal Hospital of Chinese Traditional Medicine, Beijing; the College of Pharmacy, Nanking; and the Department of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry, Beijing University (Duke and Ayensu, 1985).


Many herbs in China have been extensively studied by using methods acceptable from a Western perspective. For example, a 1992 article in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology reported that during the preceding 10 years more than 300 original papers on Panax ginseng had been published in Chinese and English (Liu and Xiao, 1992). Ginseng is one of the world's most thoroughly researched herbs. Following is an overview of recent research on ginseng and other herbs in China. Unless otherwise indicated, the data on specific herbs are taken from Chinese Herbal Medicine: Materia Medica, revised edition, compiled and translated by Dan Bensky and Andrew Gamble (1993).


* Ginseng root (Panax ginseng [ren shen]). The Chinese first used oriental ginseng (Panax ginseng) more than 3,000 years ago as a tonic, a restorative, and a specific treatment for several ailments. By the 10th century, oriental ginseng had traveled the Silk Road to the Arabic countries (Kao, 1992), and during the next 4 centuries it spread to Europe, where the French, among others, used it to treat asthma and stomach troubles (Vogel, 1970).


In modern times, ginseng has been extensively studied in China, Japan, and Korea and, to a lesser degree, in the United States. In its various forms, ginseng or its compounds have various physiological effects. These include antistress capabilities (Cheng et al., 1986; Yuan et al., 1988), antihypoxia effects (Cheng et al., 1988; Han et al., 1979; Qu et al., 1988), alteration of circadian rhythms by modifying neurotransmitters (Lu et al., 1988; Zhang and Chen, 1987), cardiac performance effects (Chen et al., 1982), protection against myocardial infarction in animals (Chen, 1983; Fang et al., 1986), histamine response effects (Zhang et al., 1988), inhibition of platelet aggregation (Shen et al., 1987; Yang et al., 1988), alteration of circadian variation of plasma corticosterone (Li et al., 1988), modulation of immune functions (Qian et al., 1987; Wang et al., 1980), and delay of the effects of aging (Tong and Chao, 1980; Zhang, 1989).


* Fresh ginger rhizome (Zingiber officinale [sheng jiang]). In one study, preparations of sheng jiang and brown sugar were used to treat 50 patients with acute bacillary dysentery. A cure rate of 70 percent was achieved in 7 days. Abdominal pain and tenesmus (an urgent but ineffectual attempt to urinate or defecate) disappeared in 5 days, stool frequency returned to normal in 5 days, and stool cultures were negative within 4 days, with no side effects.


In another study, 6 to 10 thin pieces of sheng jiang placed over the testes were used to treat acute orchitis (inflammation of the testicles). The ginger was changed daily or every other day. All participants felt a hot-to-numbing sensation in the scrotum, while a few reported local erythema and edema. Among 24 patients in the study, average cure time was 3 days. In a control group of four patients, average healing time was 8.5 days. This technique is not recommended for patients with scrotum lesions.


* Chinese foxglove root (Rehmannia glutinosa [sheng di huang]). A preparation of this herb and Radix glycyrrhiza uralensis (gan cao) was used to treat 50 cases of hepatitis in various stages. Within 10 days, 41 cases showed improved symptoms, reduced liver and spleen size, and improved liver function tests. Experiments from the 1930s seemed to show that sheng di huang, given to rats via gastric lavage or injection, lowered serum glucose levels. Later studies of this problem showed variable results. Work in Japan showed that the herb is useful in treating experimental hyperglycemia in rats. In other studies, decoctions of sheng di huang have been used to treat rheumatoid arthritis in adults and children. In one uncontrolled study, 12 subjects all showed reduced joint pain and swelling, increased function, improved nodules and rash, and lowered temperature. Followup over 3 to 6 months showed only one relapse, which was treated successfully with the same preparation.


* Baical skullcap root (Scutellaria baicalensis [huang qin]). Huang qin was shown to inhibit the skin reaction of guinea pigs to passive allergic and histamine tests. It has been shown to be effective in treating guinea pigs with allergic asthma. Huang qin also prevented pulmonary hemorrhage in mice subjected to very low pressure. Huang qin has an inhibitory effect against many kinds of bacteria in vitro, including Staphylococcus aureus, Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Neisseria meningitidis. In one report, one strain of bacteria (Staph. aureus) that was resistant to penicillin remained sensitive to this herb. According to one study, 100 patients with bacillary dysentery received a prescription composed mainly of huang qin. Mean recovery times were 2.5 days until symptoms disappeared, 3.3 days until normal stool examination, and 4.3 days until negative stool cultures.


* Coptis rhizome, or yellow links (Coptis chinensis [huang lian]). Huang lian and one of its active ingredients, berberine, have broad effects in vitro against many microbes. It strongly inhibits many bacteria that cause dysentery; it is more effective than sulfa drugs but less effective than streptomycin or chloramphenicol. Decoctions of huang lian have been effective against some bacteria that developed resistance to streptomycin and other antibiotics. The herb's antimicrobial ingredient is generally considered to be berberine. Experiments on chicken embryos show that huang lian has an inhibitory effect against flu viruses and the Newcastle virus.


Huang lian preparations have a strong inhibitory effect in vitro against many pathogenic fungi. Capsules of powdered huang lian were given to patients with typhoid fever, with good results. In one report, two cases that were resistant to antimicrobials responded to this herb. In another study, 30 cases of pulmonary tuberculosis were treated with huang lian for 3 months; all improved.


A 10-percent solution of huang lian also was used to treat 44 cases of scarlet fever. It was as effective as penicillin or a combination of penicillin and a sulfa drug. Huang lian also has been successfully used to treat diphtheria; in one study, the fever subsided in 1 to 3 days. Huang lian ointments or solutions promoted healing and reduced infections in first-and second-degree burns. It also has positive effects on blood pressure, smooth muscle, lipid metabolism, and the central nervous system; is effective as an anti-inflammatory; and has been used successfully in gynecology, ophthalmology, and dermatology patients.


* Woad leaf (Isatis tinctoria [da qing ye]). Da qing ye kills some kinds of bacteria, including some strains resistant to sulfa drugs. It was reported effective in hundreds of cases of encephalitis B, with cure rates of 93 percent to 98 percent. In most cases the fever subsided in 1 to 4 days, and symptoms disappeared 3 to 5 days later. Da qing ye has been effective by itself in mild and moderate cases; other herbs, acupuncture, and Western drugs should be added in severe cases.


In a study of 100 subjects, only 10 percent of the group given a da qing ye decoction twice daily had upper respiratory infections during the study period versus 24 percent of the control group. When a mixture of decoctions of da qing ye and Herba taraxaci mongolici cum radice (pu gong ying) was given to 150 children with measles, signs and symptoms disappeared in 4 to 5 days. In 68 of 100 cases, da qing ye was used successfully to treat infectious hepatitis.


* Wild chrysanthemum flower (Chrysanthemum indicum [ye ju hua]). Ye ju hua has been used to treat hypertension, either alone as an infusion or with Elos lonicerae japonicae (jin yin hua) and Herba taraxaci mongolici cum radice (pu gong ying) in a decoction. Ye ju hua preparations have an inhibitory effect in vitro against some bacteria and viruses. Preparations given orally or as injections lowered blood pressure. Preparations made from the whole plant had more toxicity and less efficacy than those made from the flower alone.


One study was performed with 1,000 subjects to see whether ye ju hua would prevent colds. The subjects were compared with their own histories and against a matched set of 261 controls. A ye ju hua decoction was taken once a month by people with histories of infrequent colds, twice a month by those with three to five colds a year, and weekly by those with frequent colds. Comparison with their own histories showed a 13.2-percent reduction in frequency, but a greater frequency in comparison with the controls. At the same time, another clinical series of 119 cases of chronic bronchitis was observed. Using the same preparation, this group experienced a 38-percent reduction in acute attacks in comparison with their seasonally adjusted rate for the previous year.


* Bletilla rhizome (Bletilla striata [bai ji]). Bai ji, in powdered form or in a powder made from starch and a decoction of bai ji, helped control bleeding in seven of eight cases of surgical wounds to dogs' livers. Pure starch was much less effective. Similar results have been achieved with sponges soaked in a sterile water-extraction solution of the herb. In anesthetized dogs with 1-mm-diameter stomach perforations, washing the perforations with 9 g of powdered bai ji through a tube closed the perforations in 15 minutes. Eight hours after the procedure the abdomens were opened, and no trace of gastric contents was found. When the dogs' stomachs were full or the perforations were larger, powdered bai ji had no effect.


In another study, powdered bai ji was used to treat 69 cases of bleeding ulcers, and in all cases the bleeding stopped within 6.5 days. In another series of 29 perforated ulcer cases, the powdered herb was successful in 23 cases, 1 required surgery, and the other 4 died (1 went into hemorrhagic shock while under treatment, and the other 3 were in precarious condition on admission).


In other studies, powdered bai ji was given to 60 chronic tuberculosis patients who had not responded to normal therapy. After taking the herb for 3 months, 42 were clinically cured, 13 significantly improved, and 2 showed no change. A sterile ointment made from decocted bai ji and petroleum jelly was used in a local application to treat 48 cases of burns and trauma (less than 11 percent of total body area). Dressings were changed every 5 to 7 days, and all patients recovered within 1 to 3 weeks.


* Salvia, or cinnabar root (Salvia miltiorrhiza [dan shen]). Dan shen caused coronary arteries to dilate in guinea pig and rabbit heart specimens. In one study of 323 patients given a dan shen preparation for 1 to 9 months, there was marked improvement in 20.3 percent of clinical cases and general improvement in 62 percent of cases. Results were best when patients had coronary artery disease and no history of myocardial infarction. In a clinical series of more than 300 patients with angina pectoris, a combination of dan shen and Lignum dalbergiae odoriferae (jiang xiang) given intramuscularly or intravenously improved symptoms in 82 percent and electrocardiograms in 50 percent of cases.


* Corydalis rhizome (Corydalis yanhusuo [yan hu suo]). Yan hu suo is widely used to treat pain. Powdered yan hu suo is a very strong analgesic, about 1 percent the strength of opium. In one clinical study of 44 patients with painful or difficult menstruation, 50 mg of the yan hu suo active ingredient, dihydrocorydaline, given 3 times a day brought significant relief in 14 cases and reduced pain in another 18 cases. Side effects included reductions in menstrual flow, headaches, and fatigue.


* Root of Szechuan aconite (Aconitum carmichaeli [fu zi]). Fu zi's toxicity has always been a major concern. It is usually prepared with salt to reduce its toxicity. Anesthetized dogs or cats given fu zi preparations showed a sharp drop in blood pressure. In another experiment, fu zi caused blood vessels to dilate in lower extremities and coronary vessels. In normal dosage for humans, fu zi slightly lowers blood pressure, while a large overdose can cause rapid heartbeat or ventricular fibrillation. This herb seems to have some cardiotonic function and a regulatory effect on heart rhythm. Administered with herbs such as Cortex cinnamomi cassiae (rou gui), Panax ginseng (ren shen), Rhizoma zingiberis officinalis (gan jiang), and Radix glycyrrhiza uralensis (gan cao), fu zi raised blood pressure in animals with acute hemorrhage. In one study, patients with congestive heart failure were treated by intramuscular injections of a fu zi preparation. In all cases, including one of cardiogenic shock, the result was increased cardiac output as well as decreased breathing difficulty, liver swelling, and general edema. A few cases showed temporary side effects of flushing and slight tremors.


* Licorice root (Glycyrrhiza uralensis [gan cao]). Gan cao preparations have been used with common antituberculosis drugs in many large clinical studies among patients who did not respond to standard treatment. In most cases, symptoms improved or disappeared and x rays improved markedly. In many clinical studies using gan cao for ulcers with groups of 50 to 200 subjects, effectiveness was around 90 percent. It was especially useful to treat the pain, which disappeared or improved within 1 to 3 weeks. The more recent the onset of disease, the better the results. In almost all cases the powdered herb was most effective.


In rats with experimentally induced atherosclerosis, gan cao lowered cholesterol levels and stopped progression of lesions. In several experiments, the herb reduced the toxicity of some substances, including cocaine, and moderately reduced the toxicity of others, including caffeine and nicotine. When decocted with fu zi, it sharply reduced fu zi's toxicity.


* Dryopteris root, or shield fern (Dryopteris crassirhizoma [guan zhong]). Dryopteris crassirhizoma is called dong bei guan zhong because it is found in northeastern (dong bei) China. In recent times this herb has been prescribed as a preventive measure during influenza epidemics. Guan zhong preparations strongly inhibit the flu virus in vitro. In one clinical trial, 306 people took twice-weekly doses of guan zhong and 340 served as controls. In the treatment group, 12 percent became ill versus 33 percent of the controls. Local versions of guan zhong from Guangdong, Hunan, and Jiangxi provinces have mildly inhibitory effects in vitro against many pathogenic bacteria. Guan zhong also is effective against pig roundworms in vitro, and it expels tapeworms and liver flukes in cattle.


In other studies, decoctions and alcohol extracts of dong bei guan zhong strongly stimulated the uterus of guinea pigs and rabbits. It increased the frequency and strength of contractions. Intramuscular injections of dong bei guan zhong preparations were used with more than 91-percent success to treat postpartum, postmiscarriage, and postsurgical bleeding.


* Garlic bulb (Allium sativum [da suan]). Da suan preparations have a strong inhibitory effect in vitro against amebae. In one study, concentrated da suan decoctions were used to treat 100 cases of amebic dysentery. The cure rate was 88 percent, and the average hospital stay was 7 days. In this clinical study, purple-skinned bulbs were more effective than white-skinned bulbs. Patients were discharged on a regimen that included purple-skinned da suan in the daily diet.


When used with Chinese leek seeds, da suan juice and decoctions have a strong inhibitory effect in vitro against many pathogenic bacteria. Da suan can be effective against bacteria that resist penicillin, streptomycin, and chloramphenicol. In one clinical study, 130 patients with bacillary dysentery were given da suan enemas. Of the followup colonoscopies, 126 showed that pathological changes were resolved within 6.3 days. In other studies with hundreds of patients, da suan's effectiveness against bacillary dysentery was more than 95 percent. Again, purple-skinned garlic seemed more effective than white-skinned, and fresh bulbs were more effective than old ones. In one clinical study, 17 cases of encephalitis B were treated with an intravenous drip of da suan preparations and supportive care. Except for one fatality, all other cases recovered.


India

Ayurveda, the oldest existing medical system, is recognized by WHO and is widely practiced. The word comes from two Sanskrit roots: ayus means life or span; veda means knowledge or science. India recently increased research on traditional Ayurvedic herbal medicines after observations that they are effective for conditions to which they have traditionally been applied. For example, the ancient Sanskrit text on Ayurveda, the Sushruta Samhita, noted that Commiphora mukul was useful in treating obesity and conditions equivalent to hyperlipidemia, or increased concentrations of cholesterol in the body. The plant has been used by Ayurveda practitioners for at least 200 years and may have been in use since the writing of the Sushruta Samhita more than 2,000 years ago. In a recent study, the crude gum from Commiphora mukul significantly lowered serum cholesterol in rabbits with high cholesterol levels. The plant substance also protected rabbits from cholesterol-induced atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries). This finding led to pharmacological and toxicological studies that showed this herbal remedy to be effective in humans, with no adverse side effects. Approval was obtained from the national regulatory authority in India for further clinical trials (Verma and Bordia, 1988). The drug is marketed in India and other countries for treatment of hyperlipidemia (Chaudhury, 1992).


The following other Ayurvedic herbs have recently been studied in India under modern scientific conditions:


* Eclipta alba. In Ayurvedic medicine, Eclipta alba is said to be the best drug for treating liver cirrhosis and infectious hepatitis. Eclipta alba and Wedelia calendulacea are widely used in India for jaundice and other liver and gall bladder ailments. One recent study showed that a liquid extract from fresh Eclipta leaves was effective in vivo in preventing acute carbon tetrachloride-induced liver damage in guinea pigs. Clinically, the powdered drug is effective against jaundice in children (Wagner et al., 1986).


* Common teak tree (Tectona grandis). Trunk wood and bark of the common teak tree are described in Ayurvedic medicine as a cure for chronic dyspepsia (indigestion) associated with burning pain. Teak bark forms an ingredient of several Ayurvedic preparations used to treat peptic ulcer. Pandey et al. (1982) experimentally screened teak bark and its effect on gastric secretory function and ulcers in albino rats and guinea pigs. The solution reduced gastric ulcers in restrained albino rats and significantly inhibited gastric and duodenal ulcers in guinea pigs.


* Indian gooseberry (Emblica officinalis [amla]). Jacob et al. (1988) studied the effect of total serum cholesterol by using amla to supplement the diets of normal and hypercholesterolemic men aged 35-55. The supplement was given for 28 days in raw form. Normal and hypercholesterolemic subjects showed decreased cholesterol levels. Two weeks after the supplement was withdrawn, total serum cholesterol levels of the hypercholesterolemic subjects rose almost to initial levels.


* Picrorhiza kurroa. P. kurroa rhizomes are main ingredients of a bitter tonic used in fever and dyspepsia (indigestion). This drug occupies a prestigious position in Ayurveda. It often substitutes for Gentiana kurroo, the Indian gentian. Powdered rhizomes also are used as a remedy for asthma, bronchitis, and liver diseases. Other researchers have reported that a P. kurroa-derived mixture called kutkin exhibits hepatoprotective activity; that P. kurroa acts as a bile enhancer; that it has antiasthmatic effects in patients with chronic asthma; and that it has immunomodulating activity in cell-mediated and humoral immunity. Another study (Bedi et al., 1989) shows that P. kurroa works to boost the immune system as a supplement to other treatments in patients with vitiligo, a skin disease that causes discolored spots.


* Articulin-F. This herbomineral formula contains roots of Withania somnifera, stem of Boswellia serrata, rhizomes of Curcuma longa, and a zinc complex. Kulkarni et al. (1991) performed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study of articulin-F to treat osteoarthritis, a common progressive rheumatic disease characterized by degeneration and eventual loss of articular cartilage. Articulin-F treatment produced a significant drop in pain severity and disability score, whereas radiological assessment showed no significant changes.


* Abortifacient plants. Nath et al. (1992) organized a survey program in Lucknow and Farrukhabad, two towns in Uttar Pradesh, India, from March to July 1987. During the survey, they recorded the common folk medicine used by women and consulted Ayurvedic and Unani drug encyclopedias for the antireproductive potential of the following medicinal plants: leaves of Adhatoda vasica, leaves of Moringa oleifera, seeds of Butea monosperma, seeds of Trachyspermum ammai, flowers of Hibiscus sinensis, seeds of Abrus precatorius, seeds of Apium petroselinium, buds of Bambusa arundensis, leaves of Aloe barbadensis, seeds of Anethum sowa, seeds of Lepidium sativum, seeds of Raphanus sativus, seeds of Mucuna pruriens, seeds of Sida cordifolia, seeds of Blepharis edulis, flowers of Acacia arabica, and seeds of Mesua ferrea. Plant materials were collected, authenticated, chopped into small pieces, air dried in shade, and then ground to a 60-mesh powder. During the survey, female rats were given aqueous or 90-percent ethanol extracts of the plants orally for 10 days after insemination by males, with special attention to effects on fetal development. Leaf extracts of Moringa oleifera and Adhatoda vasica were 100-percent abortive at doses equivalent to 175 mg/kg of starting dry material.


* Neem (Azadiractica indica) and turmeric (Curcuma longa). In the Ayurveda and Sidha systems of medicine, neem and turmeric are used to heal chronic ulcers and scabies. Charles and Charles (1991) used neem and turmeric as a paste to treat scabies in 814 people. Ninety-seven percent of cases were cured within 3 to 15 days. The researchers found this to be a cheap, easily available, effective, acceptable mode of treatment for villagers in developing countries, with no adverse reactions.


* Trikatu. Trikatu is an Ayurvedic preparation containing black pepper, long pepper, and ginger. It is prescribed routinely for several diseases as part of a multidrug prescription. These herbs, along with piperine (alkaloid of peppers), have biological effects in mammals, including enhancement of other medicaments. Of 370 compounds listed in the Handbook of Domestic Medicines and Common Ayurvedic Remedies (Handbook, 1979), 210 contain trikatu or its ingredients. Trikatu is a major decoction used to restore the imbalance of kapha, vata, and pitta, the body's three humors (see the "Alternative Systems of Medical Practice" chapter). Piper species are used internally to treat fevers, gastric and abdominal disorders, and urinary difficulties. Externally they are used to treat rheumatism, neuralgia, and boils. P. longum and P. nigrum are folklore remedies for asthma, bronchitis, dysentery, pyrexia, and insomnia (Akamasu, 1970; Chopra and Chopra, 1959; Perry, 1980; Youngken, 1950). In Chinese folklore, P. nigrum is mentioned as a treatment for epilepsy (Pei, 1983). The efficacy of P. longum fruits in reducing asthma in adults (Upadhyaya et al., 1982) and children has been reported (Dahanukar et al., 1984). P. nigrum promoted digestive juice secretion (Shukla, 1984) and increased appetite (Sumathikutty et al., 1979). P. longum was reported useful in patients with gastric disorders accompanied by clinical symptoms of achlorhydria (Kishore et al., 1990).




Barriers to Herbal Medicine Research in the United States

The regulatory lockout of natural remedies has crippled natural products research in U.S. universities and hospitals. There is no dedicated level of support by the Federal Government for herbal medicine research. Herbalists may apply under existing guidelines for approval of new pharmaceutical drugs, but this burden is unrealistic because the total cost of bringing a new pharmaceutical drug to market in the United States is an estimated $140 million to $500 million (Wall Street Journal, 1993). Because botanicals are not patentable (although they can be patented for use), an herbal medicine manufacturer could never recover this expenditure. Therefore, herbal remedies are not viable candidates for the existing drug approval process: pharmaceutical companies will not risk a loss of this magnitude, and herb companies lack the financial resources even to consider seeking approval.


Another major barrier is that the academic infrastructure necessary for proper study of ethnomedical systems has seriously eroded in recent decades and must be reinvigorated to accommodate the newly recognized need for preserving traditional medical systems and biological diversity. Pharmacognosy and other academic studies of medicinal plants have declined alarmingly in the United States. North American scientists, once at the forefront of this research, lag behind their European and Japanese colleagues, reducing the likelihood that they will discover useful new medicines from plants. This problem is exacerbated by the fact that much of the discipline of botany has moved away from field studies and into molecular and laboratory approaches. Today only a handful of active full-time ethnobotanists are trained to catalog information on the medicinal properties of plants.


In contrast to the United States, many European and Asian countries have taken a more holistic approach to researching the efficacy of herbal remedies. In Germany, France, and Japan, the past 20 years have seen a rapid increase in research into and use of standardized, semipurified (still containing multiple individual chemicals) herbal extracts called phytomedicines. In Europe and Japan, phytomedicines treat conditions ranging from serious, life-threatening diseases such as heart disease and cancer to simple symptomatic relief of colds, aches and pains, and other conditions treated by OTC drugs in the United States. Phytomedicines include preventive medicines, an often-neglected area of medicine in the United States. The FDA has approved many plant-derived "heroic" cures, but never a plant-derived preventive medicine.



Research Needs and Opportunities

Much modern-day medicine is directly or indirectly derived from plant sources, so it would be foolish to conclude that plants offer no further potential for the treatment or cure of major diseases. Worldwide, the botanical pharmacopoeia contains tens of thousands of plants used for medicinal purposes. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of definitive texts, monographs, and tomes on herbal remedies exist. But most of this information is outside current databases and remains unavailable to physicians, researchers, and consumers.


Globally, herbal remedies have been researched under rigorous controls and have been approved by the governments of technologically advanced nations. The scientific validation is good to excellent, and the history of clinical use is even stronger. Many phytomedicines have been used by thousands of physicians in their practices and are consumed under medical supervision by tens of millions of people.


A great deal of literature exists on the use of phytomedicines in Europe and within native medical systems in China, Japan, India, and North America. Much of this literature can be found in a unique database developed and maintained by the University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Pharmacy. The database, NAPRALERT (Natural Products Alert), holds references for more than 100,000 scientific articles and books on natural products (plant, microbial, and animal extracts). NAPRALERT includes considerable data on the chemistry and pharmacology (including human studies) of secondary metabolites of known structure, derived from natural sources. About 80 percent of the references are from post-1975 literature, the rest from pre-1975 literature (see the "Research Databases" chapter for more information on NAPRALERT).


In 1981 the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), in conjunction with the National Cancer Institute, concluded a 25-year study of plants with possible anticancer properties. One result is published in the Handbook of Medicinal Herbs (Duke and Ayensu, 1985). This work lists 365 folk medicinal species and identifies more than 1,000 pharmacologically active phytochemicals. Toxicity estimates are given for many of these biologically active compounds. More recently, Dr. James Duke of USDA published databases on biologically active compounds of more than 1,000 species of plants with potential medicinal uses (Duke, 1992a, 1992b). Duke proposed to FDA a computer-calculated toxicity index to parallel the Ames Human Exposure Rodent Potency (HERP) index for carcinogenicity. He calls his index the Better Understanding of Relative Potency (BURP) index.


Much of the literature on traditional Chinese and other Asian countries' herbal medicine is only now beginning to be translated into English. While much of this information is in the form of folklore, there is a growing body of data from scientifically valid literature on herbal medicine research in China as well as India and Japan. In 1986, the book Chinese Herbal Medicine: Materia Medica was published by Dan Bensky and Andrew Gamble, both of whom are fluent in Chinese dialects and studied herbal medicine in Asia. Revised in 1993 (Bensky and Gamble, 1993), it presents an indepth study of 470 herbs used in traditional Chinese medicine. Each entry details the traditional properties, actions and indications, principal combinations, dosage, and contraindications of the herbs, as well as summaries of abstracts regarding pharmacological and clinical research conducted in Asia. The revised edition also provides a brief description of the appearance of each herb.


Although very little laboratory or clinical research has been performed on Native American Indian herbal remedies, extensive listings of herbs and their uses have been compiled by ethnobotanists for several tribes. One source, American Indian Medicine (Vogel, 1970), cites references in the professional ethnobotanical literature on herbal medicines for the following tribes: Alabama-Koasati, Arakara, Algonquian, Arapaho, Aztec, Catawba, Cheyenne, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Comanche, Congaree, Creek, Dakota, Delaware, Hoh, Hopi, Houma, Huron, Illinois-Miami, Iroquois, Kwakiutl, Lake St. John Montagnais, Mayan, Menomini, Mescalero Apache, Malecite, Meswaki, Michigan, Mohawk, Mohegan, Natchez, Navajo, Nebraska, Oglala Sioux, Ojibwa, Omaka, Pawnee, Penobscot, Ponca, Potawatomi, Quileute, Rappahannock, San Carlos Apache, Seminole, Sioux, White Mountain Apache, Ute, Winnebago, Yuma, and Zuni. Moerman's database (Moerman, 1982) lists more than 2,000 species of Native American Indian medicinal plants, and Duke (1986) lists more than 700 eastern ones.


These sources--the NAPRALERT database, USDA laboratory research, the Bensky and Gamble book, and the Native American Indian herbal medicinal books--are the foundation on which the U.S. Government, particularly the National Institutes of Health (NIH), can begin substantial research into herbal medicines.


Much unwritten knowledge resides in the hands of healers in many societies where oral transmission of information is the rule. Unfortunately, in many regions this information is endangered because there are no young apprentices to whom elderly healers can pass on their unwritten wisdom; the knowledge that has been refined over thousands of years of experimentation with herbal medicine is being lost. A major research opportunity in this area would be to catalog information on herbal medicines from thousands of traditional healers in cultures where these skills are normally transmitted through an apprentice system. Some organizations have recently increased their efforts to catalog endangered herbal knowledge from traditional medical systems in Latin America, such as those practiced in the rain forests of Belize (Arvigo and Balick, 1993) and Peru (Duke and Martinez, in press).



Basic Research Priorities

Basic research into characterizing these plant products and compounds in terms of standardized content and potential toxicity is needed to allow safe and replicable research to document clinical efficacy. Basic science research should be conducted to evaluate research on the biochemical effects of traditional herbal prescriptions from Western, Ayurvedic, oriental, and other traditions (see the "Alternative Systems of Medical Practice" chapter).



Clinical Research Priorities

Research in phytomedicines in the United States could follow on the results of existing high-quality European and Asian research on plant medicines and should focus on replicating results of key studies or addressing weaknesses in those studies. Reviews of foreign literature and translations of non-English literature would be helpful. Current widespread use of herbal medications as "food supplements" in the United States provides a ready base of users, producers, and practitioners for clinical research in traditional and modern applications of botanical medicine.



Key Research Issues

Before a comprehensive research agenda is developed, several key issues must be addressed, including the following: the impending loss of knowledge about traditional healing in many societies; the impending loss of large numbers of plant species of potential medicinal value; impediments to the use of herbal remedies outside the cultures in which they originated; and determination of the conditions under which herbal medicines are most appropriate, safe, and effective. Additionally, several regulatory issues hamper research into herbal medicines.



Loss of Knowledge

The knowledge of traditional healers in remote Amazonian or Central American regions may have the potential to make a significant contribution to Western society. But few, if any, practitioners of these lesser known medical systems practice outside their native range, and those who still practice within these regions are elderly and often have not found younger disciples.



Loss of Plant Species of Potential Medicinal Value

This loss of knowledge from traditional healers comes at a time when native flora in many areas, especially tropical regions, are being destroyed at an alarming pace. In the United States alone, an estimated 10 percent of all species of flowering plants will be extinct by the year 2000, including an estimated 16 species of medicinally useful plants (Farnsworth et al., 1985).


One hopeful sign is that the U.S. Government recently formed a cooperative biodiversity group including representatives from NIH, the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Science Foundation (NSF), and the U.S. Agency for International Development. This group intends to fund research to locate and catalog medicinally active substances that can be analyzed and used for new pharmaceutical drug development, while working to preserve biological diversity in developing countries.



Use in Practice

Basic to the use of medicinal herbs in many societies is the practice of using whole, unrefined plant material. The material may be leaves, buds, flowers, bark, or roots, separately or in combination. In some cases an herbal remedy is a complex mixture of many plants. There is an age-old belief that whole-plant medicines have fewer dangerous side effects and provide a more balanced physiological action than plant-derived pharmaceutical drugs whose single ingredient has been isolated, concentrated, and packaged as a pill or liquid.


Herbs and herbal preparations generally are self-administered. Often they are purchased through native herbalists who prescribe one or more herbs or preparations on the basis of medical and health approaches that often include concepts of attaining balance in the client's body, psychology, and spirit (see the "Community-Based Medical Practices" section of the "Alternative Systems of Medical Practice" chapter). Consequently, it is often difficult to assess the relative value of herbal remedies versus prescription drugs on a one-to-one basis.


Indeed, herbal remedies of all types, including those from China, are composed of a multitude of ingredients whose interactions with the body are exceedingly complex. A high level of sophistication of research methodology is necessary to describe the interaction between the human body and substances as complex as those contained in many herbal remedies. Only recently has such a rigorous methodology begun to be developed. For example, the Chinese herb Herba hedyotidis diffusae (bai hua she she cao) has been shown clinically effective in the prevention and treatment of a variety of infectious diseases. However, it has not been demonstrated to have a significant inhibitory effect in vitro against any major pathogen. Only as techniques became available to test the immunological system did it become apparent that at least part of the herb's effect was due to its enhancement of the body's immune response (Bensky and Gamble, 1993).


Another complicating factor in researching traditional Chinese herbal medicine is the fact that Chinese medicine characteristically tries to treat the whole body to alleviate disease stemming from one body organ. Therefore, it rarely relies on a single herb to treat an illness. Instead, formulas usually contain 4 to 12 different herbs (Duke and Ayensu, 1985).


Beyond the problem of trying to test herbal preparations that may contain many active ingredients is the question of whether the research eventually will lead to the isolation of single active ingredients that can be packaged and sold separately. Intense debate surrounds the issue of how to conduct clinical trials of herbal medicines according to Western pharmaceutical clinical standards. Critics say there is an inherent problem with the single-active-ingredient approach preferred by pharmaceutical companies that are actively involved in herbal medicine research. The problem, they say, is that isolating a single compound may not be the most appropriate approach in situations where a plant's activity decreases on further fractionation (separation of active ingredients by using solvents) or where the plant contains two or three active ingredients that must be taken together to produce the full effect (Chaudhury, 1992). Beckstrom-Sternberg and Duke (1994) have documented several cases where synergy has been lost by using the single-ingredient approach to developing drugs from plants.


A good example of this single-active-ingredient versus whole-plant debate is illustrated by intense interest among pharmaceutical companies in the compound called genistein. Genistein is part of a class of compounds called flavonoids that occur naturally in plants such as kudzu, licorice, and red clover. Soybeans contain high concentrations of genistein, and lima beans reportedly are even higher in genistein than soybeans (Duke, 1993). There is increasing evidence that genistein may inhibit the growth of cancers of the stomach (Yanagihara et al., 1993), pancreas (Ura et al., 1993), liver (Mousavi and Adlercreutz, 1993), and prostate (Peterson and Barnes, 1993). Genistein is believed to inhibit the growth of cancers because of its antiangiogenetic properties (i.e., it prevents the growth of new blood vessels--a process known as angiogenesis--to tumors).


Genistein is being intensely studied as a possible preventive or treatment for breast cancer, which kills an estimated 44,000 women in the United States each year (Duke, 1993). Studies indicate a correlation between a high intake of foods containing genistein (soy products) and a low incidence of hormone-dependent cancers such as breast cancer (Hirayama, 1986) and prostate cancer (Baker, 1992). The growth of certain cancers, especially breast cancers, has been shown to depend on the female sex hormone estrogen. Genistein exhibits estrogenlike activity in plants and is often called a phytoestrogen. In humans it binds to estrogen receptors (Baker, 1992). It has been suggested that these phytoestrogens may compete with endogenous estrogen on the cellular level, further reducing the cellular proliferation and the potentially carcinogenic effects of estrogen (Tang and Adams, 1981). Thus, it may prevent the growth of estrogen-dependent cancer by competing for estrogen sites on the tumor cells.


If genistein is developed as an isolated pharmaceutical drug, it may have some action against cancer, but the purified compound may not be as potent as genistein in its natural state, and trials may give misleading results. The reason is that all plant species containing genistein also contain other flavonoid compounds, which may have synergistic effects when ingested with genistein. Formononetin--a precursor of equol, which also occurs with genistein--is said to be more active estrogenically than genistein (Spanu et al., 1993). Although genistein clearly inhibits angiogenesis, several other compounds are pseudoestrogens. With this in mind, the question arises: Is a mixture of genistein, formononetin, and other flavonoids, as occurs in many plants, more estrogenic (and antiangiogenic) than an equivalent quantity of any one of these components? If so, the herbal or dietary approach may make more sense than a genistein "silver bullet" approach.



Safety, Efficacy, and Appropriateness

Opinions about the safety, efficacy, and appropriateness of medicinal herbs vary widely among medical and health professionals in countries where herbal remedies are used. Some countries' professionals accept historical, empirical evidence as the only necessary criterion for herbal medicine's efficacy. Others would ban all herbal remedies as dangerous or of questionable value.


The problem is further complicated by the fact that many "patent medicines" available in world trade often are sold as herbal medicinal preparations when they include nonherbal substances. These nonherbal additives often include toxic metals (cinnabar, i.e., mercury) (Kang-Yum and Oransky, 1992), poisonous substances (powdered scorpion), or refined prescription drugs (Catlin et al., 1993). Usually labeled "Chinese herbal medicine," many of these products are manufactured in Thailand, Taiwan, or Hong Kong and exported to the United States, where they are sold in retail outlets. The California Department of Health Services, in conjunction with the Oriental Herbal Association, recently published a list of 20 popular Asian patent medicines (see app. E) that contain toxic ingredients.



Regulatory Issues

The increased use of plant medicines has potential for improving public health and lowering health care costs. Phytomedicines, if combined with the preventive model of medical practice, could be among the most cost-effective, practical ways to shift the focus of modern health care from disease treatment to prevention. But drug regulatory policy prevents the United States from taking advantage of these phytomedicines for two reasons. The first is the exorbitant expense involved in investigating each chemical compound in a given plant extract before it can be tested for clinical usefulness. Hence there is an urgent need to rework current research guidelines to allow the whole plant material or combination mixture (an herbal remedy containing more than one plant) to be evaluated instead of requiring separate evaluations of each chemical component of the therapeutic ingredients.


The second reason is that regulatory requirements for proof of safety and efficacy constitute an economic disincentive for private industry to conduct additional scientific studies. Relaxing regulatory requirements for efficacy for herbal products might make it economically feasible for more private companies to pursue research into issues of safety and quality control. Even with such regulatory change, some public funding of research is needed to confirm the remedies' validity. Public funds are needed because private industry has no incentive to develop an herbal product that might displace a patented drug from an approved treatment regime.



Recommendations

The Panel on Herbal Medicine recommends the following:


* OAM should hold a research organizational conference to facilitate planning in herbal medicine research. The conference would help to identify state-of-the-art questions in ethnomedical research, existing databases, and research personnel needed to support basic and clinical research needs in this area.


* Federal funding agencies such as NSF and NIH must begin to support the training of ethnobotanists--specifically in the field of ethnomedicine--and to offer funding opportunities to foster the rebirth of this field at U.S. universities and research institutions. This is a critical priority because much traditional knowledge in herbal remedies is in danger of disappearing, as are the plant species used in these systems of medicine.


* The bias against plant medicines must be eliminated by restructuring the requirements for proof of efficacy and concentrating on safety, and by removing the need for extensive analyses of chemically complex natural product medicines (thus eliminating the "monosubstance bias"). Several international regulatory models exist to guide the United States in this direction. For example, the German "Kommission E" (expert committee for herbal remedies) monographs give a good example of how the United States might simplify the approval of natural products without sacrificing safety or quality standards. (The "doctrine of reasonable certainty" that influences the approval of drugs under this system was previously mentioned.)


Adopting a more realistic standard of evidence for established plant medicines would eliminate much of the expense required for approval of new and unknown chemical drugs. Doing so would be similar to having standardized the crude drug senna leaf, used in the United States as an OTC laxative and documented for safety, effectiveness, and quality.


Another option might be to require pharmaceutical companies that are testing a plant-derived, single-ingredient pharmaceutical on a specific condition to demonstrate that it is more effective than the natural product. For example, before a patent could be issued to a pharmaceutical company for an isolated compound such as genistein, the company would first have to prove that the isolated compound is more effective than genistein consumed in context (as a food). But some market incentive, such as exclusive prescriptive marketing rights, might be needed to allow the pharmaceutical company to recoup its research costs.


* Legislative action may be required to restate FDA's mandate with respect to herbal products and traditional medications. The current regulatory mandate puts FDA in a difficult position. It is expected to "protect the public" but has no expertise or resources to evaluate the global herbal medicine inventory. If a crisis such as the contaminated tryptophan affair (see the "Diet and Nutrition" chapter) were to occur with a popular herbal product, FDA might attempt to prohibit the sale of medicinal herbs altogether. Instead of expecting FDA to be an omnipotent protector, Congress should legislate a more educational, informational role.


With respect to herbs used in popular health care, a proactive FDA role in establishing quality and safety standards would benefit the public and industry. A certification system for herbal content and potency of marketed products could be set up by FDA with USDA and the herbal industry. Such a system could draw on the existing global database and other countries' regulatory experiences. Participation in a voluntary product certification system would be a marketing advantage for ethical producers, allowing them, for example, to make a statement such as "This product meets U.S. government purity and potency standards." New statutory authority also would be necessary to establish a category that would allow traditional usages to be listed on labels according to criteria similar to WHO guidelines.


Finally, if herbal remedy producers were given the option to apply for specific health condition label indications based on new FDA phytomedicine standards, the United States would have the same three-tiered regulatory system adopted by other developed countries. Such a voluntary system would let consumers make intelligent personal choices about the use of medicinal herb products while mandating safety standards consistent with existing OTC practices for potentially toxic drugs such as aspirin and ibuprofen.


* OAM should review the TRAMIL approach, in which distinguished Caribbean botanists, chemists, ethnologists, and physicians review promising herbs and label them as reasonably safe and effective for people who cannot afford the prescription alternatives.

 

 

#6387 From: Lee & Cynthia <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Wed Aug 6, 2008 12:03 am
Subject:: Click the ball-guaranteed to drive you crazy!!!!!!
cheyennecin
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Click the ball

 
This is wild!
 
 
 
This is guaranteed to drive you crazy!!!!!!

 

 

 

 

Click on the ball and it changes color.

 


____________________________________________________________
Click for FHA loan, $0 lender fees, low rates approvals nationwide


#6386 From: Lee & Cindy <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Tue Aug 5, 2008 8:16 pm
Subject:: Polygamy (Polygyny-the kind of Polygamy that ONLY Allows IT FOR MEN)
cheyennecin
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Biblical contest:
 
Polygamy (Polygyny-the kind of Polygamy that ONLY Allows IT FOR MEN)
Key question: What does it mean that he is to be the husband of one wife? The phrase "husband of one wife" is literally a "one-woman man" in the original...
 
Key question: What does it mean that he is to be the husband of one wife?
The phrase "husband of one wife" is literally a "one-woman man" in the
original Greek...

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/pretribonly/message/7796


====

Key question: What does it mean that he is to be the husband of one wife?
The phrase "husband of one wife" is literally a "one-woman man" in the
original Greek (mia/j gunaiko.j a;ndra - mias gynaikos andra). The
emphasis in the Greek language ison the word "one," as it is found in the
emphatic position.

The Man of God cannot be a Polygamist.
Polygamy is having more than one wife. This view understands the passage
as prohibiting polygamy for the life of a leader...only one wife at a
time. But this could hardly be Paul's thought here. Polygamy is a sin
that is forbidden for all, not just pastors. From the beginning of
creation, God said that a man and woman were to leave and cleave together
and become one flesh (Gen 2:20-25). It is very doubtful that there were
leaders in Crete or Ephesus who had two wives. Even Jewish law forbids
this. This cannot be a consideration.

I know men who have been married to only "one woman" their whole married
life, but aren't characterized as one-woman men. Maybe the man is married
to one wife but the lover of two or three either in his heart's affects
or outright physical actions?
What does it mean to be the husband of one wife? Answer: The man of God
must be a "one-woman man"! (This, as mentioned above, is the literal
interpretation of the text) The man must be exclusively devoted to his
wife in thought, desire and action. In other words, monogamy is not
enough!
Viewed this way, Paul is not so much referring to the marital status of
an elder/deacon as seen on a document, but to a Biblical character trait
of a man's heart. The phrase implies loyalty and faithfulness. The man
must be characterized as a one-woman man, who is exclusively and totally
devoted to his wife. This man is not flirtatious or promiscuous. The man
is not involved in any questionable relationship with any other woman.

Alexander Strauch says: "This man must have an exclusive relationship to
the woman. A one-woman man is a man above reproach in the marital
relationship as well as all other male/female relationships. The man of
God must be a man of unquestioned morality."
Kenneth Wuest, the Greek scholar said: "The elder should be a man
who loves only one woman as his wife. It should be his nature to isolate
and centralize his love."
A man who is a "looker," apart from any physical adultery, has
already committed adultery in his heart and is thereby not a one-woman
man. Jesus spoke on this subject with extreme clarity when he said...
"Everyone who looks on a woman to lust for her has committed adultery in
his heart." (Matt 5:28)
The key questions to ask regarding a man's character in relation to
his wife are...
Are you a flirt?
Are you known as a ladies-man?
Are you a looker? (do you look twice or once too long?)
Are you fantasizing about other women in your heart?
Are you training yourself to be a one-woman man?
John MacArthur stated here.... "For the most part, evangelical
Christianity during this century has focused on the battle for doctrinal
purity, and it should, but we are losing the battle for moral purity. We
have people with the right theology who are living impure. God's standard
cannot be lowered for the sake of sympathy. All battles for the integrity
of Scripture are ultimately in vain if the church's preachers are corrupt
and the sheep no longer follow their shepherds as models of holiness. The
church must have leaders who are above reproach. Anything less is an
abomination to God and spells disaster for the life of the church."
(Rediscovering Pastoral Ministry, John MacArthur p. 89)
This doesn't mean that a man who has sinned this way can never be
forgiven...(not at all). It simply means that only a man who is morally
pure and faithfully devoted to his wife is qualified to serve in the
office of an elder or deacon.
Was this not Paul's fear? Paul knew that this type of sin could morally
disqualify him from his office. I Cor 9:27 - "But I buffet my body and
make it my slave, lest possibly, after I have preached to others, I
myself should be disqualified".
CONCLUSIONS:
It does not seem possible that, by Paul's phrase in 1 Timothy 3:2, he
intends to hold a man's pre-conversion sins against him (see 1 Pet. 4:3;
Eph. 2:2; 4:17ff; 1 Cor. 12:2; Col 3:7). To judge a man's spiritual
qualities on the basis of a sin committed before he was saved, before he
was capable of understanding God's will or Word, and before he has the
power of Christ's life within him is to create a false standard that
detracts from God's wonderful grace and which also fails to deal with the
real issue of 1 Timothy 3. It must be stated however, that like some
other pre-conversion sins, a divorced and remarried man might be in a
vulnerable condition, which could lead to embarrassing circumstances or
subtle reproach.


Regardless of one's view on divorce and remarriage, an acting
elder/deacon who divorces while in office is under reproach and must be
disqualified. The issue is not whether God forgives divorced people (of
course) or whether a divorced person can serve God (of course he can).
The real issue in this instance is the leader's public reproach on God's
glory and the testimony of the church.


Elders and Deacons must be devoted to their marital purity to be accepted
into the office of church leadership and must stay that way to remain
qualified.
MY OWN ADDITION- if a man professes to be a "Christian" gets divorced or
is in non-repentant adultery, he is not to be a church leader, and it's
doubtful he's even a Christian. If a DIVORCED MAN BECOMES a Christian
AFTER THE DIVORCE, and if the woman to whom he was (most recently)
married is still not remarried, he is to pursue HER. Once she has
remarried another man, he is free, but he had better take the WHOLE
DIVORCE upon himself, and he is usually guilty of ADULTERY with another
woman- that is WHAT CAUSED THE DIVORCE, let's face reality here, and the
woman who has fooled around with him and contributed to the break-up of
the marriage and the devastation to this married woman is also equally as
guilty, and had better not call herself a "Christian", either. Of course,
this eliminates polygyny or polygamy.-"Cheyenne Cin" - P.S. A PREVIOUSLY
MARRIED AND DIVORCED MAN can be a Christian church leader, provided he
became a Christian AFTER THE DIVORCE, then did everything correctly,
including take full blame and be fully repentant, and now is a ONE WOMAN
MAN, in every way!

A WARNING TO ALL WOMEN- if you are STUPID AND IMMORAL ENOUGH to think
just because a MAN IS DIVORCED, and says he is (WAS) a "Christian", or
worse yet, blames his former wife, and you marry him, whatever your
'justifications', you are ASKNG FOR BIG TROUBLE. And if you are a church
congregation who accepts this man, even into leadership, or "remarries"
('marries') him and her, big problems!
==============


 
7794 (No subject)
Polygamy is true in the Old Testament, but in the ... to those in authority, "do not multiply wives unto yourselves". So you have to understand ... either the husband, or the other sister wives to help her walk through a crisis, while ...
francis chan
curtainrods2003@yahoo...
curtainrods2003
Aug 4, 2008
3:52 pm
6868 Re: "Why Not Women?" by Loren Cunningham- Women following God's Call to Preach, etc.
... 12 (and 3:2) states that a deacon must be the "husband of but one wife"; (iii) 3:11 is a specific instruction regarding the wives of the deacons, thus (it is said) indicating that deacons must be men. I would like to answer these each in turn. (i) 1 Timothy ... 
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Aug 14, 2007
7:59 pm
5201 Hiding Polygamist Married Off 100s of Young Girls, Former Members Say
... who said that he was thrown out in 2003 and that his three wives and 17 children were taken without warning. "His leadership ... advocated plural marriage. The mainline Mormon church renounced polygamy in 1890 and denies any connection to such fundamentalist sects ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
May 17, 2006
8:08 pm
5146 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CULT;Judgment Coming;JW's Masonic Connection,more
... senses the most. In example: Mormons believe in large families and polygamy so they are promised a planet where women can be forever pregnant and men can have a multitude of wives, women in serving their needs. The Watchtower does not promise heaven ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
May 10, 2006
12:59 am
4665 Re: [pretribonly] The 144,000 and 2 questions
... to Gentile. "There was a very great 'Jewish' component among the Sicambrian Franks/Merovingians and, because they practiced polygamy (another Merovingian peculiarity) they left a great number of offspring. These aristocratic Merovingian children married into ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
Mar 2, 2006
9:50 am
4632 Re: Giants;Notes on the Nephilim: The Giants of Old-Return of the Nephilim?
... parallel with the statement in Genesis 6, that the "sons of God" came in to "the daughters of men" and married them, taking wives as they chose. This is evidently regarded in the Scriptures as an unnatural act. Thus we have the picture of fallen angels joining ...
Lee & Cindy
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Feb 24, 2006
5:22 pm
 
 
3934 "Wives" suing to bring end to abuse under polygamy-Mormon Abuses!
... com/reference/polygamy/polygamy138.html "Wives" suing to bring end to ... of former polygamist wives from Colorado City and ... article about mormonism and polygamy (actually, polygyny ... women" at puberty become 'wives', raped and even pregnant ...


==========
6922Re: In that day, you will have no place to hide.
... Any man who believes marriage to multiple women is acceptable (you),
who ... women, esp. husbands with their own wives, and consequently how
women react ... BEGINNING OF WISDOM! = <Bill> "tHe mAdd pRoFeSsOr"
<madd_professor@... Re: Why Most ...
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/pretribonly/message/6922



Hey Bill. Gonna try to do the 'answering session' more swiftly today. Two
points- one to each of the below issues. It's not a matter of
'competition'- that is not a good thing to say about what a married
person faces, even though I know you're saying that lightly and
humorously, and really kind of making the same point I am. It's like
putting Madeleine Albright in the 'ugly' category. I do think the things
she works for are perhaps ugly, but when a person is a certain age or
born with certain physical features, God put that together. But then
again, there is a certain beauty (outside, physical) that can be achieved
- and I'm only talking women here now- from being rested and not having
to go out to a job, from the lack of stress that comes with a good loving
Christian marriage and husband, from the self control that accompanies
the members of the household in a conservative thinking family. I agree
with you that all who do the best with what they have, and not to look
like someone Bruce can lust after or to 'avoid competition' is beautiful.
Besides, when a young woman is physically at her peak, an older woman is
still not only beautiful to a certain age of men and women who also
appreciate wisdom, intelligence, Christianity and yep, she's still even
physically attractive, in many instances. I heard a radio preacher today
saying that a husband should keep flirting with his wife for life, and
mean it, and should never flirt with any other woman, at work, at the
restaurant or grocery store, church or anywhere else. A one woman man. (A
male church leader is to be the 'husband of one wife', and that means
simply one woman man.)
====
HERE IS SOME MORE "CHAT" I located on this subject:
People in the Bible had more than one wife....does that mean i can have
more than one too?
God seemed to be more than ok with Kings having several wives then i
guess i could have more than one as well.
If it was ok with him back then it sounds only logical he's ok with it
now.

Don't you think?
==
No, I don't think so.

As Christian, you should only have one wife.

A man and woman when married become "one flesh." The New Testament adds a
warning to this "oneness." "Wherefore they are no more twain, but one
flesh. What therefore God hath joined together, let not man or woman put
asunder" (Matthew 19:6).

1Co 7:1 Now concerning the matters about which you wrote: "It is good for
a man not to have sexual relations with a woman."
1Co 7:2 But because of the temptation to sexual immorality, each man
should have his own wife and each woman her own husband.
===
God did allow it.

As the only wife of one husband, I DO NOT.

The Bibe says that a bishop-pastor should be the husband of only one
wife...
this and other things make me see and feel that God doesn't really go for
it like some think.

I think the Bible even says God allowed it because the hardness of man's
hearts.
In that time especially for royalty people married for business... mainly
to keep peace members of both royal families would marry. Also there were
a lot less men per women in those days...
Not to mention that God never said it was OK, God just allowed it...
which you shouldn't assume God is OK with it because God also allows sin
and God is defiantly not OK with that.
====
Matthew 6:24, words spoken by Jesus:


"No man can serve two masters." (In the case of women, two mistresses.)

OK, a little out of context, but the principle applies.
==
Just because it happened does not mean God approved. Look at the life of
Solomon. Or better yet, look at the life of King David. Both had multiple
wives and it destroyed them. It also destroyed the women and the
children. Not usually physically, but it did nonetheless.
===
If you could have more than one wife, then your wives ought to have more
than one husband don't you think. All is fair.
==
It wasn't "ok" with God. Furthermore, it's illegal and the Bible says to
abide by the laws of the land.
===
As long as I'm not one of them, I don't care. Good luck finding several
women dumb enough to not mind sharing.
==
No. The apostle Paul showed that a husband should only have one wife.
============
How to KEEP THE CHURCH as it should be! (Standards for Male Leaders)
... meaning no sexual activity outside of marriage, and not given to
lust, etc.... treating ... scriptural 'widow' and the children of
divorced parents or of fathers who never married ... means repeat,
unrepentant adultery, or remarriage to another woman. -"Cheyenne Cin"- P
...
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/prophecycenterbest/message/187
Lee & Cynthia
leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
Jan 21, 2004
10:32 am
Re: [prophecycenterbest] The ABORTION issue, CORRECT analysis
... children are young? All the while, the marriage is strained, and the
children are allowed ... internal destroyer of the family socially is
divorce. Large Sabbath-keeping groups may say ... effect promote or
condone divorce and remarriage, which is adultery. A happy family life
...
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/prophecycenterbest/message/169

leeandcindy@...
cheyennecin
May 18, 2003
9:07 pm
The Foundation of Marriage (When to Divorce, Remarry, etc.)
... become an adulterer. If you are already wrongly remarried, your
marriage is valid. The Bible says that people who have defiled themselves
by wrong remarriages are not to divorce and return to the former spouse,
but there must be repentance ...
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/prophecycenterbest/message/81

--
WHY will seven women want to marry one man, and provide for themselves?
My guess is...
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/prophecycenterbest/message/206


(DON'T ATTEMPT TO JOIN PROPHECYCENTERBEST group, it's memberless, for
great info only!)

===================
ANY MAN WHO PUTS AWAY HIS WIFE EXCEPT FOR (HER) ADULTERY AND MARRIES
ANOTHER COMMITS ADULTERY! -- Luke 16:18
 
By the way, notice there is no reference to his 'wives'

and also that when God created Adam, then Eve as husband and wife,
it was only those two?!


____________________________________________________________
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#6385 From: Lee & Cindy <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Tue Aug 5, 2008 5:43 pm
Subject:: Re: Doctors who have witnessed Christian Miracles,including patients raised from dead
cheyennecin
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Biblical health
Holy Bible
Teachings
 
 
From the beginning, God has given us foods that can help prevent cancer and heart disease.
    "And God said, 'Behold, I have given you every herb bearing seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed; to you it shall be for meat (food)'." --- Genesis 1:29
Since God had provided Adam and Eve with abundant fruits and vegetables, He must have intended for them to be vegetarians. However, it was not until after Adam and Eve had eaten the forbidden fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil that God allowed animal sacrifices to be made and subsequently allowed meat to be eaten.

Prior to the Flood, we read in Genesis 7:2 that a distinction arose between clean and unclean animals. Moses later enacted this distinction into law. The law was based partly on their wholesomeness as food; and partly on religious considerations. These laws were designed to serve as one of the marks of separation of Israel from all other Gentile nations.

In the Book of Leviticus, we can learn a lot about the restrictions placed upon foods that could be eaten by the Hebrews and foods that could not be eaten by the Hebrews. However, there are numerous references to other healthy foods mentioned in the Bible, and I have listed several examples below:

The Clean

Leviticus 11:2-3 Clean, lean meat from certain animals. "Whatsoever parteth the hoof, and is clovenfooted, and cheweth the cud, among the beasts, that shall ye eat."
Leviticus 11:9
Deuteronomy 14:9
Fish with scales
Proverbs 24:13
Deuteronomy 8:8
Genesis 43:11
Honey is known to have several healing ingredients (especially royal jelly which comes from the queen bee).
Ruth 1:22 Barley grains
Genesis 43:11 Almonds and other nuts are loaded with various nutrients
Ezekiel 4:9 Millet
Numbers 11:5 Cucumbers, leeks, melons, & onions
Deuteronomy 8:8 Barley, wheat, grapes, & pomegranates
Exodus 12:8,15
Ezekiel 4:9
Dark grainy bread is high in fiber & gives protection from both heart disease and cancer
Isaiah 7:15-22
Proverbs 27:27
Yogurt, milk of cows, sheep, & goats
Genesis 25:34
Ezekiel 4:9
Beans & lentils
Numbers 11:5 Garlic contains cancer-fighting chemicals and also helps maintain a good cholesterol level in the body.
Deuteronomy 8:8 Olive oil which can "clean" the artery walls and strengthen the immune system
Leviticus 11:22
Mark 1:6
Locusts, beetles, and grasshoppers are high in protein.


The Unclean

Leviticus 11:10 Shellfish such as lobster and crab lived in water, but they could not be eaten because they had no fins or scales. These sea creatures (although high in zinc) contain a large amount of cholesterol.
Deut.14:21
Exodus 22:31
Wild birds and scavengers could not be eaten because they fed upon dead animals and birds. Twenty-four varieties of birds are listed that could not be eaten because man was not allowed to eat anything related to dead things. Deuteronomy 14:21: "Ye shall not eat of any thing that dieth of itself," and in Exodus 22:31 the Hebrews were instructed that "neither shall ye eat any flesh that is torn of beasts in the field."
Leviticus 11:7 Many restrictions were placed upon what man could eat because of health reasons. Pork, for instance, deteriorated rapidly in the semi-tropical climate of Palestine. In addition, swine have split hoofs, but they don't chew the cud so are considered unclean. Also, pork, bacon, and ham are known to contain bacteria if not cooked properly.
Leviticus 11:23 But all other flying creeping things (besides locust, bald locust, beetle, and grasshopper), which have four feet, shall be an abomination unto you.
Leviticus 11:41-43 Other creeping things could not be eaten either. An example of this would be a snake.


It is important to note that Jesus abolished the distinction between clean and unclean foods in Mark 7:18-19:
    "Do ye not perceive, that whatsoever thing from without entereth into the man, it cannot defile him; Because it entereth not into his heart, but into the belly, and goeth out into the draught, purging all meats."
Thus we read that Jesus "made all meats clean." However, to further prove this point, we read in Acts 10:11-15:
    "And (Peter) saw heaven opened and a certain vessel descending unto him, as it had been a great sheet knit at the four corners, and let down to the earth. Wherein all manner of four-footed beasts of the earth, and wild beasts, and creeping things, and fowls of the air. And there came a voice to him, 'Rise, Peter; kill, and eat.' But Peter said, 'Not so, Lord; for I have never eaten any thing that is common or unclean.' And the voice spake unto him again the second time, 'What God hath cleansed, that call not thou common'."
So we see that as long as we bless our food, the food is cleansed. However, it is still important to note that God (in His infinite wisdom) placed certain restrictions on the foods deemed "unclean" due to their lack of nutrient density as well as possible contaminants. After all, God made our bodies and knows what foods make them run at their optimal levels. That is why He gave us an instruction manual to follow - the Bible.


Our Body Is a Temple

Our body is the temple of the Holy Ghost. Are you treating it with respect so it will last a long time?

The Bible tells us in I Thessalonians 5:23
    "And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole SPIRIT and SOUL and BODY be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ." ---
One of Satan's traps is getting you to think that spiritual focus is so important that you don't have time for natural things (like taking proper care of your body which transports your spirit).

When we defile our bodies with foods that are bad for us, we bring destruction to our body, and God's Word says He will judge us.

    "What? Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God's." --- I Corinthians 6:19-20
    "...Know ye not that ye are the temple of God, and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you? If any man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy; for the temple of God is holy, which temple ye are."
    ---
    I Corinthians 3:15-17
Furthermore, we are told in Romans 12:2
    to "present our bodies as a living sacrifice, holy acceptable unto God, which is our reasonable service."
The apostle Paul wrote to the church of Corinth saying:
    "..I buffet my body (handle it roughly, discipline it by hardships) and subdue it, for fear that after proclaiming to others the Gospel and things pertaining to it, I myself should become unfit (not stand the test, be unapproved and rejected as a counterfeit)." --- I Corinthians 9:27
Paul's message was not to give your body everything it wants, but rather to discipline it by avoiding fleshly desires. You need to keep your body in line with what you know is right.

Overeating, undereating, improper eating, lack of rest, no exercise, worry, stress, frustration are all potentially dangerous and are definately not right.

However, proper nutrition, rest, plenty of vigorous exercise, laughter, and enough relaxation and fun are quality elements that are essential to good health.


Lack of Knowledge

The Bible says that God's "people are destroyed for lack of knowledge." --- Hosea 4:6

We as Christians need to acquire enough knowledge about the foods we eat so we will be able to know what food is good for us and stay away from empty or wasted calories. We need to use wisdom in selecting what foods we eat, yet exercise self control and eat a variety of foods.


The Bondage of Dietary Laws

Diets are like "the law," a written code of rules and regulations that according to Romans 5:20, only serve to increase our desire to break it. God told Adam and Eve they could freely eat of every tree in the garden - except one. That was freedom - and that is what God wants for all of us.
Galatians 5:1 tells us to:
    "STAND fast therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bondage." ---
Remember Jesus tells us in John 10:10, that Jesus came into this world "that we might have life and have it more abundantly." Jesus wants us to "prosper and be in health, even as our soul prospers."
--- III John 2.

We as believers are called to liberty. God does not want us to be in bondage to strict diets, overeating, or any harmful substances. Instead, He wants us to be free and to exercise self control in all areas of our lives.


Taking God for Granted?

Beloved, too often we as believers take God for granted. We assume we can eat what we want to eat in this fast paced society of instant gratification without thinking of the consequences to follow. Then, we suffer physical ailments, we expect God to fix them right away.

The bottom line is the axiom: we reap what we sow, or we are what we eat. If we eat fruits and vegetables and limit our intake of fatty foods we will reap abundant health and vitality; however, if we eat fast food every day and forget about those colorful fruits and vegetables, we will reap health problems down the road.

God (the Inventor) created our bodies to be efficient machines. He wants us (the drivers) to regularly maintain our bodies so they will operate the way He designed them to. God doesn't want us to abuse our bodies by putting in the wrong substances like junk food, alcohol, nicotine, etc.

Hebrews 12:2 tells us that Jesus (God) is the Author and Finisher of our faith. He doesn't have to finish something He didn't author. Or, in other words, God shouldn't have to fix something we carelessly abuse. Fortunately, however, our God is a gracious and merciful God who loves us so much that He often gives us a second chance to be a steward over a healthy body.


Detrimental Habits

Satan uses some strongholds to addict our flesh and keep us locked up in defeat. Let me list a few below:

Smoking Smoking is the #1 cause for heart disease, cancer, and causes premature bone loss. A smoker's RDA for vitamin C is 100 mg; a nonsmokers RDA is 60 mg.
Alcohol Alcohol causes cancer of the liver plus contributes to premature memory loss.
Overeating People overeat for several reasons: lack of knowledge, lack of exercise, lack of spiritual and emotional fulfillment, having food on their mind too much, eliminating entire food groups and not eating a balanced diet, and unwillingness to deny themselves comfort.

Overeating leads to wait gain due to caloric intake exceeding caloric expenditure.
Lack of exercise With the convenience of modern technology (like driving your car to work rather than biking or walking and the invention of the television and computer), people today are simply much more sedentary. However, the Bible says in I Timothy 4:8 that "Bodily exercise profiteth little." Spiritual exercise is much more important, BUT it is important to exercise one's body whether it be walking, swimming, rollerblading, or lifting weights.
Failure to wash one's hands Washing your hands can make a big difference in one's health. God talked about this simple action thousands of years ago in Deuteronomy 23:11.

In addition, it has recently been shown that several forms of bacteria can be found on currency such as E-Coli and other foreign substances when viewed under a microscope.


It is important to note that even if you eat healthy foods, one who is in bondage to certain unhealthy foods and a few of the substances mentioned above will find that these substances greatly neutralize the positive benefits of healthy eating.


Conclusion

Exodus 23:25 declares
    "And ye shall serve the Lord your God, and he shall bless thy bread, and thy water; and I will take sickness away from the midst of thee." ---
Believe God today for His best in your body, but also take care of His creation by what you eat and how you rest.


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Nutrients
Vitamins Minerals

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Teaching - Part 2
Healthy Eating Habits

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Teaching Directory
Click here

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Where to Buy the Best Supplements
Nature's Sunshine

Good health is not expensive; it's priceless. Help your body perform to its full potential by supplementing your diet with all-natural vitamin, mineral, and herbal supplements. Good nutrition is the key to optimal health.

From raw materials to finished products, Nature's Sunshine ensures that your vitamins and nutrients are the best that money can buy. Whether you seek relief from certain physical ailments or need all natural, minimally processed nutritional supplements to improve your quality of life, Nature's Sunshine has the products for you.

Not sure what products are for you? Well, you can try our free health analyzer.

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cross Back to the "Christ-Centered Mall
========================
Subject: ANGELS ARE ALWAYS THERE,on ASSIGNMENT from GOD!
 
ANGELS ARE ALWAYS THERE,
on ASSIGNMENT from GOD! -
 
 
Did you ever feel a tiny raindrop
trickle down from the sky
and land upon your cheek
when there is no rain in sight....
and wonder where it came from
when the day is sunny and bright?

Did you ever hear someone
clearly call out your name,
and when you turned to look
there's not a familiar face
anywhere around
and wonder where it came from,
when the voice was there
without an ounce of doubt?

The answer is quite simple you see,
Angels are everywhere
watching over you and me....
Though at times we don't feel
a presence at our side
Angels are always there
morning, noon and night,
in the most mysterious of ways....
looking after us with much love
forever and always.
 
 
 
========

Can God make you better?

by Peter Lavelle

It won't cure cancer or heart disease; but Christianity can play an important role in our health and wellbeing, say researchers.

Published 31/05/2007

Can God make better? 300x150iStockphoto

Is Christianity good for your health?

It's a question that researchers looked at in the latest Medical Journal of Australia. The journal published research papers presented at the first Australian Conference on Spirituality and Health held in Adelaide in 2005.

Though we're not as devout as the Americans, most Australians have some religious affiliation. According to Census figures, about 75 per cent of us nominate a religion, although this has fallen from 97.5 per cent 100 years ago.

We're not good church goers though. Only 20 per cent attend church at least once a month – well down on the 45 per cent of us who did so in the 1950s.

But many of us consider ourselves spiritual rather than religious. Two thirds of Australians say spirituality is important in their lives (women more than men on the whole). (I am replacing the word "religion" and sometimes "spirtuality" with Christianity- "religion" isn't worth a hill of beans, and Christianity is the only spiritual way! --"Cheyenne Cin")

Is it good for the health?

There are actually plenty of studies looking at this question. In 2006 for example, more than 70 published research studies examined the relationships between religion, spirituality and health (most studies were of Judeo-Christian populations in the US). And many found positive relationships, the researchers say.

Going to church or other places of worship seems to keep people living longer. For example, a US study found that life expectancy at age 20 for people who attended church services more than once a week was, on average, seven and a half years longer than those who never attended. Another study found people who had never attended a religious service had a 19 times higher risk of death over an eight-year period than those who attended more than once a week.

Why should Christianity prolong life? A number of possible reasons, the researchers say.

People with religious beliefs tend to take better care of themselves. A national study of high school students in the US found that Christian students were more likely than their non-Christian students to eat breakfast, eat green vegetables and fruit, get regular exercise, and sleep at least seven hours a night.

Many studies showed that religion has a positive effect on mental health – with religious and spiritual people experiencing less depression and anxiety and less alcohol and drug dependence. And they have better social and family networks to help combat problems.

Specific practices may have positive biological effects. Some Christian activities, such as prayer and meditation tend to slow breathing, and reduce heart rate and blood pressure – all of which have been shown to have beneficial health effects.

But what about helping to cure an established medical condition? Here the picture is less clear.

There have been studies looking at the effects of religion on cancer survivors and in people after heart attacks. But overall the studies haven't shown a strong positive or benefit. Overall, cure rates aren't any better – though many subjects reported improved psychological states.

The end of the journey

So what does this research mean for us?

Of course, for most of us Biblical Christianity is something we choose not on the basis that's its good for our health but because of our personal conviction and backgrounds. We're not likely to adopt a particular Christian belief because it might reduce our risk of heart disease or cancer.

On the other hand, as we age and draw close to death and often disability, we're inclined to embrace Christianity as a way of seeking to understand our mortality, and the loss of key relationships. Christianity can help us look back on their lives and understand the journey we've undertaken.

Doctors and other health workers need to recognise the importance of Christianity, the researchers concluded. They shouldn't offer Christianity as a treatment (it should be left to the individual) but they should accept it as a factor in a person's well being.

===========

6338 Doctors who have witnessed Christian Miracles,including patients raise d from dead
... life transformed by faith in God you'll read ... The doctors still did not believe that I would live to be a teenager, ... christianity.about.com/od/lossanddying/a/roberttestimony.htm - 24k - Does God Still Do Miracles? - Today's ChristianDoes God Still Do ...

 

 

http://au.groups.yahoo.com/group/FoodHerbHealth/msearch?query=christianity+&submit=Search&charset=utf-8

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=================
==== don't try to join Rapture Imminent Group-can't get new members in!
http://groups.msn.com/RaptureImminent/messages.msnw
http://groups.msn.com/RaptureImminent/general.msnw?action=get_threads&Dir=0&ID_Last=255
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#6384 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Tue Aug 5, 2008 4:02 am
Subject:: Re: IJK herbs,MRSA
cheyennecin
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5160
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I was surprised at the drawn-out and not so effective answers and solutions discussed by the people in previous messages with and about MRSA, the external rash / boils that is MRSA. Since I HAVE HAD it on my wrist, back of hand (some people get it more on ankle and foot), and quickly discovered this effective treatment, I will AGAIN pass it along:
 
 
 
"MRSA STAPH SUPERBUG" external (skin);Arthritin Ingredient Profile.
... oxide or baby diaper rash ointment, cover with vaseline or vick's if you wish, maybe some calamine lotion against the itch, and if you want to ... are from touching hands, cell phones,etc. = mrsa skin or internal? - search words Arch Intern ...
 
 
THAT "MRSA STAPH SUPERBUG" -'antibiotic resistant' - that is all the "rave and rage" now is, from what I understand on the SKIN ONLY-- and it's SOOOO easily cured. I've actually had it, and yep, it's bad, real bad. But all you have to do (besides use the topic search box and go back to FoodHerbHealth archives), is slather on raw honey, or if you prefer less 'sticky', use zinc oxide or baby diaper rash ointment, cover with vaseline or vick's if you wish, maybe some calamine lotion against the itch, and if you want to use garlic oil, tea tree or other antibiotic treatments, even internally, go for it! I am going just from memory, not going back to look!-"Cheyenne Cin"- P.S. Oh, and WASH YOUR HANDS, after using the restrooms, or being around staph, etc. I understand much of the spreads are from touching hands, cell phones,etc.
 


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#6383 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
Date: Tue Aug 5, 2008 2:16 am
Subject:: Re: IJK herbs,MRSA
cheyennecin
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email
 

"TRUNCATED" MESSAGE, continued:

 

  •   carlla (Check me out!)

    // Mar 7, 2007 at 5:30 am

    Christina, I am also involved with a military doctor. I have a four month old I was diagnosed with MRSA while pregnant with her. I could not take the needed medication while pregnant, so we planned to knock it out after I delivered…. I STILL have MRSA and know my 4 month old has been diagnosed. I was told that she could not catch it because she was so young. That was a lie. I have 5 children and we all have it including my husband. I will pray for you and your baby with the hopes that this will not happen to your child. Keep as clean as possible spray lysol daily(4-5 times a day)bleach everything and was your hands every chance you get. take care I hope this works for you

    Was this comment useful to you ?

  • // Mar 7, 2007 at 8:39 am

    Part of the reason that MRSA is so prevalent is that so many people use antibacterial everything in their homes. Unless someone is sick in your home you do NOT want to do this. Personally I told my daughters kindergarten teacher just recently that I will not nor will my daughter be allowed to use the purell she wanted all the kids to have at the beginning of the year. I want my daughter to keep her normal flora. (the good bacteria that live in and on us everyday) Also I want my daughter to be able to build immunity to germs so she will be better able to fight colds and the flu. Everytime you have a cold or the flu you build immunity and teach your body to fight off stronger things later. By using so many antibacterial and sanitizers we are dooming our children to being sick all the time when they get older. There will be nothing left to use when they truely ill. Nothing will no longer work. We are very close to that point now. By killing off the normal flora in your homes you will become more susceptible to infections because you are not always able to kill off the bad bacteria that adapt in order to stay alive. Also by killing the bacteria that you want you give a breeding ground to these “super bugs” (bacteria like MRSA and others) Yes if you have a cut use antibacterial cream. I’m not saying to not treat your body if you have an injury or if you are colonized with MRSA. To an earlier comment you can be a carrier of MRSA and not get sick. I would bet that at least 70% of health care workers are carriers and don’t even know it. I know that in my area I cannot buy dish detergent that is not antibacterial. These companies are pushing and pushing antibacterial everything these days by using your fears. It is irresponsible of these companies!!!!!! This is a big reason for this epidemic or should I say this pandemic. The other factor is the overuse of antibiotics. If you have a virus antibiotics will NOT help, all you will do is kill all off your normal flora. That is why people get diarrhea from antibiotics. It kills the good flora. And there is alot of bacteria in stool. And really sick people who have been on antibiotics for extended periods have no normal bacteria there and then you have another bacteria to worry about, C-DIFF. I am not saying don’t take antibiotics if you have a bacterial infection, I am saying do not run to the doctor demanding antibiotics for a cold or the flu. There are still alot of doctors out there that do still give antibiotics if the patient says I want one. Also not all infections need antibiotics. If you are otherwise healthy there are alot of infections that do not usually need to be treated. Not all ear infections do however if you have it more than 3 days or if it is severe yes antibiotics is appropriate. And Salmonella in healthy people is eliminated from your body in 3 days. If not then seek treatment. Be careful. To get back to what I was originally going to say. 10% bleach and 90% water is the best thing to use to clean if there is someone in your home with MRSA. But let me tell you if someone is colonized you will NOT be able to remove it from your home no matter how diligent you are unless the carrier is treated and right now the majority of infection control people and doctors are not taking that stand. In the Netherlands they have removed MRSA and continue to fight it. They took drastic steps and pretty much won the battle. But it is VERY expensive to wage the war that the Netherlands did and it is very unlikely the US will be doing it any time soon. There is way too much money to lose. Washing your hands with plain old soap and water is the best thing you can do to prevent the spread. Let me rephrase that put soap in your hands and rub them together while you sing happy birthday when you finish singing it then rinse your hands. Always wash your hands that long especially if you have to pick up a young child and you have MRSA. Everytime before touching or picking up that child. Or touching anything that your child will touch. Especially an infant. They are not born with bacteria. They have no normal flora. But they do begin as soon as they are born. But it takes time they are the most susceptible. HAND WASHING HAND WASHING HAND WASHING with plain old soap (not antibacterial soap) is the BEST thing that can be done to prevent spread.

    Was this comment useful to you ?

  • // Mar 9, 2007 at 8:53 pm

    We just recently discovered MRSA…unfortunately, it’s all over my back in the form of mini-boils (or large pimples)…

    But we caught it in our children and my husband instantly, applied high-grade melaleuca oil (tea tree) two to three times daily and the sores went away, right away.

    So apparently, when outbreaking, the trick is to get it with melaleuca oil as fast as you can. I recommend a medicinal grade of the oil, not a cheap “aromatherapy” type blend, by the way.

    There are other things we can do to help our bodies fight mrsa. A healthy diet is HUGE—–no sugars (including corn syrups, etc), whole grains, etc. Whole food diet is huge, and since sugar and white flour are both total immune-system DEpressants, they need to be avoided. Get some good cookbooks on cooking with whole foods, do some research and reading (from the library, perhaps), and start eating as HEALTHY as possible (foods that are as close to nature as possible).

    There are many excellent antibiotics provided via nature, too. GSE (grapefruit seed extract) from Nutribiotic is now a staple for us, now that I’ve learned about mrsa’s dangers…you can get pills for those old enough to swallow them, and drops (to mix into juice) for children. It’s very strong stuff, but friendly even for children. (It doesn’t work overnight, but it sure makes for an unfriendly environment for the mrsa to live in…a good way to prevent outbreaks, that’s for sure, at the very least)…

    Another one, though this one burns and is probably too strong for children, is Oil of Oregano. Do a google search on it…it’s expensive, but it’s a killer (of bad bugs). You can take up to 6 drops of it orally, and you can also put it directly on sores. It is a SERIOUS antibiotic, and really does work.

    Also, when the body is in an alkaline state, versus an acid state, that REALLY helps. You can do a google search on that, too, and learn about the foods to eat that promote an alkaline state (which, again, makes it hard for bad bugs to live at all). Lots of green foods help…spinach…liquid chlorophyll…etc…

    Hope this helps…I just want to repeat the encouragement from some of the others on this thread—-don’t ignore the naturopathic/holistic medicine community. There are a LOT of options out there that many regular doctors don’t know of. If you are suffering and have exhausted your resources, please go see a homeopathic or naturopathic doctor and see if they have anything that can help, work on developing a healthy whole-foods diet, and reading up on all of the medicinal powerhouses that are available through nature.

    God bless,
    Molly

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  • // Mar 10, 2007 at 12:24 am

    I forgot to add a few other natural antibiotic options.

    A very promising one is olive leaf. Type in “MRSA Olive Leaf” into google and you’ll see some interesting things, including hospitals using it on MRSA with good success.

    Obviously, organic is best, as that way you know you’re not drinking pesticides and whatnot… Olive Leaf can come in capsule form but also in tea—-and for those dealing with mrsa in children, kids might not be able to swallow capsules, but will probably like the tea, especially if sweetened with raw honey.

    Speaking of raw honey, that’s another thing that some hospitals are using on mrsa infections and to prevent mrsa infections— honey as a skin salve–but it has to be *raw* honey to be the most effective (the “raw” simply means unheated, which means the medicinal properties are still fully intact). Taking the raw honey internally might be really good too, as I know I’ve read of numerous health benefits from raw honey (another thing you can google if you want).

    And I also forgot to mention garlic… It’s another powerful natural antibiotic…fresh cloves are said to be the best—chop or press and then quickly swallow.

    (I know someone who mixes the fresh pressed garlic into raw honey, which preserves the medicinal aspects of the garlic, and then keeps it stored in a jar in her cupboard [it won’t go bad–just keep it tightly sealed] and that’s how she and her kids all take it).

    ANYways, I figure the best defense is a good offense. :) MRSA is notoriously resistant to antibiotics, but these natural remedies work in a much different way—-super bugs *can’t* get resistant to them.

    As to how long one must use the remedies, what strength they should be used, and if they will simply subdue the mrsa or eradicate it altogether, I have no idea. But I do know that MRSA will not like any of these things, as they are all decidely UNfriendly to nasty bugs like mrsa.

    Yours in Hope,
    Molly

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  •   Lauren (Check me out!)

    // Mar 12, 2007 at 12:15 am

    Fashion may be some of the problem.
    The majority of clothing is this spandex stuff which is customarily washed in cold water. We need more selections of cotton that can be boiled and bleached.
    This is my unique observation on reasons for the increase in staph infections.

    What is the implication of eating meats that don’t contain antibiotics?

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  • // Mar 12, 2007 at 4:58 pm

    okay so i was diagnosed in december and havent had any abcess’ since. i decided to get my nose cultured, still havent figured out what made me do it, and it came back positive. does anyone have any idea what this means?

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  • // Mar 13, 2007 at 2:53 pm

    Laura, if you have had a nose culture that grew MRSA that means you are a carrier of MRSA. You are colonized. Depending on where you live and how your DR feels about it will depend on what treatment or no treatment you will recieve. If you are ever hospitalized without being treated you will have to be isolated. Either in a private room or in a room where the other person also has MRSA. Make sure you tell them if you are admitted or you could spread it to someone else. Colonization does not necessarily mean you will be sick from it (But you can spread it) but some people will be severely ill and it can cause death especially in immunocompromized, very young and elderly.

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  •   Charles R. Marshall (Check me out!)

    // Mar 16, 2007 at 10:27 am

    My cousin has MRSA and gets frequent MRSA Sorer/Boils. We have been told by a MD the hydroden peroxide under the scab is the most effective way to kill off the sores. However being and RN myself, I decided to fill a syringe with proxide and inject under sore with Proxide with the Permission of our MD. Immideatly the Peroxide will kill all active infection in the sore keeping the sore from growing and promiting it to heal.

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  • // Mar 17, 2007 at 11:55 am

    I, too, was tempted to try this since I know there have been reports of this working on squamous cell carsinoma tumors. Good job! Please keep us posted on any more attempts with this if there is a recurrence!

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  • DS // Mar 17, 2007 at 8:07 pm

    I had a collasped lung December 26, 2006 and was in the hospital with a chest tube in place for about nine days. I got the chest tube taken out and thought things were going to be fine. I no more got home for just a few short days and my right lung collapsed again. Back to the hosptial and more x-rays. It had collasped a second time. The blow out was due to Blebs and COPD and my emphsemia. I had to have another chest tube put in my chest. It was left to heal and this went on about 14 days. My lung was still leaking air badly so a team or surgens were called in. I met with them and they deceided surgery and it was going to be a big major surgery on my right lung. I had this done and the pain was overwhelming it was the worst thing I had ever experienced in my entire life. I came out of surgery with two chest tubes in my right lung. I was very unconfortable to say the least. I was in surgery for my right lung to be patched due to Bleb disease and the next morning they had me blowing in a little machine to expand my lungs and it blew again I was now leaking air in the two chest tubes in place. I keep leaking air even when I was moved to step down unit and this went on and on. Until one day when the Lung Doctor came in and noticed I might should not need to be blowing in the little machine. So he finally haulted the blowing in the machine and slowly for the first time since surgery my right lung started to get less on the air leak. This was the first improvement made since the surgery when I blew the lung up again using the machine after the surgery. Now you could say there was a big miscommunication on the part of my Doctors who seemed to never talk to each other one ordered one thing and the others disagreeded. Finally they took one of the two chest tubes out. Now you would think when the one left in stopped leaking the Doctors could all agree to take the second one out. But NO that did not happen thanks to the surgen who deceided to let me take it home. I went on with a chest tube in my chest. It was still very painful time in my life. Not knowing the effects of all the pain medicines they had me on in the hospital. I went home and the surgen nurse practiner ordered the homehealth nurses NOT to change my side dressing only to r

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    #6382 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
    Date: Tue Aug 5, 2008 2:11 am
    Subject:: Re: IJK herbs,MRSA
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    // Jan 22, 2007 at 12:05 am

    i, my name is melissa i was diagnosed with mrsa last week i have a five year old who had mrsa two and a half years ago and i just got married last month… i am 25 years old and to me i feel like i am just starting my life and i dont know what to expect with this… but my story is a little different see my son did have sores on his butt and on his arm and leg… but i dont have these i have had this gross green stuff come out of my nose that everyone just told me was just a cold and then chronic sinus infections.
    i just recently got my husbands insurance so i did not see a doctor about this until last week and he tested the mucus from my nose which tested positive for mrsa… i am scared even more because i might be pregnant so i the doctor says i cant take my antibiotic which is velaquin. i still don know how i am still alive with that infection in me for who knows how long that stuff has been coming out of my nose for almost nine months now. we were not on any birth control and we had sex while i was ovulating it might be all in my head but it is too soon to take a pregnancy test but i am starting to get really scared the doctor was not any help he was a ent doctor i dont know what kind of specialist to see and i cant get a soon enough appointment do you know if i can just go to the emergency room and say i am not leaving until i am better or i know how to get better?? please any info will help i am clueless i am scared my son will get this again is it possible i caught it from him three years ago almost with out him having any new sores?
    do you know if i am pregnant if it will affect the baby or do you know who i can ask because the doctor would not give me any info…

    thank you so much and may God be with you

    melissa

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  • // Jan 24, 2007 at 10:53 pm

    i had my first mrsa outbreak almost a year ago, but i was not properly diagnosed until about two weeks ago. i went to the doctor with a baseball size carbuncle under my arm that had well over 16 heads. absolutely the grossest and most painful thing i’ve ever experienced. i’ve been put on bactrim as well as mupirocin nasal spray and was given chlorhexidine to wash with. The combination has been miraculous. I’ve also found that tea tree oil is a good antiseptic to use to wash the wound. i’ve have had 5 outbreaks since last may, each one worse than the last. My doctor is optimistic that this treatment will help me get rid of the infection. i hope this helps someone out there.

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  •   Lauren (Check me out!)

    // Jan 29, 2007 at 11:24 am

    Someone please help! I’ve had MRSA for about 2 years now. I’m only 22 and this is not the way or what I want to die from. About a week ago I went to a local infectious disease doctor. He gave me 3 diff RX’s. I’m trying the things he told me to do like clean under my nails, wash everything and start fresh from when I begin the RX which I have. The doctor also told me to use this scrub which is called Chlorhexydine. (it comes it a bluish, green bottle. You use it after your normal shower but before you actually get out. You put it on from your nose to your toes and leave it on for a minute than rinse it off. I’ really sick of these skin boils and they leave scars. They’re ugly! If anyone knows any cures, please let me know. I dont want to live with this forever.

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  • // Jan 31, 2007 at 2:14 pm

    Hello, My daughter 7 months old was dx yesterday with MRSA. They put her on Sulfamethoxasole w/tmp susp. I was told this staph is very resistant but was also told it can be cured. By reading what everyone else writes it doesnt seem to be. She has had 3 boils in the past month. And its starting to seem she got it from getting her ears pierced. Im not sure though. I dont really know what to think or what to do, like i said, by reading everyones statements on here it doesnt seem like something that goes away.

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  • // Jan 31, 2007 at 5:28 pm

    I know this can be cured-it takes diligence on the Medical Community’s part and on the patient and patient’s family’s part. We alternate bleach-alcohol to clean surfaces-no sharing towels or face cloths-keep numbers down-get the precise medication for pathogen-this is identified by blood cultures-Try Staph-a-septic-look on line-google it and it will tell you where you can buy it near you-tee tree oil-nasal bactroban-keep hands clean always-cover boils and get treated immediately-Infectious Disease Specialist is the way to go-children can get very sick from this-can develop ostomyelitis from this as well as other complications. Eat right and get plenty of rest. Let’s all fight this together-God Bless-Keep the prayers going.

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  • // Jan 31, 2007 at 9:39 pm

    MRSA is a terrible infection that no one should have to deal or live with. Unfortunately, some people do have to struggle with it every day, but many people are being and have been cured. I contracted the infection about one year ago. It was not an easy battle, especially as the first site that opened was on my leg and I am a dancer in college. But, with wonderful medical aid, diligent self-care, loving friends, and homeopathy (Echinacea, goldenseal, and other herbs for healing and immune boosting) I am healing. I just want those that join this group to have hope that they can be cured and heal. I truly feel that herbology, feeling loved, and staying positive helped immensely. I suggest that some people look to alternative medicines like herbology along with doctor prescribed anti-biotics. Antibiotics do kill the good bacteria in your intestines along with the bad, so I’ve been taking a probiotic (also found in live-culture yogurts) which has helped my stomach. I’m praying for you all to have faith in your own ability to heal and stay positive.

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  • // Jan 31, 2007 at 11:25 pm

    My husband had to go into a nursing home after contacting MRSA in the hosp. He got it four years ago when he had surgery and now it has reapeared Does anyone have a cure for it He has been in the nursing home three weeks, has to stay there because he is having intervenious antiobotics every six hours, Insurance wont pay for it at home, I plan on giveing him a lot of vitamin C seleium, zinc vitamin D and Probotics when he gets home I welcome any suggestions thanks to all of you for shareing

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  • // Feb 3, 2007 at 8:29 pm

    Kathleen,
    Several antibiotics can be used to treat most staph infections, including MRSA. From what my family has been told Vancomycin has been the most effective and reliable drug in these cases, but is used intravenously and is not effective for treatment of MRSA when taken by mouth.
    Give him vitamins and buikd up his immune system. I dont have MRSA but my father contracted it through a hospital and has never been the same. He is 82 and is stable, due to the Vancomycin.
    “Few antibiotics are available to treat more serious MRSA infections. These include vancomycin (Vancocin, Vancoled), trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim, Bactrim DS, Septra, Septra DS), and linezolid (Zyvox).”

    This came from this website:

    http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/007261.htm

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  • // Feb 7, 2007 at 8:55 pm

    so happy to share that my realtive has been to infectious disease specialist today-only one more week of PIC line-going back to school tomorrow-so by next week it will have been 6 weeks on Iv vancomycin-success! Keep fighting this disease-we will win—Prayers to all-Keep the Faith-

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  • // Feb 7, 2007 at 11:11 pm

    my little brother is still alive but the doctors say that he has a new case of MRSA called necrotizing MRSA pnomonia…… He’s only 24 and he has 6 chest tubes has anyone heard of a strain this serious?

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  •   Monica (Check me out!)

    // Feb 8, 2007 at 2:09 pm

    I’m a 19 year old college student. I was diagnosed with mrsa only one month ago, but I think I’ve had it for close to one year. I was initially treated with the antibiotic Cefadroxil 500 mg and Mupricin 2% ointment. The boils cleared up after being lanced by a dermatologist, but I unfortunately got a new boil this past week. I am now on Doxycycline and using an iodine wash.
    I am allergic to septra and all sulfa drugs, as well as clyndomycin. I am therefore even further restricted in the types of medicines I can use to fight off the infection.
    I live in a dorm room with four other girls, all of whom are very scared to catch what I have. Now that I have an abcess, I have bagged all of my sheets and wash obsessively, but I am unsure of what else I can do.
    The Health Center at my school does not know much about mrsa and was responsible for misdiagnosing me many times throughout first semester. They told me I had scabies, a viral infection, scarlet fever, and many other improbable conditions. I don’t really know if I can even trust their judgment anymore.
    Please, if anyone has any suggestions for me, please let me know. Should I be attending classes? Should I go home? I don’t want to be infecting my campus, but no one seems to be taking it very seriously.
    This is a very scary and confusing thing for me to deal with. I just want to put myself and my roommates at ease.
    Also, if anyone has any other suggestions for medications that I am not allergic to that might work better, please let me know.

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  • // Feb 8, 2007 at 5:03 pm

    Monica, Who diagnosed the MRSA? One suggestion I would have is go to an infectious disease specialist-one who has treated this successfully in the past. Sometimes people need IV treatment-I do not know if you are one of those people, but a blood culture would tell you what you need to know-then the Doctors can treat you more exactly. My relative has been on vancomycin for almost 6 weeks-started with a boil last April-It went away but sort of laid dormant for months-and caused a severe infection. She was in hospital for almost three weeks-then went home on PIC line IV-she is much better-only one more week of the line-but doctors keep testing blood. Best of Luck-I hope you get all better soon. We wash clothes with bleach-surface clean with bleach and alcohol-any cuts are treated immediately-with staph-a-septic, then covered with bandaid., careful washing warm soap and water. Hands have to be kept very clean. Remember the germs like moist warm places to hide like under arms, folds of skin, in between toes, in the belly button. Let’s beat this monster.

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  • // Feb 8, 2007 at 5:17 pm

    to Josh, My relative was in critical condition-has your brother been put on Rifampin? he is still fighting, is he on Vancomycin? Will he have surgery? I will keep him in my prayers. The Rifampin goes directly to the lungs. I had to learn that the hard way. Maybe the doctors can give him Rifampin? It seemed to help the vancomycin work much better whe it was prescribed-I remember waiting all night for the pharmacy in the hosputal to get it to her-but we noticed a difference within hours. I hope this is helpful.

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  • // Feb 10, 2007 at 6:09 pm

    I was diagnosed with MRSA on 1/3/07. It was the second time I had a big red welt on my left side. The first one I noticed the week after Thanksgiving, it was on my left hip. I asked the doctor about it and she stuck two needles in and drained it. For the next three weeks I applied hot compresses, kept the wound covered with an antibiotic ointment and a bandaid and took an antibiotic. Then on 12/28 I went back to the Dr. with a new hot red lump. This one a on my left thigh. After a few days on the new antibiotic (bactrim ) this one was getting worse. I went back to the Dr. who got me an appointment with a surgen the following day. He cut the absess open ,dug out the infection and told me it looked like MRSA, but the culture wouldn’t be back for a few days. The culture came back MRSA. He prescribed a cream to put in my nose twice daily and said to continue taking the bactrim. I was also told to wash the wound daily with peroxide and keep it covered until there was nothing comming out. About three weeks later, just as my second lump was healing I found another lump. We started again cut it, drain it, clean it daily with peroxide and keep it covered. This time he prescribed Zyvox which seems to be helping. I feel like I should buy stock in the chlorox company. I spray the shower down after I shower with a mixture of 1/3 bleach and 2/3 water, use chlorox wipes everywhere and lots of hand sanatizer. My MRSA so far has only appeared on the left side of my body.
    I have recently noticed that a few of my teeth are turning black. Has anyone heard of this? At this point every little thing has me wondering if it is connected to the MRSA.

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  • // Feb 10, 2007 at 7:54 pm

    Monica — i’m sorry that you have developed this at such a young age and i’m sure it is very difficult to deal with being in a dorm. i’m 47 and had my first outbreak in may of last year. i was not actually tested for mrsa until last month and the test was positive. i’ve had about 5 or 6 episodes since may. the last dr i went to put me on bactrim and prescribed an antibacterial cleanser (HIBICLENS) as well as a nose spray (CALLED OCEAN SPRAY) which can be purchased over the counter at walmart. also, try putting tea tree oil (also at walmart) on the sores. it really does help to heal them up. best of luck to you, keep us posted.

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  • // Feb 14, 2007 at 9:31 am

    I was diagnosed with MRSA 2/13/07, Im kinda freaked out about this.I’ve had 3 lumps total. The last lump or abscess was on the left side of my chin, it looked awful and it hurt. My doc put me on Bactrim, March 6th I go back to see if its colonized. What in the world does that mean?

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  • // Feb 22, 2007 at 7:42 pm

    I was just informed today 2/22/07 that my culture came back and I do have MRSA. I am not sure how bad it is,but I had both underarms lanced on Monday 2/19/07 and I have been in pain for about a week. My husband says there are different levels of MRSA but I don’t know exactly what all of this means.I do know that I am scared for my health and I hope I can fight this off. I go back to the doctor on Monday,so I guess I’ll know more then. Meanwhile, I’ll just keep taking my medicine and pray that it helps.

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  •   Rebecca (Check me out!)

    // Feb 23, 2007 at 2:11 pm

    My thoughts and prayers go out to all of you. My nephew (7 yrs old) is currently in ICU. He has been there officially for a week. He first went in because he was not able to breath, during transport from one hospital to another he went into cardiac arrest. He is now on an ECMO machine, he has been on it since last Thursday. His lungs, heart, and kidneys are not working w/0 life support. They have drained 1/2 his body weight in fluid from his chest (fluid that is not even in his lungs), they have put tubes in his lungs to drain them as well. His little arms and feet have turned blue (lack of circulation) and he is full of fluids. You can’t even touch him w/o sores forming, because his skin is stretched out from all the fluid retention. The doctors told my brother yesterday that his son has MRSA. We are all in a lot of heartache and pain. They did an EEG on my nephew yesterday because he is having brain seizures and they do not know if he has suffered severe brain damage. They can’t give him an MRI at this time because he is to weak and can’t be put into the MRI with the life support. They are getting very minimal brain wave activity from the EEG tests.
    I’ve never heard of MRSA until now. And we are all dumbfounded as to how he got this. We don’t know if he contracted it in the hospital, or if it was the original cause of his severe sickness.
    When he first got sick his symptoms were fever and very dry cough. The morning my sister in law took him to the doctor they said he had croup, he was in ICU by the following day. That is how fast this took hold of his little body. Since he has been on life-support since last Friday, it seems odd to me that they are just now telling us he has MRSA. I don’t understand why they were unable to identify it last week.
    They have told my brother and his wife that they need to think of taking my nephew off of life support, but at this time they are not going to do that. We refuse to give up.
    Please please please pray for my nephew, he needs all of the help he can get.
    If anyone could share their thoughts with me on this, or let me know if they’ve heard the outcome of these situations please let me know.
    My thoughts and prayers are with all of you as well.

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  • // Feb 24, 2007 at 8:29 am

    Went to infectious disease specialist after my 3rd
    outbreak and 2nd surgical removal.
    I have been recovering for 11 weeks !!
    Each time the anti-biotics were done within 10 days another outbreak.
    I’m now on heavy dose’s of bactrin(4 a day)and wound is healing well. The real test will be when the medicine is discontinued , only time will tell.
    if i had known to see a SPECIALIST perhaps i could have prevented the 2nd & 3rd outbreak, may have saved alot of $$$ and prolonged suffering and pain.
    My advice to anyone is to see your Dr ASAP
    if you have a boil or spider-bite. insist on a NASAL SWAB for lab-testing.
    If MRSA confirmed see a SPECIALIST!!!
    If anyone you know is entering a hospital for ANYTHING, have them request a NASAL SWAB upon admitting and discharge.
    This could save them alot of agony and protect loved ones.

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  • // Feb 26, 2007 at 5:38 pm

    It all started with a boil on my son’s leg. Eventually, my husband and my youngest son had them too. I was the only one in the house without a rison (spelling?). However, a few months later, I noticed that my nose was quite sore to the touch…very painful. My husband came to the rescue…we thought…pulled out the infected hair…and doctored it with medicine. I had immediate relief. However, the next day, i noticed a red area veining down from the corner of my mouth to my jawline. It was hard and sore to the touch. This was a Wednesday. That same day, while walking out of my office, I was hit with a strange and severe chest pain. It went away as quickly as it came. But, my head begain to hurt. That night, I had a seizure, which was not that unusaul since I suffer from non-epileptic seizures from time to time. For some reason, after having the seizures, I don’t have lasting affects, so when woke up the next morning with really bad chest pain and a bad headache…and this hard veining still there, in my heart of hearts, I knew something was wrong. I called my doctor’s office, but could only see a new physician…However, I knew I didn’t need to wait. He was problem #1. He took my temp…didn’t have one…as my temp runs low to begin with. He told me that I just had myalgia from the seizure. I told him that I did not agree with him…that this had never happened before…and that I could hardly breathe. He then agreed to do an x-ray. Nothing showed up. He came back to me and said, “Again, we have eliminated anything life threatening or serious. The chest x-ray was normal.” I asked him if he thougth we needed to do blood work. He said, “No, it’s just myalgia. If something was seriously wrong, it would show up on the x-ray.” I felt foolish and went on to work. But, as I sat there, I felt my body truly declining. My boss walked by and took one look at me…and instructed me to go home. I went back to work again on Friday…thinking that I was just having muscle pain. I left early again. That night, I was in excruciating pain in my chest. Breathing was almost impossible. I could not sleep. I could not get comfortable. The veining was now very swolen and red. I woke my husband at 6 am and asked him to take me to the hospital. Since my diagnosis had been just muscle pain, he tried to encourage me to take something for pain and try to get comfortable. I knew something was horribly wrong. I was losing it…and losing it quickly. This was Saturday. I remember arriving at the emergency room and being told that the same doctor that diagnosed me with myalgia was on call again. With his arrogance he walked into the room and said to me, “I’ve already told you, we have eliminated anything serious or life threatening.” I didn’t respond to him. Since we had left the kids at home, my husband left me thinking I would be okay…and my mother would join me momentarily…everything would be fine…At this point, I lost consciousness. I only remember waking a couple of times over the several days. I remember screaming in pain when they tried to budge me. I was placed on antibiotic to handle a normal staph infection…and dilaudid for pain. I only got worse. My temp went to 105. The right side of my face swelled to connect with my shoulder. My bottom lip swelled and turned down completely, peeling off and leaving me with permanent swelling and blue discoloration on the lip…and scarring on the side of my face and jawline. The doctors did not make progress, so an Infectious Disease doctor was called in. I do remember him coming into my room. It was as if something supernatural was happening. He came in and saw me…and said, “Oh, my God.” The entire time, I had not been isolated, nurses were coming and going. Family members was coming and going. He then said, “Let’s get her to the Unit.” This was on Tuesday. Somewhere between then and when I woke up the next time, I went into respiratory arrest. At this point of consciousness, I was halluciating. My nurse had purple eyes…Drew Carey was in my room…and there was purple cursive writing on the ceiling, but I couldn’t read it. They found that I had MRSA staph and it had traveled to my lungs. They had to add a steroid for the vancomycin (spelling?) to begin working. I ended up with a tube running out of my back to drain the fluid which had collected, a catheter and feeding tube in my nose. They kept a close watch on my face, as they intended to slice the skin along the jawline, to relieve some of the pressure. For some reason, this really bothered me. I was dying, but when they told me about cutting me, it was the straw that broke the camel’s back. This made me cry. After only 3 weeks, I developed a reaction to the antibiotic. I had red-man syndrome, was scalded on the inside and out. I threw up at the mention of food (and if you know me…I LOVE food). I grew severely depressed (and I have OCD) and addicted to the pain medication. They had to take me off of it…which put me through horrible withdrawals. The second antibiotic only worked for a about a week and I had a reaction to it as well. I itched so badly and still could not eat. By then, they had placed me in Long Term Care and had finally taken me off of oxygen. I started physical, respiratory and occupational therapy. I couldn’t walk by myself. Breathing was still quite difficult and extremely painful. The day I left the hospital, I was able to keep a few bites down. By then, I had been free of MRSA for about a week. The left the hospital after 5 and a half weeks…on the Wednesday before Christmas on Monday. I did my Christmas shopping and returned to work the following Tuesday…the day after Christmas. I wanted to get on with my life and move forward. I look back now and wonder WHY?! I pushed myself sooo hard. I still have chest pain from the lung scarring. I still have scarring on my jawline. I still have a blue bottom lip. Medications don’t work like they used to, because of the damage to my liver…and my increased tolerance to drugs. But, every once in a while, I completely stopped in my tracks with the thought of what really happened…how close was I to dying…why didn’t someone tell me. I had no idea during the sickness…the gravity of the situation. Today, I try to find information on CA-MRSA which lead to the lungs, but not much is out there. I really would like to correspond with someone that could give me insight. You don’t always get staph from the hospital………

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  • // Mar 1, 2007 at 12:13 pm

    Hello, I currently work in the microbiology department of a hospital. And I will tell all of you that MRSA is a very big problem. The major problem is that there are 2 types of MRSA community acquired and hospital acquired. And studies are now beginning to show that the 2 may merge and become even worse. I can tell you that hospital acquired is the better to have. The community acquired is much more resistant. MRSA is a product of overuse of antibiotics. these microbes are adapting in order to survive. MRSA can also be colonized in a person. If this is the case it lives inside you. A nasal swab culture would determine this. If this is than yes more than likely if you get staph infections it will more than likely always be MRSA. Hand washing is the best prevention. When in the hospital do NOT ever let a DR, nurse, or aide touch you without you first personally seeing them wash their hands. When you do get outbreaks that need to be treated it is important to have it cultured. MRSA is getting more and more resistant which means antibiotics that have previously worked may no longer work. Each infection will be different. The more you use a particular antibiotic the greater the chance is that the infection will be resistant to it. MRSA is just the tip of the iceberg. Many other organisms are becoming more and more resistant. I would like to also add that just because someone is colonized or should I say a carrier does not mean it will make them sick. It just means that when an infection occurs it has a higher probablity of being a MRSA infection. There are some body washes available for people with MRSA in other countries I do not know if they are available in the states. The Netherlands has successfully irradicated MRSA. Using the body washes, nasal creams, and when hospital personnel have become carriers they are treated and not allowed to work until they are no longer harborers of MRSA. The US are not doing anything like this. The cost is outragious because it is so prevalent. But I would bet that eventually the whole world will have to do something similiar eventually. Also I would like to add that MRSA skin infections often do start out looking like they are spider bites.

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  • // Mar 1, 2007 at 5:41 pm

    Jill and all, I am writing again because this disease is so ravaging-it tries to take hold, and unless the doctors are really agressive it becomes severe. I have seen this in a child. It was stopped in its tracks with vancomycin and Rifampin-I believe the Rifampin helped the Vancomycin to work. It traveled to lung-near heart and caused a blood clot that did the worst possible thing-broke off to the lung. Thank God that the monitors were on-they beeped to alert the nurse who had to give oxygen-constant monitoring of temp and oxygen saturation throught the night. Who would think this could all start from a festering boil. Do not allow a boil to fester-keep it clean-have it checked right way you fought the beast Jill, and you won. Hand washing is key-for all of us. This can get down into the bone which it did in our family-muscle and bone-they put a child on morphine for the pain that this caused. I never want to see it rear it’s ugly head again. To God be the Glory. We prayed and put oil on her leg all night. God Bless

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  •   Rebecca (Check me out!)

    // Mar 1, 2007 at 9:22 pm

    If you read my previous post. Please pray for my family. My nephew passed away lassed Tuesday.
    MRSA took his young life.

    This is a serious disease! Please please please I beg you, if you of someone you know gets sick, has unexplainable symptoms force your doctor to give you a staph test. This staph does not discriminate, it will take the old the young and everyone in between. Americans need to STOP taking antibiotics for every cough and sniffle so that these superbugs and be killed with antibiotics. They have mutated and found a way to survive because we don’t take any responsibilitly for our health. We expect to go the th doctor get a pill and like magic be better. This is not the way to be healthy. And it is killing so many innocent people.
    I know that my nephew is with God, and that is a thought I hang on to dearly. But this could have been avoided. Doctors need to wake up and pay attention to this awful superbug.

    Again, I pray for all of you suffering or having a loved one suffer from this. My love and good thoughts go out to all of you.

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  •   heather (Check me out!)

    // Mar 2, 2007 at 2:30 pm

    my daughter is 3 and has been fighting mrsa for over a year. we were in the hospital for over a week in nov, i thought it was gone and one week after i ended up with my first boil. I have done the protocall 100 times I think, I am a very clean person, I bleach every day now, we bathe in bleach we have done the vank and the bactrum the sulfate drugs the clendomyacin, and now i have been boil free since nov i just had one return what can i do???

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  • // Mar 3, 2007 at 2:32 pm

    By nature, when I have a catastrophe, I just get up and keep going. I’m always afraid I might miss something. But, this illness shut me down. I had nothing to do but be still and know that I was not in control. In the beginning, I was very unaware of the severity of the problem. I know think that was a blessing, but a part of me wants to go and read my records…find out everything. Why? Because, even today, after beating this disease, I still deal with it both emotionally and medically. I continue to have the chest pain, which I can certainly live with, but the nausea has seemed to become permanent. Each time I go back to the doctor, I’m told that whatever is wrong…is a result of my illness. As a matter of fact, even my medications don’t work the same. My doctor stated that the obsorption in the liver had changed. Why wasn’t I prepared for this? I constantly have sores in my mouth. My hairs texture will never be the same…nor the color. My face aged YEARS. Before my illness, I NEVER had to wear foundation…EVER. I had a smooth complexion. Now, I have age spots all over my face (from the liver?), dark circles under my eyes, pores the size of lakes, eyes that are huge and lines that go on for days. I know this all sounds superficial, but I now know that the outside only mirrors the problems from the inside. That’s why I know I still have problems. Every once in a while…it hits me…I almost died…I should have died…And as I sit here at my desk working on a Saturday, I think I need to perhaps find a way to have more joy…and celebrate the miracle of my life.
    To all of you that are holding on…praying…hoping…needing a miracle…I speak blessings over you and pray for your miracle to come. Mine did. There was a reason for my illness. God doesn’t make mistakes. I just have to stop running…and trying to catch up…and sit still and know that HE is GOD and HE is in control.
    Just this week, my little nephew who is only several months old was hospitalized with a boil on his tummy. We were heartbroken. He was in severe pain. They had to lance it, but he’s now home.
    In my house, we wash at least once a month with Physoderm. At least every month, we swab bactriban (spelling) in our noses, as this is where the virus is carried. But, even still, my husband and son have had a boil each in the past six months. However, they were not MRSA.
    I don’t have any answers, but I truly believe it’s good for me to talk about this…and recognize that although it may be “widespread” the seriousness of the disease is not known by most. And it will never be addressed as long as people walk around with boils uncovered, thinking that they’re not hurting anyone.

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  • // Mar 5, 2007 at 2:28 am

    Hi, I am a 23 year old male in the US Navy… I have just gotten back from the doctor for my 3rd case of what i and the doctor believe to be MRSA…I am stationed in Lemoore, California…I had an outbreak of this when I was in a school for the navy in Great Lakes, about a month or two after boot camp…I originally thought that this was a spider bite…my “bites” consisted of one on my left thigh right above the knee cap and one on my right forearm about 8 inches above the wrist…I had the one on my forearm lanced, drained and wicked…while the one on my thigh cleared up on its own after a week or so…I just recently got an extremely infected boil on my right knee…about a year and a half after the incident in Great Lakes…I actually just had it drained and wicked today…The doctor made about two steps thru the door and said that looks like MRSA…He did take a culture of it, I am awaiting the results of now…something the Great Lakes dr. didnt do, so i continued to think it was a spider bite until now…This is some really ugly stuff…just thought i would add my comments to this…As this seems to be a subject of more concern…once you have this does it stay in you? thank you, all comments are very much welcomed…Have a great and hopefully mrsa free day!!!

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  •   heather (Check me out!)

    // Mar 5, 2007 at 7:33 am

    this is how scary this i get a pimple and istart searching websites im glad i found this but in my last post i thought id had a new mrsa spot but thank the good Lord it wasnt!! but I still am scared to death this thing will come back we have bothe been free from it since nov any suggestions people?? i am so scared it will be back!!

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  • // Mar 5, 2007 at 9:35 am

    okay so both my daughter and i had mrsa in the beginning of december and have been fine since. i would like to know if anyone has not had a second outbreak after time. everyone writes in who has had more than one abcess, i think for those of us who have only had one outbreak it would be very reassuring to hear from you.

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  • // Mar 5, 2007 at 3:48 pm

    I had an abcess, and it was drained and then somehow the MRSA got into both of my kidneys. I was treated in a hospital for 15 days my kidneys were drained, then released and on home care with a PICC line for another 15-20 days. I have had no problems since.

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  •   Rebecca (Check me out!)

    // Mar 5, 2007 at 9:13 pm

    Josh—how is your brother doing? I am praying for him.

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  • // Mar 6, 2007 at 4:43 pm

    MRSA is a staph infection -(bacterial infection) I think many people think it is a virus-it is resistant bacterium-nasty stuff-wash hands often-warm soapy sudsy water-keep any and all cuts and boils clean and covered. Go to the doctor right away even if you think its a spider bite-which it may not be.I think many of us should check if we are carriers and do the protocal for that. I know I am going to do that. I am going to ask my doctor because I do not want to cause any one to be sick even if I do not get sick myself, I think one can be a carrier. We can only do what we can do.Fight the monster.God Bless all who are touched by this.

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  •   Christina (Check me out!)

    // Mar 6, 2007 at 9:23 pm

    I would just like to say that I am so glad that there are so many other people out there who I an relate with about this situation. For the past 5 months I have been in and out of the Doctor’s office because of this and everytime I’ve been there it has been a different diagnosis. I don’t know if it’s just the Military doctor that doesn’t want the patient’s there all day or what but it has been horrible. I have lost count within the first month of the number of these “bumps” I’ve had….i stopped at 25. I am now pregnant, 3 months and I’m scared that MRSA and any antibiotics I may be rx-ed will have a bad effect on my child. Has anyone else been through this part of it too? Any suggestions?

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  • // Mar 6, 2007 at 11:08 pm

    Hi. I just saw this one. My daughter just found out that she is pregnant, too. Please share anything you learn about CA MRSA and pregnancy and I will do the same! Thanks and Best Wishes, Rhoda4@...

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  •   carlla (Check me out!)

    // Mar 7, 2007 at 5:30 am

    Christina, I am also involved with a military doctor. I have a four month old I was diagnosed with MRSA while pregnant with her. I could not take the needed medication while pregnant, so we planned to knock it out after I delivered…. I STILL have MRSA and know my 4 month old has been diagnosed. I was told that she could not catch it because she was so young. That was a lie. I have 5 children and we all have it including my husband. I will pray for you and your baby with the hopes that this will not happen to your child. Keep as clean as possible spray lysol daily(4-5 times a day)bleach everything and was your hands every chance you get. take care I hope this works for you

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  • // Mar 7, 2007 at 8:39 am

    Part of the reason that MRSA is so prevalent is that so many people use antibacterial everything in their homes. Unless someone is sick in your home you do NOT want to do this. Personally I told my daughters kindergarten teacher just recently that I will not nor will my daughter be allowed to use the purell she wanted all the kids to have at the beginning of the year. I want my daughter to keep her normal flora. (the good bacteria that live in and on us everyday) Also I want my daughter to be able to build immunity to germs so she will be better able to fight colds and the flu. Everytime you have a cold or the flu you build immunity and teach your body to fight off stronger things later. By using so many antibacterial and sanitizers we are dooming our children to being sick all the time when they get older. There will be nothing left to use when they truely ill. Nothing will no longer work. We are very close to that point now. By killing off the normal flora in your homes you will become more susceptible to infections because you are not always able to kill off the bad bacteria that adapt in order to stay alive. Also by killing the bacteria that you want you give a breeding ground to these “super bugs” (bacteria like MRSA and others) Yes if you have a cut use antibacterial cream. I’m not saying to not treat your body if you have an injury or if you are colonized with MRSA. To an earlier comment you can be a carrier of MRSA and not get sick. I would bet that at least 70% of health care workers are carriers and don’t even know it. I know that in my area I cannot buy dish detergent that is not antibacterial. These companies are pushing and pushing antibacterial everything these days by using your fears. It is irresponsible of these companies!!!!!! This is a big reason for this epidemic or should I say this pandemic. The other factor is the overuse of antibiotics. If you have a virus antibiotics will NOT help, all you will do is kill all off your normal flora. That is why people get diarrhea from antibiotics. It kills the good flora. And there is alot of bacteria in stool. And really sick people who have been on antibiotics for extended periods have no normal bacteria there and then you have another bacteria to worry about, C-DIFF. I am not saying don’t take antibiotics if you have a bacterial infection, I am saying do not run to the doctor demanding antibiotics for a cold or the flu. There are still alot of doctors out there that do still give antibiotics if the patient says I want one. Also not all infections need antibiotics. If you are otherwise healthy there are alot of infections that do not usually need to be treated. Not all ear infections do however if you have it more than 3 days or if it is severe yes antibiotics is appropriate. And Salmonella in healthy people is eliminated from your body in 3 days. If not then seek treatment. Be careful. To get back to what I was originally going to say. 10% bleach and 90% water is the best thing to use to clean if there is someone in your home with MRSA. But let me tell you if someone is colonized you will NOT be able to remove it from your home no matter how diligent you are unless the carrier is treated and right now the majority of infection control people and doctors are not taking that stand. In the Netherlands they have removed MRSA and continue to fight it. They took drastic steps and pretty much won the battle. But it is VERY expensive to wage the war that the Netherlands did and it is very unlikely the US will be doing it any time soon. There is way too much money to lose. Washing your hands with plain old soap and water is the best thing you can do to prevent the spread. Let me rephrase that put soap in your hands and rub them together while you sing happy birthday when you finish singing it then rinse your hands. Always wash your hands that long especially if you have to pick up a young child and you have MRSA. Everytime before touching or picking up that child. Or touching anything that your child will touch. Especially an infant. They are not born with bacteria. They have no normal flora. But they do begin as soon as they are born. But it takes time they are the most susceptible. HAND WASHING HAND WASHING HAND WASHING with plain old soap (not antibacterial soap) is the BEST thing that can be done to prevent spread.

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  • // Mar 9, 2007 at 8:53 pm

    We just recently discovered MRSA…unfortunately, it’s all over my back in the form of mini-boils (or large pimples)…

    But we caught it in our children and my husband instantly, applied high-grade melaleuca oil (tea tree) two to three times daily and the sores went away, right away.

    So apparently, when outbreaking, the trick is to get it with melaleuca oil as fast as you can. I recommend a medicinal grade of the oil, not a cheap “aromatherapy” type blend, by the way.

    There are other things we can do to help our bodies fight mrsa. A healthy diet is HUGE—–no sugars (including corn syrups, etc), whole grains, etc. Whole food diet is huge, and since sugar and white flour are both total immune-system DEpressants, they need to be avoided. Get some good cookbooks on cooking with whole foods, do some research and reading (from the library, perhaps), and start eating as HEALTHY as possible (foods that are as close to nature as possible).

    There are many excellent antibiotics provided via nature, too. GSE (grapefruit seed extract) from Nutribiotic is now a staple for us, now that I’ve learned about mrsa’s dangers…you can get pills for those old enough to swallow them, and drops (to mix into juice) for children. It’s very strong stuff, but friendly even for children. (It doesn’t work overnight, but it sure makes for an unfriendly environment for the mrsa to live in…a good way to prevent outbreaks, that’s for sure, at the very least)…

    Another one, though this one burns and is probably too strong for children, is Oil of Oregano. Do a google search on it…it’s expensive, but it’s a killer (of bad bugs). You can take up to 6 drops of it orally, and you can also put it directly on sores. It is a SERIOUS antibiotic, and really does work.

    Also, when the body is in an alkaline state, versus an acid state, that REALLY helps. You can do a google search on that, too, and learn about the foods to eat that promote an alkaline state (which, again, makes it hard for bad bugs to live at all). Lots of green foods help…spinach…liquid chlorophyll…etc…

    Hope this helps…I just want to repeat the encouragement from some of the others on this thread—-don’t ignore the naturopathic/holistic medicine community. There are a LOT of options out there that many regular doctors don’t know of. If you are suffering and have exhausted your resources, please go see a homeopathic or naturopathic doctor and see if they have anything that can help, work on developing a healthy whole-foods diet, and reading up on all of the medicinal powerhouses that are available through nature.

    God bless,
    Molly

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  • // Mar 10, 2007 at 12:24 am

    I forgot to add a few other natural antibiotic options.

    A very promising one is olive leaf. Type in “MRSA Olive Leaf” into google and you’ll see some interesting things, including hospitals using it on MRSA with good success.

    Obviously, organic is best, as that way you know you’re not drinking pesticides and whatnot… Olive Leaf can come in capsule form but also in tea—-and for those dealing with mrsa in children, kids might not be able to swallow capsules, but will probably like the tea, especially if sweetened with raw honey.

    Speaking of raw honey, that’s another thing that some hospitals are using on mrsa infections and to prevent mrsa infections— honey as a skin salve–but it has to be *raw* honey to be the most effective (the “raw” simply means unheated, which means the medicinal properties are still fully intact). Taking the raw honey internally might be really good too, as I know I’ve read of numerous health benefits from raw honey (another thing you can google if you want).

    And I also forgot to mention garlic… It’s another powerful natural antibiotic…fresh cloves are said to be the best—chop or press and then quickly swallow.

    (I know someone who mixes the fresh pressed garlic into raw honey, which preserves the medicinal aspects of the garlic, and then keeps it stored in a jar in her cupboard [it won’t go bad–just keep it tightly sealed] and that’s how she and her kids all take it).

    ANYways, I figure the best defense is a good offense. :) MRSA is notoriously resistant to antibiotics, but these natural remedies work in a much different way—-super bugs *can’t* get resistant to them.

    As to how long one must use the remedies, what strength they should be used, and if they will simply subdue the mrsa or eradicate it altogether, I have no idea. But I do know that MRSA will not like any of these things, as they are all decidely UNfriendly to nasty bugs like mrsa.

    Yours in Hope,
    Molly

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  •   Lauren (Check me out!)

    // Mar 12, 2007 at 12:15 am

    Fashion may be some of the problem.
    The majority of clothing is this spandex stuff which is customarily washed in cold water. We need more selections of cotton that can be boiled and bleached.
    This is my unique observation on reasons for the increase in staph infections.

    What is the implication of eating meats that don’t contain antibiotics?

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  • // Mar 12, 2007 at 4:58 pm

    okay so i was diagnosed in december and havent had any abcess’ since. i decided to get my nose cultured, still havent figured out what made me do it, and it came back positive. does anyone have any idea what this means?

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  • // Mar 13, 2007 at 2:53 pm

    Laura, if you have had a nose culture that grew MRSA that means you are a carrier of MRSA. You are colonized. Depending on where you live and how your DR feels about it will depend on what treatment or no treatment you will recieve. If you are ever hospitalized without being treated you will have to be isolated. Either in a private room or in a room where the other person also has MRSA. Make sure you tell them if you are admitted or you could spread it to someone else. Colonization does not necessarily mean you will be sick from it (But you can spread it) but some people will be severely ill and it can cause death especially in immunocompromized, very young and elderly.

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  •   Charles R. Marshall (Check me out!)

    // Mar 16, 2007 at 10:27 am

    My cousin has MRSA and gets frequent MRSA Sorer/Boils. We have been told by a MD the hydroden peroxide under the scab is the most effective way to kill off the sores. However being and RN myself, I decided to fill a syringe with proxide and inject under sore with Proxide with the Permission of our MD. Immideatly the Peroxide will kill all active infection in the sore keeping the sore from growing and promiting it to heal.

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  • // Mar 17, 2007 at 11:55 am

    I, too, was tempted to try this since I know there have been reports of this working on squamous cell carsinoma tumors. Good job! Please keep us posted on any more attempts with this if there is a recurrence!

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  • DS // Mar 17, 2007 at 8:07 pm

    I had a collasped lung December 26, 2006 and was in the hospital with a chest tube in place for about nine days. I got the chest tube taken out and thought things were going to be fine. I no more got home for just a few short days and my right lung collapsed again. Back to the hosptial and more x-rays. It had collasped a second time. The blow out was due to Blebs and COPD and my emphsemia. I had to have another chest tube put in my chest. It was left to heal and this went on about 14 days. My lung was still leaking air badly so a team or surgens were called in. I met with them and they deceided surgery and it was going to be a big major surgery on my right lung. I had this done and the pain was overwhelming it was the worst thing I had ever experienced in my entire life. I came out of surgery with two chest tubes in my right lung. I was very unconfortable to say the least. I was in surgery for my right lung to be patched due to Bleb disease and the next morning they had me blowing in a little machine to expand my lungs and it blew again I was now leaking air in the two chest tubes in place. I keep leaking air even when I was moved to step down unit and this went on and on. Until one day when the Lung Doctor came in and noticed I might should not need to be blowing in the little machine. So he finally haulted the blowing in the machine and slowly for the first time since surgery my right lung started to get less on the air leak. This was the first improvement made since the surgery when I blew the lung up again using the machine after the surgery. Now you could say there was a big miscommunication on the part of my Doctors who seemed to never talk to each other one ordered one thing and the others disagreeded. Finally they took one of the two chest tubes out. Now you would think when the one left in stopped leaking the Doctors could all agree to take the second one out. But NO that did not happen thanks to the surgen who deceided to let me take it home. I went on with a chest tube in my chest. It was still very painful time in my life. Not knowing the effects of all the pain medicines they had me on in the hospital. I went home and the surgen nurse practiner ordered the homehealth nurses NOT to change my side dressing only to r

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    MRSA: Survival in Adaptation

    November 12th, 2006 ¡¤ 360 Comments

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    Tags: MRSA

    360 responses so far ¡ý

       
    •   Esther Kelly (Check me out!)

      // Nov 17, 2006 at 9:28 pm

      I had Surgery three years ago and the Dr. missed and put a staple in the wound and I got MRSA. I had to be put back in the hospital for treatment. I thought that was the end of it. I had surgery three weeks ago and it showed its ugly head again. My question is do you ever get rid of it? Do you carry it with you all your life, and as long as it is treated is there any chance of death from it ? If any one has any info you can give me I would greatly appreciate it. Esther Kelly GAimplant@...

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    •   Amanda (Check me out!)

      // Nov 22, 2006 at 10:56 am

      i was diagnosed a year ago my first treatment failed im only 22 and i really scared about this situation

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    •   domonique (Check me out!)

      // Dec 4, 2006 at 5:26 am

      My daughter 21, grandaughter 3, and son-in-law 24, have all been diagnosed with mrsa, I have so many questions I don;t know where to begin, but without follow up care will the mrsa stay ?spread?¡­¡­.My daughter just found out she is three months pregnant, can this infect the fetus? please help us, none of us ever feels well.

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    • // Dec 5, 2006 at 11:38 am

      I was diagnosed with MRSA in my first three days of college freshman year. I do a lot of walking, as my campus is large and rural. I¡¯m also a dancer. It seems that my wound begins to puss with large amounts of moving (the wound is on my leg) and I keep ecountering set backs to healing even though I keep it clean and covered. I can¡¯t give up walking or dance. Is there something I should be doing to take better care of it and help it to heal?

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    •   Elizabeth (Check me out!)

      // Dec 11, 2006 at 10:22 am

      I am 16 and I have MRSA. I was diagnosed with it three years ago. I was infected with it when no doctor¡¯s knew what the hell it was. I suffered from it for eight months before the doctor¡¯s and myself found the medication that puts me back into dormant state. I have to live with this for the rest of my life. I am a preformer (dance, acting, etc) and it effects everything. Whenever I have an outbreak I have to soak in a bath tub to drain the puss. I get large abscesses around my butt and my knees. It even spread to my arms and nose.

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    • // Dec 11, 2006 at 5:46 pm

      I am 28 and was just diagnosed with MRSA and was hospitalized. A week later i find out my five year old daughter has it. All the info I find doesnt seem to answer the questions i need answered. My daughter had no open abrasions on her and still caught it. ?????

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    • // Dec 12, 2006 at 11:38 pm

      My 16 year old granddaughter just got diagnosed today with MRSA. But we can¡¯t seem to get the right answers to our questions. She is an athlete and I woul like to know what specialists should be contacted for answers? She is in a lot of pain, lost of abscesses and we need to know how to what to do.

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    • // Dec 19, 2006 at 2:36 pm

      My daughter has itching hives from the mersa on a daily basis. The doctors have no answers for it. I know she is itching terribly because I too now have mersa.
      I want to be told a regimine to follow for fewer boil out breakes. My daughtert has had just the one episode three months ago.

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    •   Carlla (Check me out!)

      // Dec 21, 2006 at 6:10 am

      I am 23. I¡¯ve had mrsa for 3 years before doctors could tell me what it was. I have 5 children ages 2 mos, 1, 3, 5, and 8 they also have mersa along with my husband and they¡¯ve been treated, but the mersa keeps coming back. I get it the worst and I¡¯ve been treated with so many different medications (bactrim, rifampin, doxycycline, betasept..ect) nothing seems to work.( I feel like giving up) We are covered in the scares that mersa leaves. I had to quit my job and I clean obsessively. I¡¯ve been living with this problem and having out breaks frequently. Someone please help my family !

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    •   Lauren (Check me out!)

      // Dec 24, 2006 at 9:03 am

      I am 22 years old. I was diagnosed with MRSA about a week ago. I have so many questions that are unresolved. First, what can I do to make someone around here listen?? The doctors treat it as a ¡°headache¡± and I read online how horrible this desease is. They never even told me about it, I found out only because I work with the healthsystem let alone hospitalize me. I am so nervous my son will catch this. I am totally unsure of what precautions to take at home. Where can I go to find some answers? Do I need to go back and get retested after I am off of antibiotics>?

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    • // Dec 24, 2006 at 9:43 am

      lauren¡­ just to fill you in on the info i found out. my daughter caught it to¡­ luckily it was just one abcess. but i kept it covered and kept her from school. if the abcess comes in contact with sheets or clothes bleach them in very hot water, towels too! (so try to use whites!) and only use things once between washes. that has worked for us. she is off her meds and i am one day away from it. my doctor told me that if neither one of us gets an abcess within a week of being off antbiotics, then were no longer contagious. and lysol should always be used, i used it on everything constantly.

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    •   Gale Hartney (Check me out!)

      // Dec 24, 2006 at 1:02 pm

      I was just diagnosed with mrsa I was in a auto accident 24 years ago had both legs crushed Plates and pins and screws instaled had a infection when I left the hospital ostimilites now it has turned into MRSA now on iv Vancomycin twice a day been on it for 8 days tell you if it works. Have alot of qustions to ask but don¡¯t know who to ask. Gale

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    •   Gloria (Check me out!)

      // Dec 25, 2006 at 5:11 pm

      I have had MSRA for over a year. I have found no way to prevent the misery. I hope that someone develops a vaccine!

      My first breakout came a week after surgery in Aug 05. Since then, I have had several breakouts including a breakout in Oct 06 on the open drainage site from back surgery. I had to be hospitalized again and treated surgically. What a miserable problem we have.

      When I get the dreaded red node, I go to the walk in clinic to get antibiotics - for me it is Augmentin that works right now. (this is the third rx that I have tried) I have taken antibiotic injections for one attack. The boil must become ¡°ripe¡± and drained. (PAIN)

      My primary care physician had no clue how to treat the MRSA. The doctors at the walk in are familiar with the disease/condition.

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    • // Dec 27, 2006 at 3:04 pm

      my dad has alzheimers disease and he was recently diagnosed with mrsa about 6 weeks ago and my mom is devastated as the alzheimers disease is enough to handle as she is the primary caretaker at home. My 1st question is would this mrsa problem be passed onto someone by sharing a hair clipper if the person whom owned it used it for shaving an area with the furnuncles?? The razor was cleaned with rubbing alcohol 91 % isopropyl before using on my dad to whom has alzheimers, his resistance or immune system is low because of the alzheimers anyhow. We are confused and hoping this goes away. He has taken the new experimental anti-biotic linezolid and also the dr. gave them a cream to apply to the nose where the swelling took place.I dont know what to ask here but any tips or helpful hint will help. we are very clean hygeine oriented and have use lysol for disinfecting. Pleas anyone help !!!!

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    •   Pamela (Check me out!)

      // Dec 27, 2006 at 8:44 pm

      I was dx with MRSA two months ago. It started out as, what I thought, was an insect bite. But I was wrong, within two days of getting it, I had to go to the doctors. He told me that it wasn¡¯t a big deal and he was seeing as many as six cases a week with the same dx. He gave me an antibiotic and sent me home. The infection went away about two weeks later. Now here it is two months later and I have another out break, but not on the same leg. Is it possible that it will keep showing up in different places? And is this something that I will have to live with for ever? I have two small boys and the last thing I want is for them to get it. If anyone could advice that would be wonderful.

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    • // Dec 28, 2006 at 2:23 am

      My brother was dx with MRSA it infected his blood he is on life support and in critical condition his lungs are failing,kiddneys,liver,and even his heart. He is only 24yrs old , has anyone ever heard of this serious of case and the survival rate in someone this young¡­..family needs answers and prayers

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    • // Dec 28, 2006 at 7:46 am

      Josh, we will keep your family in our prayers - unfortunately what is happening is not as uncommon as one would hope, and is the reason we are here. My husband survived it, and I sure pray that your brother does too.

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    • // Dec 28, 2006 at 10:09 am

      I have almost EXACTLY the same story as Pamela. I had ¡°spider bites¡± supposedly onone leg at first, then after the antibiotics they got better. then a few weeks later I got more, then ANother antibiotic and it spread to the other thigh, that happened 4 times before I finally got diagnosed with MRSA and put on the RIGHT antibiotics. it was horrible, I couldnt walk or work. I have 2 small boys and now I¡¯m worried about them as well.

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    • // Dec 28, 2006 at 10:53 am

      I WAS FOUND OUT THAT I HAVE MRSA LAST YEAR. SOMEHOW IT CAME BACK EXACTLY A YEAR LATER. THIS TIME I HAD TO GET BY BACK LANCED 6 INCHES WIDE, AND 2 INCHES DEEP. I WAS WONDERING IS THERE ANY CURE OF THIS, BECAUSE I¡¯M STARTING TO THINK ONCE YOU HAVE IT, YOU HAVE IT FOR LIFE. IF SOMEONE OUT THERE CAN HELP, ¡°PLEASE DO!!!!!!!!!!!¡±

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    • // Dec 29, 2006 at 12:08 am

      does anyone know about the drug XIGRIS? My brother has been on it for a couple of days now the doctors are realy concerned about the condition of his lungs. Last night they had to put a air hose in the side of his bodie to go in to his lung. They said he developed a hole in his lung due to the ventilator?

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    • // Jan 1, 2007 at 9:46 am

      Josh, I have seen a case as serious as ur brothers. My boyfriends 17 years old cousin was taken to the hospital because she was starting to swell around her throat and couldnt breath. She had MRSA in her lungs and her blood was infected. She stopped breathing on her own and she was put on a ventilator, but she had brain damage due to lack of oxygen. The doctors had never seen anything like it before and didnt know what to do, and she died 12 hours later. No one knew she had MRSA and it was too late for her. I pray that your brother¡¯s MRSA was detected soon enough and that he will be ok.

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    • // Jan 3, 2007 at 12:41 am

      what¡¯s really interesting is that MRSA can stay dorment for any length of time and still become infectious to any one in contact with it. Where was MRSA before HIV, and where was HIV before HEP C. Ask yourselves this one question?
      When has good old pennicillin ever failed to deliver anibiotic to the body in order to fight off any infection? Only when the germ was put there, and believe me it has been very well , skilled, mastered, tried, and then released to the population. Only the strong survive!!!!!

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    •   andrea (Check me out!)

      // Jan 3, 2007 at 12:46 pm

      to all in dire need - just read that tea tree oil may help fight MRSA viruses.

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    •   Valerie (Check me out!)

      // Jan 3, 2007 at 5:33 pm

      Thank you for all your stories and questions. I have read them all. I have been fighting an infection in my hands since July and it wasn¡¯t untill September it went to my eye and they told me it was mrsa. No other info was provided at the time. After treatments of Vincomycin, which I am now allergic to, my eye healed-not without permanent damage, my hands are still breaking out after treatments of Doxyclycline, Clindamycin, Levaquin, and Zyvox. I am going to the hospital for IV treatment on Fri. Without health insurance I am running out of options, but not hope. I have been supplementing with colloidal silver, stimucell, and enterobiotic S-IGC. So far boils are drying up faster than on drugs. I realize there is much controversy over alternative medicine however for me it seems to be working. I am new at this computer stuff but if anyone would like to write me feel free. I¡¯ll do my best to answer. dogwench@... Just put mrsa under subject. My prayers go out to all of us suffering from this dreadful disease. There has to be an answer somewhere. I would also like to know what to expect in the hospital. Thanks for your help, God Bless All

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    • // Jan 4, 2007 at 11:43 am

      My father of 82 has MRSA. He contacted it at a hospital and its been 4months now. He is not doing good. His organs are slowly shuting down due to the Vancomycin.
      Where can one get brochures and pass them around to alert people.
      thanks

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    •   Pamela (Check me out!)

      // Jan 5, 2007 at 3:41 pm

      Well I have just read all the new entries. My heart goes out to each and everyone of you. Maybe the New Year will bring better health to all of us.
      I finished my second round of antibiotics earlier this week. This outbreak wasn¡¯t as bad as the first one. I hope that I¡¯m lucky enough to catch and treat it next time before it enters my blood stream.
      I haven¡¯t had much luck from my doctor on information, that is why I turn to all of you.
      As long as wel have this infection, we are the best source of advertising for it. We need to tell people about it and how dangerous it is. Word of mouth is the best weapon we have right now to fight this. God bless all of you.

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    • // Jan 5, 2007 at 6:22 pm

      My husband was diagnosed with MRSA in May 2005 went into his bloodstream caused all of his joints to swell and his doctor sent us to Rheumatologist, which diagnosed him with something called Ankylosing Spondylitis and gave him RX similar to chemotherapy and he is to take this for 3 years. Now I have just been diagnosed with MRSA and I have found that MRSA can cause septic arthritis, symptoms are exactly what Ankylosing Spondylitis is, what should I do. Also I havent slept in days, I have developed OCD about cleaning and fear every second that our 5year old will get this from us..Please help, please?

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    •   Louise (Check me out!)

      // Jan 7, 2007 at 2:20 pm

      I first got this in 2002 and was told it was an allergic reaction from a spider bit when I lived in Fresno. The doctor treated it with a topical and an antibiotic. It crept up again this summer (July) on my right side below my breast. With lancing, antibiotics it cleared up¡­the doctors said it was MRSA, but didn¡¯t tell me anything about this infection. I been trreated with Keflex, Doxycycine, and others with some success until the reoccurrance. My house has been cleaned to the point of being a sterile lab.

      I¡¯m still breaking out¡­under my arms, side of my face and neck, sides.

      I have had breakouts months since¡­usually around my period. I¡¯m having another right now on my right forearm and it is painful and sore but draining with heat.

      I need to know what I can do dietary wise to build up my immune system. Does this thing go ¡°dormant¡± only to resurface?

      Since childhood, I had ¡°cold sores¡± that developed in my nose. I thought that was all they were until I started to get educated. Now I am beginning to believe I¡¯ve had this colony for over 40 years.

      HELP!

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    • // Jan 9, 2007 at 12:12 pm

      Valerie,
      You mentioned some supplements that you are taking. Would you mind listing them, where you get them and the cost. I hope it is not too imposing.
      I am trying Ester C, Echenachea, folic acid, and B vitamins.

      Wendi,
      I kind of feel obsessed with cleaning. When my grandson lived with me, for over a year, he did not develop mrsa. I used those antibacterial wipes for everything I touch. Found a product called Staph Attack on the internet and ordered it. Now I use that with the antibacterial wipes. I use Antibacterial Body Wash for showers as well as hands. At work, I carry antibacterial wipes for my hands and the desks, etc. I also have the antibacterial hand liquid (over 60% alcohol) for times when I can¡¯t get to soap and water. I change sheets often and wash all my laundry in hot water. Yeah, I feel like a cleaning nut.

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    • // Jan 9, 2007 at 4:33 pm

      If mrsa gets into the eyes what happens and how long does it take before symptoms develop? What are the symptoms ?

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    • // Jan 10, 2007 at 10:07 pm

      mrsa in the family-started with a boil-did not have bactroban nasal medication-came down with high fever-pain in leg-leg swelled-red-hot to touch-vancomycin and rifampin-rifampin did it -it got the numbers down- I watched the infection go away with the rifampin-it is going to be a long road back-much needed medicine for a long time -other complications-too many to mention-if you have a boil please keep it clean-go to doctor-get medicine-get the bactroban for in the nose-wash your hands often-warm soapy water-God Bless

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    •   Janice (Check me out!)

      // Jan 12, 2007 at 10:29 pm

      I just found out today that I have MRSA I went to the Doctors for him to recheck my finger after he had done surgery on it this week to drain it and my swollen hand. I don¡¯t think I have had anything that hurt as much as this has. And as I was was getting ready I notice another sore on the very next finger just appeared. It made me sick, at the thought that I would be going though this sicking pain again. and wondering how I got this strain of staph. He also told me that it was not contagious, Because I told him my grandson stays often at my house. So he gave me a new prescription to see how it will work on the new outbreak. After reading all the stories submitted I¡¯m not to happy so if anyone out ther has anywords of incorrigment I would be glad to hear from them.

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    • // Jan 13, 2007 at 2:26 pm

      Thank you Pam, I know that everyone on the board is the best advertising. I never knew what MRSA was until my father came up with it. I usually read up on things medically but this..I missed. And I am not suprised, no one wants to discuss it at times. Now AARP had an article on MRSA and I need to find it. It was a 2006 issue. For everyone here that has MRSA, please keep your faith it will help your strength in dealing with this.

      Blessings to all in ¡®07 with better health`

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    • // Jan 18, 2007 at 10:08 am

      My husband has just been diagnosed with MRSA. He has been dealing with this for about a month and a half because the dermatolagist could figure out what it was. For the past two/three week he has been suffering from back, chest pain. Could this be a result of the MSRA?

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    • no image Gale Hartney (Check me out!)

      // Jan 21, 2007 at 6:06 am

      Hi
      I have been on Vancomycin for 6 weeks treatment for Mrsa seams to be working.As the dranage from the wound is drying up. Have two more weeks to go. My infection started out as ostimilites then turned in to mrsa. hope it works.
      If you have any further info please let me know.
      my email is MrFiero@...

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    • // Jan 21, 2007 at 6:38 am

      Louise,
      Lysine (Walgreens, drugstore) & Vit -C also works with the immune system. Plus, try not to stress out so much as this also lower the immune system and thats proof of a cold sore attack. I take Lysine to prevent the cold sores and it does put the Herpes Virus back into dormant..let us know if this works.

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    •   melissa (Check me out!)

      // Jan 22, 2007 at 12:05 am

      i, my name is melissa i was diagnosed with mrsa last week i have a five year old who had mrsa two and a half years ago and i just got married last month¡­ i am 25 years old and to me i feel like i am just starting my life and i dont know what to expect with this¡­ but my story is a little different see my son did have sores on his butt and on his arm and leg¡­ but i dont have these i have had this gross green stuff come out of my nose that everyone just told me was just a cold and then chronic sinus infections.
      i just recently got my husbands insurance so i did not see a doctor about this until last week and he tested the mucus from my nose which tested positive for mrsa¡­ i am scared even more because i might be pregnant so i the doctor says i cant take my antibiotic which is velaquin. i still don know how i am still alive with that infection in me for who knows how long that stuff has been coming out of my nose for almost nine months now. we were not on any birth control and we had sex while i was ovulating it might be all in my head but it is too soon to take a pregnancy test but i am starting to get really scared the doctor was not any help he was a ent doctor i dont know what kind of specialist to see and i cant get a soon enough appointment do you know if i can just go to the emergency room and say i am not leaving until i am better or i know how to get better?? please any info will help i am clueless i am scared my son will get this again is it possible i caught it from him three years ago almost with out him having any new sores?
      do you know if i am pregnant if it will affect the baby or do you know who i can ask because the doctor would not give me any info¡­

      thank you so much and may God be with you

      melissa

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    • // Jan 24, 2007 at 10:53 pm

      i had my first mrsa outbreak almost a year ago, but i was not properly diagnosed until about two weeks ago. i went to the doctor with a baseball size carbuncle under my arm that had well over 16 heads. absolutely the grossest and most painful thing i¡¯ve ever experienced. i¡¯ve been put on bactrim as well as mupirocin nasal spray and was given chlorhexidine to wash with. The combination has been miraculous. I¡¯ve also found that tea tree oil is a good antiseptic to use to wash the wound. i¡¯ve have had 5 outbreaks since last may, each one worse than the last. My doctor is optimistic that this treatment will help me get rid of the infection. i hope this helps someone out there.

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    •   Lauren (Check me out!)

      // Jan 29, 2007 at 11:24 am

      Someone please help! I¡¯ve had MRSA for about 2 years now. I¡¯m only 22 and this is not the way or what I want to die from. About a week ago I went to a local infectious disease doctor. He gave me 3 diff RX¡¯s. I¡¯m trying the things he told me to do like clean under my nails, wash everything and start fresh from when I begin the RX which I have. The doctor also told me to use this scrub which is called Chlorhexydine. (it comes it a bluish, green bottle. You use it after your normal shower but before you actually get out. You put it on from your nose to your toes and leave it on for a minute than rinse it off. I¡¯ really sick of these skin boils and they leave scars. They¡¯re ugly! If anyone knows any cures, please let me know. I dont want to live with this forever.

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    • // Jan 31, 2007 at 2:14 pm

      Hello, My daughter 7 months old was dx yesterday with MRSA. They put her on Sulfamethoxasole w/tmp susp. I was told this staph is very resistant but was also told it can be cured. By reading what everyone else writes it doesnt seem to be. She has had 3 boils in the past month. And its starting to seem she got it from getting her ears pierced. Im not sure though. I dont really know what to think or what to do, like i said, by reading everyones statements on here it doesnt seem like something that goes away.

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    • // Jan 31, 2007 at 5:28 pm

      I know this can be cured-it takes diligence on the Medical Community¡¯s part and on the patient and patient¡¯s family¡¯s part. We alternate bleach-alcohol to clean surfaces-no sharing towels or face cloths-keep numbers down-get the precise medication for pathogen-this is identified by blood cultures-Try Staph-a-septic-look on line-google it and it will tell you where you can buy it near you-tee tree oil-nasal bactroban-keep hands clean always-cover boils and get treated immediately-Infectious Disease Specialist is the way to go-children can get very sick from this-can develop ostomyelitis from this as well as other complications. Eat right and get plenty of rest. Let¡¯s all fight this together-God Bless-Keep the prayers going.

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    • // Jan 31, 2007 at 9:39 pm

      MRSA is a terrible infection that no one should have to deal or live with. Unfortunately, some people do have to struggle with it every day, but many people are being and have been cured. I contracted the infection about one year ago. It was not an easy battle, especially as the first site that opened was on my leg and I am a dancer in college. But, with wonderful medical aid, diligent self-care, loving friends, and homeopathy (Echinacea, goldenseal, and other herbs for healing and immune boosting) I am healing. I just want those that join this group to have hope that they can be cured and heal. I truly feel that herbology, feeling loved, and staying positive helped immensely. I suggest that some people look to alternative medicines like herbology along with doctor prescribed anti-biotics. Antibiotics do kill the good bacteria in your intestines along with the bad, so I¡¯ve been taking a probiotic (also found in live-culture yogurts) which has helped my stomach. I¡¯m praying for you all to have faith in your own ability to heal and stay positive.

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    • // Jan 31, 2007 at 11:25 pm

      My husband had to go into a nursing home after contacting MRSA in the hosp. He got it four years ago when he had surgery and now it has reapeared Does anyone have a cure for it He has been in the nursing home three weeks, has to stay there because he is having intervenious antiobotics every six hours, Insurance wont pay for it at home, I plan on giveing him a lot of vitamin C seleium, zinc vitamin D and Probotics when he gets home I welcome any suggestions thanks to all of you for shareing

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    • // Feb 3, 2007 at 8:29 pm

      Kathleen,
      Several antibiotics can be used to treat most staph infections, including MRSA. From what my family has been told Vancomycin has been the most effective and reliable drug in these cases, but is used intravenously and is not effective for treatment of MRSA when taken by mouth.
      Give him vitamins and buikd up his immune system. I dont have MRSA but my father contracted it through a hospital and has never been the same. He is 82 and is stable, due to the Vancomycin.
      ¡°Few antibiotics are available to treat more serious MRSA infections. These include vancomycin (Vancocin, Vancoled), trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim, Bactrim DS, Septra, Septra DS), and linezolid (Zyvox).¡±

      This came from this website:

      http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/007261.htm

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    • // Feb 7, 2007 at 8:55 pm

      so happy to share that my realtive has been to infectious disease specialist today-only one more week of PIC line-going back to school tomorrow-so by next week it will have been 6 weeks on Iv vancomycin-success! Keep fighting this disease-we will win¡ªPrayers to all-Keep the Faith-

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    • // Feb 7, 2007 at 11:11 pm

      my little brother is still alive but the doctors say that he has a new case of MRSA called necrotizing MRSA pnomonia¡­¡­ He¡¯s only 24 and he has 6 chest tubes has anyone heard of a strain this serious?

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    •   Monica (Check me out!)

      // Feb 8, 2007 at 2:09 pm

      I¡¯m a 19 year old college student. I was diagnosed with mrsa only one month ago, but I think I¡¯ve had it for close to one year. I was initially treated with the antibiotic Cefadroxil 500 mg and Mupricin 2% ointment. The boils cleared up after being lanced by a dermatologist, but I unfortunately got a new boil this past week. I am now on Doxycycline and using an iodine wash.
      I am allergic to septra and all sulfa drugs, as well as clyndomycin. I am therefore even further restricted in the types of medicines I can use to fight off the infection.
      I live in a dorm room with four other girls, all of whom are very scared to catch what I have. Now that I have an abcess, I have bagged all of my sheets and wash obsessively, but I am unsure of what else I can do.
      The Health Center at my school does not know much about mrsa and was responsible for misdiagnosing me many times throughout first semester. They told me I had scabies, a viral infection, scarlet fever, and many other improbable conditions. I don¡¯t really know if I can even trust their judgment anymore.
      Please, if anyone has any suggestions for me, please let me know. Should I be attending classes? Should I go home? I don¡¯t want to be infecting my campus, but no one seems to be taking it very seriously.
      This is a very scary and confusing thing for me to deal with. I just want to put myself and my roommates at ease.
      Also, if anyone has any other suggestions for medications that I am not allergic to that might work better, please let me know.

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    • // Feb 8, 2007 at 5:03 pm

      Monica, Who diagnosed the MRSA? One suggestion I would have is go to an infectious disease specialist-one who has treated this successfully in the past. Sometimes people need IV treatment-I do not know if you are one of those people, but a blood culture would tell you what you need to know-then the Doctors can treat you more exactly. My relative has been on vancomycin for almost 6 weeks-started with a boil last April-It went away but sort of laid dormant for months-and caused a severe infection. She was in hospital for almost three weeks-then went home on PIC line IV-she is much better-only one more week of the line-but doctors keep testing blood. Best of Luck-I hope you get all better soon. We wash clothes with bleach-surface clean with bleach and alcohol-any cuts are treated immediately-with staph-a-septic, then covered with bandaid., careful washing warm soap and water. Hands have to be kept very clean. Remember the germs like moist warm places to hide like under arms, folds of skin, in between toes, in the belly button. Let¡¯s beat this monster.

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    • // Feb 8, 2007 at 5:17 pm

      to Josh, My relative was in critical condition-has your brother been put on Rifampin? he is still fighting, is he on Vancomycin? Will he have surgery? I will keep him in my prayers. The Rifampin goes directly to the lungs. I had to learn that the hard way. Maybe the doctors can give him Rifampin? It seemed to help the vancomycin work much better whe it was prescribed-I remember waiting all night for the pharmacy in the hosputal to get it to her-but we noticed a difference within hours. I hope this is helpful.

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    • // Feb 10, 2007 at 6:09 pm

      I was diagnosed with MRSA on 1/3/07. It was the second time I had a big red welt on my left side. The first one I noticed the week after Thanksgiving, it was on my left hip. I asked the doctor about it and she stuck two needles in and drained it. For the next three weeks I applied hot compresses, kept the wound covered with an antibiotic ointment and a bandaid and took an antibiotic. Then on 12/28 I went back to the Dr. with a new hot red lump. This one a on my left thigh. After a few days on the new antibiotic (bactrim ) this one was getting worse. I went back to the Dr. who got me an appointment with a surgen the following day. He cut the absess open ,dug out the infection and told me it looked like MRSA, but the culture wouldn¡¯t be back for a few days. The culture came back MRSA. He prescribed a cream to put in my nose twice daily and said to continue taking the bactrim. I was also told to wash the wound daily with peroxide and keep it covered until there was nothing comming out. About three weeks later, just as my second lump was healing I found another lump. We started again cut it, drain it, clean it daily with peroxide and keep it covered. This time he prescribed Zyvox which seems to be helping. I feel like I should buy stock in the chlorox company. I spray the shower down after I shower with a mixture of 1/3 bleach and 2/3 water, use chlorox wipes everywhere and lots of hand sanatizer. My MRSA so far has only appeared on the left side of my body.
      I have recently noticed that a few of my teeth are turning black. Has anyone heard of this? At this point every little thing has me wondering if it is connected to the MRSA.

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    • // Feb 10, 2007 at 7:54 pm

      Monica ¡ª i¡¯m sorry that you have developed this at such a young age and i¡¯m sure it is very difficult to deal with being in a dorm. i¡¯m 47 and had my first outbreak in may of last year. i was not actually tested for mrsa until last month and the test was positive. i¡¯ve had about 5 or 6 episodes since may. the last dr i went to put me on bactrim and prescribed an antibacterial cleanser (HIBICLENS) as well as a nose spray (CALLED OCEAN SPRAY) which can be purchased over the counter at walmart. also, try putting tea tree oil (also at walmart) on the sores. it really does help to heal them up. best of luck to you, keep us posted.

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    • // Feb 14, 2007 at 9:31 am

      I was diagnosed with MRSA 2/13/07, Im kinda freaked out about this.I¡¯ve had 3 lumps total. The last lump or abscess was on the left side of my chin, it looked awful and it hurt. My doc put me on Bactrim, March 6th I go back to see if its colonized. What in the world does that mean?

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    • // Feb 22, 2007 at 7:42 pm

      I was just informed today 2/22/07 that my culture came back and I do have MRSA. I am not sure how bad it is,but I had both underarms lanced on Monday 2/19/07 and I have been in pain for about a week. My husband says there are different levels of MRSA but I don¡¯t know exactly what all of this means.I do know that I am scared for my health and I hope I can fight this off. I go back to the doctor on Monday,so I guess I¡¯ll know more then. Meanwhile, I¡¯ll just keep taking my medicine and pray that it helps.

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    •   Rebecca (Check me out!)

      // Feb 23, 2007 at 2:11 pm

      My thoughts and prayers go out to all of you. My nephew (7 yrs old) is currently in ICU. He has been there officially for a week. He first went in because he was not able to breath, during transport from one hospital to another he went into cardiac arrest. He is now on an ECMO machine, he has been on it since last Thursday. His lungs, heart, and kidneys are not working w/0 life support. They have drained 1/2 his body weight in fluid from his chest (fluid that is not even in his lungs), they have put tubes in his lungs to drain them as well. His little arms and feet have turned blue (lack of circulation) and he is full of fluids. You can¡¯t even touch him w/o sores forming, because his skin is stretched out from all the fluid retention. The doctors told my brother yesterday that his son has MRSA. We are all in a lot of heartache and pain. They did an EEG on my nephew yesterday because he is having brain seizures and they do not know if he has suffered severe brain damage. They can¡¯t give him an MRI at this time because he is to weak and can¡¯t be put into the MRI with the life support. They are getting very minimal brain wave activity from the EEG tests.
      I¡¯ve never heard of MRSA until now. And we are all dumbfounded as to how he got this. We don¡¯t know if he contracted it in the hospital, or if it was the original cause of his severe sickness.
      When he first got sick his symptoms were fever and very dry cough. The morning my sister in law took him to the doctor they said he had croup, he was in ICU by the following day. That is how fast this took hold of his little body. Since he has been on life-support since last Friday, it seems odd to me that they are just now telling us he has MRSA. I don¡¯t understand why they were unable to identify it last week.
      They have told my brother and his wife that they need to think of taking my nephew off of life support, but at this time they are not going to do that. We refuse to give up.
      Please please please pray for my nephew, he needs all of the help he can get.
      If anyone could share their thoughts with me on this, or let me know if they¡¯ve heard the outcome of these situations please let me know.
      My thoughts and prayers are with all of you as well.

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    • // Feb 24, 2007 at 8:29 am

      Went to infectious disease specialist after my 3rd
      outbreak and 2nd surgical removal.
      I have been recovering for 11 weeks !!
      Each time the anti-biotics were done within 10 days another outbreak.
      I¡¯m now on heavy dose¡¯s of bactrin(4 a day)and wound is healing well. The real test will be when the medicine is discontinued , only time will tell.
      if i had known to see a SPECIALIST perhaps i could have prevented the 2nd & 3rd outbreak, may have saved alot of $$$ and prolonged suffering and pain.
      My advice to anyone is to see your Dr ASAP
      if you have a boil or spider-bite. insist on a NASAL SWAB for lab-testing.
      If MRSA confirmed see a SPECIALIST!!!
      If anyone you know is entering a hospital for ANYTHING, have them request a NASAL SWAB upon admitting and discharge.
      This could save them alot of agony and protect loved ones.

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    • // Feb 26, 2007 at 5:38 pm

      It all started with a boil on my son¡¯s leg. Eventually, my husband and my youngest son had them too. I was the only one in the house without a rison (spelling?). However, a few months later, I noticed that my nose was quite sore to the touch¡­very painful. My husband came to the rescue¡­we thought¡­pulled out the infected hair¡­and doctored it with medicine. I had immediate relief. However, the next day, i noticed a red area veining down from the corner of my mouth to my jawline. It was hard and sore to the touch. This was a Wednesday. That same day, while walking out of my office, I was hit with a strange and severe chest pain. It went away as quickly as it came. But, my head begain to hurt. That night, I had a seizure, which was not that unusaul since I suffer from non-epileptic seizures from time to time. For some reason, after having the seizures, I don¡¯t have lasting affects, so when woke up the next morning with really bad chest pain and a bad headache¡­and this hard veining still there, in my heart of hearts, I knew something was wrong. I called my doctor¡¯s office, but could only see a new physician¡­However, I knew I didn¡¯t need to wait. He was problem #1. He took my temp¡­didn¡¯t have one¡­as my temp runs low to begin with. He told me that I just had myalgia from the seizure. I told him that I did not agree with him¡­that this had never happened before¡­and that I could hardly breathe. He then agreed to do an x-ray. Nothing showed up. He came back to me and said, ¡°Again, we have eliminated anything life threatening or serious. The chest x-ray was normal.¡± I asked him if he thougth we needed to do blood work. He said, ¡°No, it¡¯s just myalgia. If something was seriously wrong, it would show up on the x-ray.¡± I felt foolish and went on to work. But, as I sat there, I felt my body truly declining. My boss walked by and took one look at me¡­and instructed me to go home. I went back to work again on Friday¡­thinking that I was just having muscle pain. I left early again. That night, I was in excruciating pain in my chest. Breathing was almost impossible. I could not sleep. I could not get comfortable. The veining was now very swolen and red. I woke my husband at 6 am and asked him to take me to the hospital. Since my diagnosis had been just muscle pain, he tried to encourage me to take something for pain and try to get comfortable. I knew something was horribly wrong. I was losing it¡­and losing it quickly. This was Saturday. I remember arriving at the emergency room and being told that the same doctor that diagnosed me with myalgia was on call again. With his arrogance he walked into the room and said to me, ¡°I¡¯ve already told you, we have eliminated anything serious or life threatening.¡± I didn¡¯t respond to him. Since we had left the kids at home, my husband left me thinking I would be okay¡­and my mother would join me momentarily¡­everything would be fine¡­At this point, I lost consciousness. I only remember waking a couple of times over the several days. I remember screaming in pain when they tried to budge me. I was placed on antibiotic to handle a normal staph infection¡­and dilaudid for pain. I only got worse. My temp went to 105. The right side of my face swelled to connect with my shoulder. My bottom lip swelled and turned down completely, peeling off and leaving me with permanent swelling and blue discoloration on the lip¡­and scarring on the side of my face and jawline. The doctors did not make progress, so an Infectious Disease doctor was called in. I do remember him coming into my room. It was as if something supernatural was happening. He came in and saw me¡­and said, ¡°Oh, my God.¡± The entire time, I had not been isolated, nurses were coming and going. Family members was coming and going. He then said, ¡°Let¡¯s get her to the Unit.¡± This was on Tuesday. Somewhere between then and when I woke up the next time, I went into respiratory arrest. At this point of consciousness, I was halluciating. My nurse had purple eyes¡­Drew Carey was in my room¡­and there was purple cursive writing on the ceiling, but I couldn¡¯t read it. They found that I had MRSA staph and it had traveled to my lungs. They had to add a steroid for the vancomycin (spelling?) to begin working. I ended up with a tube running out of my back to drain the fluid which had collected, a catheter and feeding tube in my nose. They kept a close watch on my face, as they intended to slice the skin along the jawline, to relieve some of the pressure. For some reason, this really bothered me. I was dying, but when they told me about cutting me, it was the straw that broke the camel¡¯s back. This made me cry. After only 3 weeks, I developed a reaction to the antibiotic. I had red-man syndrome, was scalded on the inside and out. I threw up at the mention of food (and if you know me¡­I LOVE food). I grew severely depressed (and I have OCD) and addicted to the pain medication. They had to take me off of it¡­which put me through horrible withdrawals. The second antibiotic only worked for a about a week and I had a reaction to it as well. I itched so badly and still could not eat. By then, they had placed me in Long Term Care and had finally taken me off of oxygen. I started physical, respiratory and occupational therapy. I couldn¡¯t walk by myself. Breathing was still quite difficult and extremely painful. The day I left the hospital, I was able to keep a few bites down. By then, I had been free of MRSA for about a week. The left the hospital after 5 and a half weeks¡­on the Wednesday before Christmas on Monday. I did my Christmas shopping and returned to work the following Tuesday¡­the day after Christmas. I wanted to get on with my life and move forward. I look back now and wonder WHY?! I pushed myself sooo hard. I still have chest pain from the lung scarring. I still have scarring on my jawline. I still have a blue bottom lip. Medications don¡¯t work like they used to, because of the damage to my liver¡­and my increased tolerance to drugs. But, every once in a while, I completely stopped in my tracks with the thought of what really happened¡­how close was I to dying¡­why didn¡¯t someone tell me. I had no idea during the sickness¡­the gravity of the situation. Today, I try to find information on CA-MRSA which lead to the lungs, but not much is out there. I really would like to correspond with someone that could give me insight. You don¡¯t always get staph from the hospital¡­¡­¡­

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    • // Mar 1, 2007 at 12:13 pm

      Hello, I currently work in the microbiology department of a hospital. And I will tell all of you that MRSA is a very big problem. The major problem is that there are 2 types of MRSA community acquired and hospital acquired. And studies are now beginning to show that the 2 may merge and become even worse. I can tell you that hospital acquired is the better to have. The community acquired is much more resistant. MRSA is a product of overuse of antibiotics. these microbes are adapting in order to survive. MRSA can also be colonized in a person. If this is the case it lives inside you. A nasal swab culture would determine this. If this is than yes more than likely if you get staph infections it will more than likely always be MRSA. Hand washing is the best prevention. When in the hospital do NOT ever let a DR, nurse, or aide touch you without you first personally seeing them wash their hands. When you do get outbreaks that need to be treated it is important to have it cultured. MRSA is getting more and more resistant which means antibiotics that have previously worked may no longer work. Each infection will be different. The more you use a particular antibiotic the greater the chance is that the infection will be resistant to it. MRSA is just the tip of the iceberg. Many other organisms are becoming more and more resistant. I would like to also add that just because someone is colonized or should I say a carrier does not mean it will make them sick. It just means that when an infection occurs it has a higher probablity of being a MRSA infection. There are some body washes available for people with MRSA in other countries I do not know if they are available in the states. The Netherlands has successfully irradicated MRSA. Using the body washes, nasal creams, and when hospital personnel have become carriers they are treated and not allowed to work until they are no longer harborers of MRSA. The US are not doing anything like this. The cost is outragious because it is so prevalent. But I would bet that eventually the whole world will have to do something similiar eventually. Also I would like to add that MRSA skin infections often do start out looking like they are spider bites.

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    • // Mar 1, 2007 at 5:41 pm

      Jill and all, I am writing again because this disease is so ravaging-it tries to take hold, and unless the doctors are really agressive it becomes severe. I have seen this in a child. It was stopped in its tracks with vancomycin and Rifampin-I believe the Rifampin helped the Vancomycin to work. It traveled to lung-near heart and caused a blood clot that did the worst possible thing-broke off to the lung. Thank God that the monitors were on-they beeped to alert the nurse who had to give oxygen-constant monitoring of temp and oxygen saturation throught the night. Who would think this could all start from a festering boil. Do not allow a boil to fester-keep it clean-have it checked right way you fought the beast Jill, and you won. Hand washing is key-for all of us. This can get down into the bone which it did in our family-muscle and bone-they put a child on morphine for the pain that this caused. I never want to see it rear it¡¯s ugly head again. To God be the Glory. We prayed and put oil on her leg all night. God Bless

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    •   Rebecca (Check me out!)

      // Mar 1, 2007 at 9:22 pm

      If you read my previous post. Please pray for my family. My nephew passed away lassed Tuesday.
      MRSA took his young life.

      This is a serious disease! Please please please I beg you, if you of someone you know gets sick, has unexplainable symptoms force your doctor to give you a staph test. This staph does not discriminate, it will take the old the young and everyone in between. Americans need to STOP taking antibiotics for every cough and sniffle so that these superbugs and be killed with antibiotics. They have mutated and found a way to survive because we don¡¯t take any responsibilitly for our health. We expect to go the th doctor get a pill and like magic be better. This is not the way to be healthy. And it is killing so many innocent people.
      I know that my nephew is with God, and that is a thought I hang on to dearly. But this could have been avoided. Doctors need to wake up and pay attention to this awful superbug.

      Again, I pray for all of you suffering or having a loved one suffer from this. My love and good thoughts go out to all of you.

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    •   heather (Check me out!)

      // Mar 2, 2007 at 2:30 pm

      my daughter is 3 and has been fighting mrsa for over a year. we were in the hospital for over a week in nov, i thought it was gone and one week after i ended up with my first boil. I have done the protocall 100 times I think, I am a very clean person, I bleach every day now, we bathe in bleach we have done the vank and the bactrum the sulfate drugs the clendomyacin, and now i have been boil free since nov i just had one return what can i do???

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    • // Mar 3, 2007 at 2:32 pm

      By nature, when I have a catastrophe, I just get up and keep going. I¡¯m always afraid I might miss something. But, this illness shut me down. I had nothing to do but be still and know that I was not in control. In the beginning, I was very unaware of the severity of the problem. I know think that was a blessing, but a part of me wants to go and read my records¡­find out everything. Why? Because, even today, after beating this disease, I still deal with it both emotionally and medically. I continue to have the chest pain, which I can certainly live with, but the nausea has seemed to become permanent. Each time I go back to the doctor, I¡¯m told that whatever is wrong¡­is a result of my illness. As a matter of fact, even my medications don¡¯t work the same. My doctor stated that the obsorption in the liver had changed. Why wasn¡¯t I prepared for this? I constantly have sores in my mouth. My hairs texture will never be the same¡­nor the color. My face aged YEARS. Before my illness, I NEVER had to wear foundation¡­EVER. I had a smooth complexion. Now, I have age spots all over my face (from the liver?), dark circles under my eyes, pores the size of lakes, eyes that are huge and lines that go on for days. I know this all sounds superficial, but I now know that the outside only mirrors the problems from the inside. That¡¯s why I know I still have problems. Every once in a while¡­it hits me¡­I almost died¡­I should have died¡­And as I sit here at my desk working on a Saturday, I think I need to perhaps find a way to have more joy¡­and celebrate the miracle of my life.
      To all of you that are holding on¡­praying¡­hoping¡­needing a miracle¡­I speak blessings over you and pray for your miracle to come. Mine did. There was a reason for my illness. God doesn¡¯t make mistakes. I just have to stop running¡­and trying to catch up¡­and sit still and know that HE is GOD and HE is in control.
      Just this week, my little nephew who is only several months old was hospitalized with a boil on his tummy. We were heartbroken. He was in severe pain. They had to lance it, but he¡¯s now home.
      In my house, we wash at least once a month with Physoderm. At least every month, we swab bactriban (spelling) in our noses, as this is where the virus is carried. But, even still, my husband and son have had a boil each in the past six months. However, they were not MRSA.
      I don¡¯t have any answers, but I truly believe it¡¯s good for me to talk about this¡­and recognize that although it may be ¡°widespread¡± the seriousness of the disease is not known by most. And it will never be addressed as long as people walk around with boils uncovered, thinking that they¡¯re not hurting anyone.

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    • // Mar 5, 2007 at 2:28 am

      Hi, I am a 23 year old male in the US Navy¡­ I have just gotten back from the doctor for my 3rd case of what i and the doctor believe to be MRSA¡­I am stationed in Lemoore, California¡­I had an outbreak of this when I was in a school for the navy in Great Lakes, about a month or two after boot camp¡­I originally thought that this was a spider bite¡­my ¡°bites¡± consisted of one on my left thigh right above the knee cap and one on my right forearm about 8 inches above the wrist¡­I had the one on my forearm lanced, drained and wicked¡­while the one on my thigh cleared up on its own after a week or so¡­I just recently got an extremely infected boil on my right knee¡­about a year and a half after the incident in Great Lakes¡­I actually just had it drained and wicked today¡­The doctor made about two steps thru the door and said that looks like MRSA¡­He did take a culture of it, I am awaiting the results of now¡­something the Great Lakes dr. didnt do, so i continued to think it was a spider bite until now¡­This is some really ugly stuff¡­just thought i would add my comments to this¡­As this seems to be a subject of more concern¡­once you have this does it stay in you? thank you, all comments are very much welcomed¡­Have a great and hopefully mrsa free day!!!

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    •   heather (Check me out!)

      // Mar 5, 2007 at 7:33 am

      this is how scary this i get a pimple and istart searching websites im glad i found this but in my last post i thought id had a new mrsa spot but thank the good Lord it wasnt!! but I still am scared to death this thing will come back we have bothe been free from it since nov any suggestions people?? i am so scared it will be back!!

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    • // Mar 5, 2007 at 9:35 am

      okay so both my daughter and i had mrsa in the beginning of december and have been fine since. i would like to know if anyone has not had a second outbreak after time. everyone writes in who has had more than one abcess, i think for those of us who have only had one outbreak it would be very reassuring to hear from you.

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    • // Mar 5, 2007 at 3:48 pm

      I had an abcess, and it was drained and then somehow the MRSA got into both of my kidneys. I was treated in a hospital for 15 days my kidneys were drained, then released and on home care with a PICC line for another 15-20 days. I have had no problems since.

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    •   Rebecca (Check me out!)

      // Mar 5, 2007 at 9:13 pm

      Josh¡ªhow is your brother doing? I am praying for him.

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    • // Mar 6, 2007 at 4:43 pm

      MRSA is a staph infection -(bacterial infection) I think many people think it is a virus-it is resistant bacterium-nasty stuff-wash hands often-warm soapy sudsy water-keep any and all cuts and boils clean and covered. Go to the doctor right away even if you think its a spider bite-which it may not be.I think many of us should check if we are carriers and do the protocal for that. I know I am going to do that. I am going to ask my doctor because I do not want to cause any one to be sick even if I do not get sick myself, I think one can be a carrier. We can only do what we can do.Fight the monster.God Bless all who are touched by this.

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    •   Christina (Check me out!)

      // Mar 6, 2007 at 9:23 pm

      I would just like to say that I am so glad that there are so many other people out there who I an relate with about this situation. For the past 5 months I have been in and out of the Doctor¡¯s office because of this and everytime I¡¯ve been there it has been a different diagnosis. I don¡¯t know if it¡¯s just the Military doctor that doesn¡¯t want the patient¡¯s there all day or what but it has been horrible. I have lost count within the first month of the number of these ¡°bumps¡± I¡¯ve had¡­.i stopped at 25. I am now pregnant, 3 months and I¡¯m scared that MRSA and any antibiotics I may be rx-ed will have a bad effect on my child. Has anyone else been through this part of it too? Any suggestions?

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    • // Mar 6, 2007 at 11:08 pm

      Hi. I just saw this one. My daughter just found out that she is pregnant, too. Please share anything you learn about CA MRSA and pregnancy and I will do the same! Thanks and Best Wishes, Rhoda4@...

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    •   carlla (Check me out!)

      // Mar 7, 2007 at 5:30 am

      Christina, I am also involved with a military doctor. I have a four month old I was diagnosed with MRSA while pregnant with her. I could not take the needed medication while pregnant, so we planned to knock it out after I delivered¡­. I STILL have MRSA and know my 4 month old has been diagnosed. I was told that she could not catch it because she was so young. That was a lie. I have 5 children and we all have it including my husband. I will pray for you and your baby with the hopes that this will not happen to your child. Keep as clean as possible spray lysol daily(4-5 times a day)bleach everything and was your hands every chance you get. take care I hope this works for you

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    • // Mar 7, 2007 at 8:39 am

      Part of the reason that MRSA is so prevalent is that so many people use antibacterial everything in their homes. Unless someone is sick in your home you do NOT want to do this. Personally I told my daughters kindergarten teacher just recently that I will not nor will my daughter be allowed to use the purell she wanted all the kids to have at the beginning of the year. I want my daughter to keep her normal flora. (the good bacteria that live in and on us everyday) Also I want my daughter to be able to build immunity to germs so she will be better able to fight colds and the flu. Everytime you have a cold or the flu you build immunity and teach your body to fight off stronger things later. By using so many antibacterial and sanitizers we are dooming our children to being sick all the time when they get older. There will be nothing left to use when they truely ill. Nothing will no longer work. We are very close to that point now. By killing off the normal flora in your homes you will become more susceptible to infections because you are not always able to kill off the bad bacteria that adapt in order to stay alive. Also by killing the bacteria that you want you give a breeding ground to these ¡°super bugs¡± (bacteria like MRSA and others) Yes if you have a cut use antibacterial cream. I¡¯m not saying to not treat your body if you have an injury or if you are colonized with MRSA. To an earlier comment you can be a carrier of MRSA and not get sick. I would bet that at least 70% of health care workers are carriers and don¡¯t even know it. I know that in my area I cannot buy dish detergent that is not antibacterial. These companies are pushing and pushing antibacterial everything these days by using your fears. It is irresponsible of these companies!!!!!! This is a big reason for this epidemic or should I say this pandemic. The other factor is the overuse of antibiotics. If you have a virus antibiotics will NOT help, all you will do is kill all off your normal flora. That is why people get diarrhea from antibiotics. It kills the good flora. And there is alot of bacteria in stool. And really sick people who have been on antibiotics for extended periods have no normal bacteria there and then you have another bacteria to worry about, C-DIFF. I am not saying don¡¯t take antibiotics if you have a bacterial infection, I am saying do not run to the doctor demanding antibiotics for a cold or the flu. There are still alot of doctors out there that do still give antibiotics if the patient says I want one. Also not all infections need antibiotics. If you are otherwise healthy there are alot of infections that do not usually need to be treated. Not all ear infections do however if you have it more than 3 days or if it is severe yes antibiotics is appropriate. And Salmonella in healthy people is eliminated from your body in 3 days. If not then seek treatment. Be careful. To get back to what I was originally going to say. 10% bleach and 90% water is the best thing to use to clean if there is someone in your home with MRSA. But let me tell you if someone is colonized you will NOT be able to remove it from your home no matter how diligent you are unless the carrier is treated and right now the majority of infection control people and doctors are not taking that stand. In the Netherlands they have removed MRSA and continue to fight it. They took drastic steps and pretty much won the battle. But it is VERY expensive to wage the war that the Netherlands did and it is very unlikely the US will be doing it any time soon. There is way too much money to lose. Washing your hands with plain old soap and water is the best thing you can do to prevent the spread. Let me rephrase that put soap in your hands and rub them together while you sing happy birthday when you finish singing it then rinse your hands. Always wash your hands that long especially if you have to pick up a young child and you have MRSA. Everytime before touching or picking up that child. Or touching anything that your child will touch. Especially an infant. They are not born with bacteria. They have no normal flora. But they do begin as soon as they are born. But it takes time they are the most susceptible. HAND WASHING HAND WASHING HAND WASHING with plain old soap (not antibacterial soap) is the BEST thing that can be done to prevent spread.

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    • // Mar 9, 2007 at 8:53 pm

      We just recently discovered MRSA¡­unfortunately, it¡¯s all over my back in the form of mini-boils (or large pimples)¡­

      But we caught it in our children and my husband instantly, applied high-grade melaleuca oil (tea tree) two to three times daily and the sores went away, right away.

      So apparently, when outbreaking, the trick is to get it with melaleuca oil as fast as you can. I recommend a medicinal grade of the oil, not a cheap ¡°aromatherapy¡± type blend, by the way.

      There are other things we can do to help our bodies fight mrsa. A healthy diet is HUGE¡ª¨Cno sugars (including corn syrups, etc), whole grains, etc. Whole food diet is huge, and since sugar and white flour are both total immune-system DEpressants, they need to be avoided. Get some good cookbooks on cooking with whole foods, do some research and reading (from the library, perhaps), and start eating as HEALTHY as possible (foods that are as close to nature as possible).

      There are many excellent antibiotics provided via nature, too. GSE (grapefruit seed extract) from Nutribiotic is now a staple for us, now that I¡¯ve learned about mrsa¡¯s dangers¡­you can get pills for those old enough to swallow them, and drops (to mix into juice) for children. It¡¯s very strong stuff, but friendly even for children. (It doesn¡¯t work overnight, but it sure makes for an unfriendly environment for the mrsa to live in¡­a good way to prevent outbreaks, that¡¯s for sure, at the very least)¡­

      Another one, though this one burns and is probably too strong for children, is Oil of Oregano. Do a google search on it¡­it¡¯s expensive, but it¡¯s a killer (of bad bugs). You can take up to 6 drops of it orally, and you can also put it directly on sores. It is a SERIOUS antibiotic, and really does work.

      Also, when the body is in an alkaline state, versus an acid state, that REALLY helps. You can do a google search on that, too, and learn about the foods to eat that promote an alkaline state (which, again, makes it hard for bad bugs to live at all). Lots of green foods help¡­spinach¡­liquid chlorophyll¡­etc¡­

      Hope this helps¡­I just want to repeat the encouragement from some of the others on this thread¡ª-don¡¯t ignore the naturopathic/holistic medicine community. There are a LOT of options out there that many regular doctors don¡¯t know of. If you are suffering and have exhausted your resources, please go see a homeopathic or naturopathic doctor and see if they have anything that can help, work on developing a healthy whole-foods diet, and reading up on all of the medicinal powerhouses that are available through nature.

      God bless,
      Molly

      Was this comment useful to you ?

    • // Mar 10, 2007 at 12:24 am

      I forgot to add a few other natural antibiotic options.

      A very promising one is olive leaf. Type in ¡°MRSA Olive Leaf¡± into google and you¡¯ll see some interesting things, including hospitals using it on MRSA with good success.

      Obviously, organic is best, as that way you know you¡¯re not drinking pesticides and whatnot¡­ Olive Leaf can come in capsule form but also in tea¡ª-and for those dealing with mrsa in children, kids might not be able to swallow capsules, but will probably like the tea, especially if sweetened with raw honey.

      Speaking of raw honey, that¡¯s another thing that some hospitals are using on mrsa infections and to prevent mrsa infections¡ª honey as a skin salve¨Cbut it has to be *raw* honey to be the most effective (the ¡°raw¡± simply means unheated, which means the medicinal properties are still fully intact). Taking the raw honey internally might be really good too, as I know I¡¯ve read of numerous health benefits from raw honey (another thing you can google if you want).

      And I also forgot to mention garlic¡­ It¡¯s another powerful natural antibiotic¡­fresh cloves are said to be the best¡ªchop or press and then quickly swallow.

      (I know someone who mixes the fresh pressed garlic into raw honey, which preserves the medicinal aspects of the garlic, and then keeps it stored in a jar in her cupboard [it won¡¯t go bad¨Cjust keep it tightly sealed] and that¡¯s how she and her kids all take it).

      ANYways, I figure the best defense is a good offense. :) MRSA is notoriously resistant to antibiotics, but these natural remedies work in a much different way¡ª-super bugs *can¡¯t* get resistant to them.

      As to how long one must use the remedies, what strength they should be used, and if they will simply subdue the mrsa or eradicate it altogether, I have no idea. But I do know that MRSA will not like any of these things, as they are all decidely UNfriendly to nasty bugs like mrsa.

      Yours in Hope,
      Molly

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    •   Lauren (Check me out!)

      // Mar 12, 2007 at 12:15 am

      Fashion may be some of the problem.
      The majority of clothing is this spandex stuff which is customarily washed in cold water. We need more selections of cotton that can be boiled and bleached.
      This is my unique observation on reasons for the increase in staph infections.

      What is the implication of eating meats that don¡¯t contain antibiotics?

      Was this comment useful to you ?

    • // Mar 12, 2007 at 4:58 pm

      okay so i was diagnosed in december and havent had any abcess¡¯ since. i decided to get my nose cultured, still havent figured out what made me do it, and it came back positive. does anyone have any idea what this means?

      Was this comment useful to you ?

    • // Mar 13, 2007 at 2:53 pm

      Laura, if you have had a nose culture that grew MRSA that means you are a carrier of MRSA. You are colonized. Depending on where you live and how your DR feels about it will depend on what treatment or no treatment you will recieve. If you are ever hospitalized without being treated you will have to be isolated. Either in a private room or in a room where the other person also has MRSA. Make sure you tell them if you are admitted or you could spread it to someone else. Colonization does not necessarily mean you will be sick from it (But you can spread it) but some people will be severely ill and it can cause death especially in immunocompromized, very young and elderly.

      Was this comment useful to you ?

    •   Charles R. Marshall (Check me out!)

      // Mar 16, 2007 at 10:27 am

      My cousin has MRSA and gets frequent MRSA Sorer/Boils. We have been told by a MD the hydroden peroxide under the scab is the most effective way to kill off the sores. However being and RN myself, I decided to fill a syringe with proxide and inject under sore with Proxide with the Permission of our MD. Immideatly the Peroxide will kill all active infection in the sore keeping the sore from growing and promiting it to heal.

      Was this comment useful to you ?

    • // Mar 17, 2007 at 11:55 am

      I, too, was tempted to try this since I know there have been reports of this working on squamous cell carsinoma tumors. Good job! Please keep us posted on any more attempts with this if there is a recurrence!

      Was this comment useful to you ?

    • DS // Mar 17, 2007 at 8:07 pm

      I had a collasped lung December 26, 2006 and was in the hospital with a chest tube in place for about nine days. I got the chest tube taken out and thought things were going to be fine. I no more got home for just a few short days and my right lung collapsed again. Back to the hosptial and more x-rays. It had collasped a second time. The blow out was due to Blebs and COPD and my emphsemia. I had to have another chest tube put in my chest. It was left to heal and this went on about 14 days. My lung was still leaking air badly so a team or surgens were called in. I met with them and they deceided surgery and it was going to be a big major surgery on my right lung. I had this done and the pain was overwhelming it was the worst thing I had ever experienced in my entire life. I came out of surgery with two chest tubes in my right lung. I was very unconfortable to say the least. I was in surgery for my right lung to be patched due to Bleb disease and the next morning they had me blowing in a little machine to expand my lungs and it blew again I was now leaking air in the two chest tubes in place. I keep leaking air even when I was moved to step down unit and this went on and on. Until one day when the Lung Doctor came in and noticed I might should not need to be blowing in the little machine. So he finally haulted the blowing in the machine and slowly for the first time since surgery my right lung started to get less on the air leak. This was the first improvement made since the surgery when I blew the lung up again using the machine after the surgery. Now you could say there was a big miscommunication on the part of my Doctors who seemed to never talk to each other one ordered one thing and the others disagreeded. Finally they took one of the two chest tubes out. Now you would think when the one left in stopped leaking the Doctors could all agree to take the second one out. But NO that did not happen thanks to the surgen who deceided to let me take it home. I went on with a chest tube in my chest. It was still very painful time in my life. Not knowing the effects of all the pain medicines they had me on in the hospital. I went home and the surgen nurse practiner ordered the homehealth nurses NOT to change my side dressing only to r

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    #6379 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
    Date: Mon Aug 4, 2008 2:42 am
    Subject:: RealAge-acai berry-highest antioxidant,isometric exercises,button mush rooms
    cheyennecin
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    RealAge  Health@...
     
    RealAge
    Tips of the Week Aug. 4 – Aug. 6, 2008
    My RealAge
    My RealAge
    My News
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    Check Your Health
    Check Your Health
    The YOU Docs
    The YOU Docs
    Eat Smart
    Eat Smart
    Acai Berries
    The Highest Antioxidant Fruit Ever
    Which fruit is the clear front-runner when it comes to antioxidants? Hint: It's smaller than a grape and darker than a blueberry . . . Read more.
     
     
     
     
     

    RealAge Tip

    The Highest Antioxidant Fruit Ever

    Rating: 4 out of 5
    Which fruit is the clear front-runner when it comes to antioxidants? Hint: It’s smaller than a grape and darker than a blueberry.

    It’s the acai (pronounced "ah-sigh-EE") berry, and it may beat every other fruit or vegetable by a mile. Case in point: The freeze-dried berry has 30 times the disease-arresting anthocyanins of red grapes.

    Cholesterol, Cancer, and . . .
    The berries are so nutritious, writes John La Puma, MD, author of ChefMD’s Big Book of Culinary Medicine, that they may help lower
    bad cholesterol, inhibit inflammation, and fight off arthritis. They may even have cancer-fighting powers. In a lab study, acai berry extract killed between 45 and 86 percent of a sample of human leukemia
    cells. (Browse La Puma’s book online.)

    Drink Up
    The antioxidant quotient is reason enough to eat this fruit, but acai berries are also chock-full of B vitamins, magnesium, copper, zinc, phosphorus, and sulfur. In South America, acai berries are pureed and served warm as a sauce or soup. Check your local health-food store for acai juice, smoothies, and other products containing this berry nutritious fruit. Check out the YOU Docs’ list of other stay-healthy superfoods.

    Here’s another superfruit you may not be familiar with.
    RealAge Benefit: Getting the right amount of antioxidants through diet or supplements can make your RealAge 6 years younger.

    References Published on 08/04/2008.
    ChefMD’s Big Book of Culinary Medicine. La Puma, J., New York: Crown Publishers, 2008.

    EDITOR'S PICK
    Acai Berries


    When it comes to acai, we like concentrated powder for its ease of use and wallet-friendly price. The powder’s lots more affordable than the pills or liquid, and you can use it in so many ways! Yogurt, juice, shakes, oatmeal, ice pops? How do you acai?

    Got a favorite product or invention of your own? Tell us: Products@...

     
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    Rate This Tip

    Tips from the RealAge Community MemberTipsIcon
    What are your favorite smoothie ingredients?
    The Secret to Flat Abs (Hint: Not Sit-Ups)
    Curls and sit-ups can definitely help tone your abs, but a new study suggests something else might work better . . .
    Read more.
     
    A Fungus That's Actually Good for You?
    The button mushrooms you bought at the store aren't just a pretty kabob filler. Those beauties may have talent, too . . . Read more.
     
     
     
     

    RealAge Tip

    A Fungus That’s Actually Good for You?

    Rating: 4 out of 5
    The button mushrooms you bought at the store aren’t just a pretty kabob filler. Those beauties may have talent, too.

    Like the ability to rev up the body’s self-defenses against things like cancer and viral infections.

    Tumor Terminators
    Western medicine has only recently begun to study the concept, but early animal research suggests fungi may have some pretty serious health-promoting powers. For example, powdered white button mushrooms recently boosted production of natural killer cells in mice. If the same thing happens in humans, that’s great news, because killer cells help defend against tumors and virus-infected cells.

    Recipe Corner
    Serve this nicely spiced Arugula-Mushroom Salad at your next barbecue.

    More Bets for Better Immunity
    Check out these other immune-boosting mouth treats: Here’s another way to shape up your immune system: Adopt a positive outlook.
    RealAge Benefit: Eating a diverse diet that includes 5 servings of vegetables per day can make your RealAge as much as 4 years younger.

    References Published on 08/06/2008.

    EDITOR'S PICK
    Mushroom Cookbook


    White button mushrooms are boring? Au contraire, mon frere. This champion of the champignon is the most widely cultivated (and least expensive) mushroom at the market. And with a dash of this, a smidgen of that, and a great mushroom cookbook ? voila! Bon appetit!

    Got a favorite product or invention of your own? Tell us: Products@...

     
     

    RealAge Tip

    The Secret to Flat Abs (Hint: Not Sit-Ups)

    Rating: 4 out of 5
    Curls and sit-ups can definitely help tone your abs, but a new study suggests something else might work better.

    Seems counterintuitive, but working your upper body may be the quickest path to a really sculpted middle.

    Above-the-Belt Action
    In a study, women did isometric exercises for their stomach, back, shoulders, and arms while researchers measured muscle activity. The results? Shoulder extensions made middle-body muscles contract most -- apparently they work extra hard to stabilize your trunk when your wings are flapping. (Watch this strength-training video to learn how building 5 extra pounds of muscle could burn 26 pounds of fat in a year.)

    Full-Body Fitness
    Some more ways to get your midsection -- and whole body -- into mint condition: Ready to make exercise a multitasking affair? Try these Dirty Dish Dips and Squeaky Clean Squats.
    RealAge Benefit: A physical activity program that builds stamina, strength, and flexibility can make your RealAge as much as 8.1 years younger.

    References Published on 08/05/2008.
    Effect of isometric upper-extremity exercises on the activation of core stabilizing muscles. Tarnanen, S. P. et al., Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2008 Mar;89(3):513-521.

    EDITOR'S PICK
    The Firm: Upper Body Sculpt


    This quick 30-minute workout for arms, back, and shoulders sculpts areas that some DVDs barely touch. No aerobics here -- it uses a blend of yoga and Pilates to target those areas, delivering focused strengthening right where we all need it.

    Got a favorite product or invention of your own? Tell us: Products@...

    Check in with the YOU Docs!

    YOU Docs Get passionate about your body with the brand-new version of YOU: The Owner's Manual.
    Get yours today!
    This Week's 2 Useful Thoughts:

    One How young are you in spirit? Take the Lipton YQ Quiz, powered by RealAge, to find out!
    Two Find out how to make your cat younger. Become a CatAge member.
    CONTACT MEMBER SERVICES OR SEND FEEDBACK: Reply to this e-mail or write to info@.... Mailing address: RealAge, Inc., 10675 Sorrento Valley Road, San Diego, CA 92121.
     
     

    #6378 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
    Date: Mon Aug 4, 2008 1:47 am
    Subject:: Fibrous dysplasia (No Natural Cures that I could find, so Far)
    cheyennecin
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    Fibrous dysplasia - MayoClinic.com

    Fibrous dysplasia is a bone disorder in which scar-like (fibrous) tissue ... Fibrous dysplasia can cause the affected bone to deform and become brittle. ...
    www.mayoclinic.com/health/fibrous-dysplasia/DS00991 - 24k -

    Your Orthopaedic Connection: Fibrous Dysplasia

    The frequency of fibrous dysplasia is not known but it accounts for approximately seven percent of all benign bone tumors. The cause of the gene mutation is ...
    orthoinfo.aaos.org/topic.cfm?topic=A00083 - 20k -

    eMedicine - Fibrous Dysplasia : Article by Mahesh Kumar Neelala Anand

    Fibrous dysplasia is a skeletal developmental anomaly of the bone-forming mesenchyme that manifests as a defect in osteo.
    www.emedicine.com/RADIO/topic284.htm - 87k -

    Fibrous Dysplasia

    Detailed information on fibrous dysplasia, including cause, symptom, diagnosis, and treatment.
    www.healthsystem.virginia.edu/UVAHealth/adult_bone/fibrdys.cfm - 21k -
     

    Bonetumor.org - The Web's Most Comprehensive Bone Tumor Resource

    The cause of fibrous dysplasia is unknown. Most cases of fibrous dysplasia ... The association of fibrous dysplasia and soft tissue tumors has been given ...
    www.bonetumor.org/tumors/pages/page52.html - 26k -

    Fibrous Dysplasia

    Foci of increased density leading to a ground glass appearance throughout the femur with expansion of the femoral neck consistent with fibrous dysplasia. ...
    brighamrad.harvard.edu/Cases/jpnm/hcache/1088/full.html - 9k
     
    ==============

    Fibrous dysplasia

    Click here to find more information about this natural product that helps ... There is no cure for fibrous dysplasia, only treatment of the symptoms. ...
    bone-muscle.health-cares.net/fibrous-dysplasia.php - 14k -

    About Fibrous Dysplasia

    It seems to me that since fibrous dysplasia is such a dynamic disease, with the affected bone continually being replaced by the body's natural processes ...
    www.geocities.com/lborchardtwier/what.html - 10k -

    Fibrous Dysplasia

    Fibrous Dysplasia Grand Rounds presentation from the Grand Rounds Archive of the ... that the patient would not be a good candidate for resection for cure. ...
    www.bcm.edu/oto/grand/052099.html - 22k -

    fibroids photos fibroids picture fibroids picture uterine fibroids ...

    ... natural cure fibromyalgia natural cures fibromyalgia natural healing .... fibrous disease fibrous displasia fibrous dysplacia fibrous dysplasia fibrous ...
    wezo4.com/15116/ - 48k -

    Fibrous dysplasia in two siblings

    dysplasia as seen in case 1. DISCUSSION. Fibrous dysplasia may occur in ... As no cure of the osseous disorder is. known, treatment consists only of cor- ...
    www.springerlink.com/index/NJ371614H4129316.pdf - Similar pages

    OhioHealth - Fibrous dysplasia

    The cause of fibrous dysplasia is unknown. There's no cure for fibrous dysplasia, .... Natural acne treatment: What's most effective? » read more ...
    www.ohiohealth.com/bodymayo.cfm?xyzpdqabc=0&id=6&action=detail&ref=3952 - 107k -

    Fracture neck of femur with avascular necrosis of head in fibrous ...

    Fibrous dysplasia of bone is an enigma with no known cure. .... The natural history of fibrous dysplasia. An orthopaedic, pathological and roentgenographic ...
    www.ijoonline.com/article.asp?issn=0019-5413;year=2004;volume=38;issue=2;spage=134;epage=136;aulast=Amaravati - 44k -

    Cervical Dysplasia, Causes & Treatments to Remove Abnormal Cells

    Mar 5, 2008 ... Fibrous Dysplasia: Causes & Treatment for Abnormal Growth of Bones ... Natural Cures · Women's Health · Yogic Cures for Diseases ...
    www.home-remedies-for-you.com/blog/cervical-dysplasia.html - 29k -
    ===

    Natural Cures for Fibroids

    Apr 7, 2008 ... List of natural cures for fibroids and other resources to relieve your ... These slow-growing masses, composed of muscle and fibrous tissue, ...
    www.naturalcures-guide.com/natural-cures-for-fibroids/ - 29k -

    Anecdotal Stories of Estrogen Dominant Disease Cures

    Testing for progesterone in the body to cure Cervical Dysplasia .... My right breast had a large painful fibrous lump for the last few months and was ...
    www.pap101.com/stories.htm - 23k
    =======================================
    images
     
           
     ] ... Polyostotic Fibrous Dysplasia, ...
    200 x 250 - 81k - jpg
    blogs.dfw.com
    More from blogs.dfw.com ]
    fibrous dysplasia
    513 x 513 - 82k - jpg
    www.radpod.org
    Fibrous Dysplasia
    500 x 125 - 20k - jpg
    www.craniofacial.net
     
     
    This is a very sad one, and with extreme case, the face is sliced open to expose the lesion, with fluid drained, and the surgical procedure will involve getting a new face. I don't know if there are any natural cures, from the little bit I have seen here, haven't really found anything promising, but of course neither I nor the 'let's find the natural cures' people have researched and exposed anything much, because it is not all that common. -"Cheyenne Cin"
     
    ====
     
     

    Disfigured teen gets new face, new life (painful picture)

    Nov 28, 2006 ... of polyostotic fibrous dysplasia, a nonhereditary genetic disease, ..... camera for all that had been done and will be done for Marlee. ...
    www.freerepublic.com/focus/fr/1745319/posts - 55k -

    Marlie Casseus First Words after 16pds tumor removed: 'Thank You ...

    Her condition is a rare form of polyostotic fibrous dysplasia, a nonhereditary genetic disease, which affects every bone in her body, though not to the ...
    www.haitiwebs.com/forums/health_science/41453-marlie_casseus_first_words_after_16pds_tumor_removed_thank_... - 83k - 8 hours ago -
     
    =============
     
    =================
    5868 Re: Trigeminal Neuralgia-facial or jawbone pain-Peppermint Gum,DMSO,mo re
    ... density and structure: Osteoporosis - Osteomalacia - continuity of bone (Pseudarthrosis, Stress fracture) - Monostotic fibrous dysplasia - Skeletal fluorosis - Aneurysmal bone cyst - Hyperostosis - Osteosclerosis Osteomyelitis - Avascular necrosis ...
     
    4648 Re: Collagen Type II-Aorta, Heart and Arthritis, Garlic (and Chondroitin sulfate A (CSA))
    ... Mar 17, 2007 10:36 pm 4155Foods, Herbs, Health-More great information & links ... aging. CHONDROITIN: Important aid for hip dysplasia and arthritis. Complementary function with glucosamine. Glucosamine builds collagen, and chondroitin protects cartilage form ...
     


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    #6377 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
    Date: Sun Aug 3, 2008 10:50 pm
    Subject:: Re: Rickets (Osteomalacia)-Lack of Vitamin D, results in lacks of calc ium,phosphorous
    cheyennecin
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    Cod liver oil, fish oil and Omega 3
    More specifically, fish oil in the summer months (with sunshine) and cod liver oil in the winter months when we can't spend as much time outdoors. ...

    Cod liver oil, fish oil and Omega 3

    In my opinion, other than drinking more water and eating more fresh raw green vegetables, the most important addition to the diet to fight and prevent disease and live longer is fish oil. More specifically, fish oil in the summer months and cod liver oil in the winter months when we can't spend as much time outdoors.

    People in the U.S. consume a dangerously inadequate amount of Omega-3, a fat which is essential to good health but is only found in fish oil and a few other foods. Meanwhile, our intake of Omega-6 fats, another fat found in soy, corn, sunflower and other oils, is much too high.
    cod liver oil and fish oil

    Experts looking at the dietary ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids suggest that in early human history the ratio was about 1:1, however the typical American's ratio is around 20:1 to 50:1! Generally our diet contains far too much omega 6 fats. For most of us, this means greatly reducing the omega-6 fatty acids we consume and increasing the amount of omega-3 fatty acids.

    I strongly recommend you avoid corn, sunflower, soy, safflower, canola, or products which contain these oils. This means no hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated fats, no margarine, no shortening, no vegetable oil. These oils are full of omega-6 fats and will only worsen your omega 6/omega 3 ratio. You want to emphasize high quality extra virgin olive oil, organic butter, coconut oil and avocados.

    You don’t need to be concerned with the quantity of fat in your diet, rather you need to be concerned with the TYPE - and saturated fat is not the enemy. Saturated fats, found mostly in animal products like butter, cheese and fatty meats, are not as dangerous as you may believe. Saturated fats offer a number of health benefits and play many important roles in the body. Some vegetable oils (coconut and palm) also contain saturated fat. Coconut oil is a particularly healthy choice.

    Trans-fatty acids, formed through a process called "hydrogenation", are found in processed foods and fried foods. Trans-fatty acids are much worse for you than saturated fats. Not only can they raise LDL (bad) cholesterol levels and lower HDL (good) cholesterol, but they have also been linked to heart disease.

    Benefits of the omega-3 found in cod liver oil and fish oil

    Omega 3 helps prevent and fight heart disease, cancer, depression, arthritis, Alzheimer's disease, ulcers, diabetes, hyperactivity and other diseases. Omega 3 increases your ability to concentrate as well as your energy level.

    While a helpful form of Omega-3 can be found in flaxseed, walnuts and a few other foods, the most beneficial form of Omega-3 - containing 2 fatty acids, EPA and DHA which are essential in preventing and fighting both physical and mental illness - can be found only in fish. Unfortunately, however, I would advise you against consuming a lot of fish, whether naturally-caught or farm-raised, because fish of all varieties from any waters are now showing dangerously high levels of the highly toxic, tasteless metal, mercury.

    I recommend the following addition to everyone's diet - children, seniors and everyone in between - cod liver oil and fish oil.
    cod liver oil and fish oil

    The main difference between fish oil and cod liver oil is that cod liver oil is high in vitamin D. The cod liver oil has the advantage of providing vitamin D, which is necessary for most of us in the United States in the cold months of winter, when we don't get very much sun exposure on our skin in order to make vitamin D.

    Many people get confused about the difference between fish oil liquid and cod liver oil. You can consider cod liver oil as fish oil+. The 2 are the same except that cod liver oil contains natural vitamin D and A.

    I would recommend limiting your fish consumption and I suggest you consider replacing it with cod liver oil. This is NOT the cod liver oil which typically comes to mind, from many decades ago. Most cod liver oil from the past was rancid and tasted terrible because it was improperly processed. It is now easy to find flavored cod liver oil and fish oil which have a much more pleasant taste.

    An additional way to increase omega 3 fats in your diet would be to use freshly ground flax seeds (just use an inexpensive coffee grinder), but I would tend to favor cod liver oil and fish oil.

    Cod liver oil, fish oil and heart disease

    Several studies and trials in humans have shown a favorable effect of dietary cod liver oil and fish oil on various risk factors for cardiovascular disease.(1,2,3)

    Supplementation of the diet with omega-3 fish oil and cod liver oil concentrates has shown the potential to reduce both the progression of cardiovascular disease and related mortality, including sudden cardiac death.(5,6)
    cod liver oil and fish oil for heart disease

    Studies have shown (7) that the Greenland Inuit, when compared with the population of Denmark, has a significantly lower rate of death from acute myocardial infarction despite only small differences in blood cholesterol levels. So cholesterol is not everything.

    The traditional high-fat Inuit diet provides several grams of omega-3 fatty acid (DHA and EPA) each day in the form of marine mammals (whale, seal), wildfowl (seabirds) and various fish.(7,8)

    If you just listen to the 'experts', you would think that cholesterol is an evil substance and that most of us would benefit from lowering our cholesterol as low as possible. But it's not so. Cholesterol is a vitally important substance which is used for building our cell membranes and producing several of our hormones. If our cholesterol level drops too low, we are actually at increased risk for depression. (11)

    Moreover, the higher fish intakes in the Japanese diet relative to that of the United States have been associated with considerably lower rates of heart attacks, other ischemic heart disease and atherosclerosis despite only moderately lower blood cholesterol levels in the Japanese.

    A European study of the effect of dietary omega-3 fatty acids - such as cod liver oil and fish oil - on coronary atherosclerosis (measured with coronary angiography) in people with cardiovascular disease using a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial showed improved health from the omega 3.(9)

    The study revealed that people with coronary artery disease given omega-3 (DHA and EPA) therapy (at levels of about 1.5 g/day) over a 2-year period had less progression and more regression of coronary disease, than did patients taking a placebo. Fewer cardiovascular events (fatal and non-fatal heart attacks, strokes) were noted in the omega-3 group. The omega-3 supplementation was considered safe and well tolerated.

    Cod liver oil and depression

    Research has found that people who suffer from depression who received a daily dose of 1 gram of an omega-3 fatty acid such as cod liver oil for 12 weeks experienced a decrease in their symptoms, such as anxiety, sadness and sleeping problems (10).
    cod liver oil and fish oil for depression

    All the patients had already tried prescription drugs before enrolling in the study, including selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) such as Zoloft, Paxil and Prozac, or drugs from an older family of drugs called tricyclic antidepressants, all of which are considered standard treatments for depression.

    Previous studies have suggested that the balance of omega-3 fatty acids in the brain may be skewed in people with depression, and earlier studies have shown that cod liver oil and fish oil supplements can help alleviate the symptoms of depression and schizophrenia.

    If you suffer from depression, I would also recommend you look into SAM-E which has been used for 20 years in Europe to treat depression and is very effective.

    If the relationship between depression and omega 3 fatty acid interests you, I would highly recommend Dr. Stoll's book "The Omega-3 Connection". Dr. Stoll is a Harvard psychiatrist who has done a good job of compiling the evidence supporting the use of cod liver oil and fish oil to treat depression.

    If you take your omega 3 in liquid form, as opposed to capsules, the dose for both the cod liver oil or fish oil liquid should be about 1-2 teaspoons per day. This is a good initial dose for most people but if you notice any belching, it is likely that your gallbladder is not digesting the oil properly and you may need to take a high potency enzyme with plenty of the fat digesting enzyme lipase.

    Ideally, you would want to measure your vitamin D levels. Unfortunately very few doctors do this. But if you overdose on vitamin D you can actually cause hardening of your arteries and osteoporosis as it causes a reverse effect. In short, I would recommend you take cod liver oil during the winter months when our exposure to the sun is minimal, and fish oil during the summer months.

    If you use beneficial products like cod liver oil without doing blood tests to check your vitamin D levels, you should keep the dose at 1 to 2 teaspoons per day to prevent overdosing or switch to plain fish oil (which contains no vitamin D).

    Use 1 teaspoon per day for a child. When you give your child cod liver oil, you will also be supplying them with essential omega-3 fatty acids which will maximize their brain development.

    Find out how to preserve your cod liver oil, what kind of supplement to look for, on page 2.

     

    Cod liver oil, fish oil and Omega 3 - page 2

    (continued from page 1)

    Code liver oil and its vitamin D for strong bone development

    There are 2 major factors known to contribute to osteoporosis - peak bone mass during childhood and adolescence, and the rate of bone loss which occurs during aging.

    Researchers found that hypovitaminosis D - deficiency in vitamin D - in adolescents has harmful effects on bone mineral growth, particularly at the lumbar spine, during a period of development when peak bone mass should be reached (1). They say that vitamin D supplements should be considered during the pre-puberty and puberty years which are a crucial stage in preventing osteoporosis later on in life.
    cod liver oil and bones

    Studies have found that intake of vitamin D from the diet is often not high enough to maintain optimal vitamin D levels during the winter months for many people(1). This points to the importance of making certain that your child gets enough vitamin D in the winter. If you live in the United States, you can be virtually certain that your child is not getting enough vitamin D from the sun in the winter months.

    To solve this problem, you can give them cod liver oil as it has the type of vitamin D which can safely increase the vitamin D level to one that will help build strong bones in your child’s body.

    Omega 3 helps prevent diabetes

    3 months of daily supplementation with docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) - found in cod liver oil and plain fish oil - produced a 'clinically significant' improvement in insulin sensitivity in overweight study participants, according to nutrition researcher Dr. Yvonne Denkins, with the Pennington Biomedical Research Institute(2).

    More than 9 out of 10 diabetics have the "type 2" form of the disease, in which the body's gradual failure to respond to insulin can cause blood sugar levels to rise to dangerous levels.
    fish oil and diabetes

    In the study, researchers had 12 overweight women and men, aged 40 to 70, consume Omega 3s at breakfast for 12 weeks. While none of the study participants had full-blown diabetes, they all suffered from insulin resistance - a pre-diabetic condition in which the body fails to efficiently respond to insulin.

    Using blood tests done at the start and at the end of the study(3), the researchers measured changes in each person's insulin resistance.

    They saw a change in insulin sensitivity after 12 weeks of Omega 3 supplementation. 70% of the study participants showed an improvement in insulin-related function, and in 50% it was a 'clinically significant' improvement.

    The dose of DHA used in this study was 1.2 grams. Since most capsules contain 180 mg of EPA and 120 mg of DHA, this would mean 15 regular fish oil capsules a day.

    I recommend a specific weight formula of one 180 /120 mg Omega 3 capsule for every 10 pounds of body weight. So for the average 150 pound person, 15 capsules a day is appropriate, preferably in 2 equal doses.

    However, many diabetics are very heavy. So a 260 pound person would require 26 fish oil capsules a day. (Please note that this is for plain Omega 3 fish oil, not for cod liver oil, because of cod liver's oil vitamin D content! For the dosage for cod liver oil, see earlier in this page) It will also take some time for the fish oil to work. It is reasonable to expect a 3-month lag time to response.

    Other studies have shown that fish oil might help protect against diabetes. There were epidemiological studies done on the Greenland Eskimos, a population which eats mainly whale blubber. These are people who are overweight, who should be diabetic and have heart disease, but they don't. The scientists who studied them thought it was probably because of their diet, and they found that it was the omega-3s.

    Preserving your cod liver oil and fish oil

    The cod liver oil does not have to be consumed with a spoon, it is far better tolerated if it is poured over vegetables, just as you would use olive oil as a salad dressing.

    The key to remember here is that cod liver oil is very perishable and should not be cooked with or poured over hot food.
    cod liver oil jar

    When you take cod liver oil or fish oil supplements in the doses I recommend please be sure to take 1 vitamin E 400 unit supplement per day as this will help to protect the fat from oxidation. This is less of an issue with the cod liver oil as the vitamin D itself is a very potent anti-oxidant.

    Cod liver oil and fish oil processing

    Most of the fish oil sold in the United States as dietary supplements come from Anchovies and Sardines caught off the coast of South America. Cod liver oil comes primarily from Nordic waters.

    All cod liver oil and fish oil for dietary supplements is refined to a greater or lesser degree. Refining requires heat under vacuum, bleaching clays, deodorization (molecular distillation) and winterization. We cannot classify any of these processes as gentle or natural, however they are necessary in order to produce a safe and pure product for human consumption.

    Molecular distillation is the only method currently which can remove metals, PCBs and other toxins to below detectable levels for human consumption. Cod liver oil and fish oil produced using molecular distillation is more expensive but it is a better product.

    I spend a lot of time researching the best prices for supplements on the internet, and in my opinion the best prices for high quality cod liver oil are hereicon. The best prices for high quality Omega 3 fish oil are hereicon. You may also like Puritan Pride's special "Buy 1 Get 2 FREE" promotions on cod liver oil and fish oil.

     

    ========

    Cod Liver Oil: The Number One Superfood

    Feb 7, 2006 ... One hundred grams of regular cod liver oil provides 100000 IU of vitamin A, .... to forestall development of rickets in the winter months, ...
    www.naturalnews.com/017590.html  - 71k -
     
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    pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/112/2/e132 -
     
    Carlson Cod Liver Oil Low Vitamin a Soft Gels Helped Us Avoid ...
    Oct 31, 2006 ... My husband and I have tried generic cod liver oil, ... so we take the Carlson Cod Liver Oil Soft Gels during the fall and winter months, ...
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    Cod Liver Oil, Fish Oil: Best Source of Omega-3!
    Think of cod liver oil as "fish-plus" -- fish oils plus vitamins D and A. In winter this may be especially important. In warm weather months or warm ...
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    Cod liver oil myths and benefits
    In the 1800s, cod liver oil was commonly used to treat and prevent ... sun needed to produce the suggested amount of vitamin D. During the winter months, ...
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    Male adults and women who are not pregnant may actually benefit from cod liver oil more than fish oil, particularly during winter months. ...
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    ==============
    6203 Re: herbalremedies.com-gout remedies page,but really covers lots more than just gout or arthritis
    ... Cobalamin Vitamin C Vitamin D D3, Cholecalciferol Vitamin E Biotin Vitamin K Bioflavonoids ... s Saffron Coconut Oil Cod Liver Oil Coenzyme Q10 Coffee ... Pascalite Passion Flower Pau d'arco Patchouli Peach Peelu ... Wild Rhubarb Wild Yam Winter Cherry Wintergreen Witch ...
    Lee and Cindy
    leeandcindy@...
    cheyennecin
    Jul 1, 2008
    9:23 pm
    6202 herbalremedies.com-gout remedies page,but really covers lots more than just gout or arthritis
    ... Carotene Borage Oil Chitosan Chlorophyll Choline Cod Liver Oil CoQ10 5-HTP Vitamin A Vitamin B B1, Thiamin B2, Riboflavin B3, Niacin ... Inositol B9, Folic Acid B12, Cobalamin Vitamin C Vitamin D D3, Cholecalciferol Vitamin E Biotin Vitamin K Bioflavonoids ...
    Lee and Cindy
    leeandcindy@...
    cheyennecin
    Jul 1, 2008
    9:16 pm
    5842 Re: Adult INGESTION WINTERGREEN OIL in SMALL DOSES safe?
    ... Chlorophyll Choline Chondroitin Cod ... Next http://au.groups.yahoo ... FoodHerbHealth/msearch?query=wintergreen+oil&pos=120&cnt=10 640Re: Natural ... s worth) ... capsules.html vitamin-C-powder.html vitamin-D.html vitamin-D3.jpg vitamin-E.html vitamin ...
    Lee and Cindy
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    Apr 2, 2008
    7:34 pm
    5422 Rickets (Osteomalacia)-Lack of Vitamin D, results in lacks of calcium,phosphorous
    ... be good source of CALCIUM, and COD LIVER oil may be good oral Vitamin D source. People who live in colder ... wear and the sun's angle in the winter sky limit how much ... www.sciencenews ... or ergocalciferol, and vitamin D3 or ..... reduced daylight hours ...
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    Dec 26, 2007
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    5105 Links to some of the Latest Health News, Updates
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    Oct 9, 2007
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    Sep 19, 2007
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    3755 Top 10 Resolutions:Eat Smart to Extend Your "Healthspan"
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    #6376 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
    Date: Sun Aug 3, 2008 9:28 pm
    Subject:: Re: Dried Herbs many uses
    cheyennecin
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    "TRUNCATED" MESSAGE, continued:

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    #6375 From: "Lee and Cindy" <leeandcindy@...>
    Date: Sun Aug 3, 2008 9:20 pm
    Subject:: Re: Dried Herbs many uses
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    "TRUNCATED" MESSAGE, continued:

    Mandrake root, c/s

    • Podophyllum peltatum
    • Wildcrafted
    • $1.65/Oz. 0% off

    Marjoram leaf, c/s

    Marshmallow root, c/s

    • Althaea officinalis
    • Organic
    • $1.75/Oz. 0% off

    Marshmallow root, pwd

    • Althaea officinalis
    • Organic
    • $1.90/Oz. 0% off

    Meadowsweet herb, c/s

    • Filipendula ulmaria
    • Organic
    • $1.85/Oz. 0% off

    Meadowsweet herb, pwd

    • Filipendula ulmaria
    • Organic
    • $1.70/Oz. 0% off

    Milk Thistle seed, whole

    Motherwort herb, c/s

    Mugwort herb, c/s

    • Artemisia vulgaris
    • Organic
    • $1.70/Oz. 0% off

    Muira Puama chips (Potency Wood)

    • Ptychopetalum olacoides
    • Grown Without Chemicals
    • $1.50/Oz. 0% off

    Mullein leaf, c/s

    • Verbascum thapsus
    • Wildcrafted
    • $1.80/Oz. 0% off

    Myrrh gum, pwd

    • Commiphora molmol
    • Commercially Grown
    • $1.95/Oz. 0% off

    N

    Nettle leaf, c/s

    Nettle leaf, pwd

    Nutmeg, pwd

    • Myristica fragrans
    • Organic
    • $2.80/Oz. 0% off

    O

    Oatstraw herb, c/s

    Olive leaf, whole

    Orange peel, c/s

    Oregano herb, c/s

    Oregon Grape root, c/s

    • Mohonia aquifolium
    • Wildcrafted
    • $1.95/Oz. 0% off

    Oregon Grape root, pwd

    • Mohonia aquifolium
    • Wildcrafted
    • $1.95/Oz. 0% off

    Orris root, c/s

    • Iris x germanica
    • Commercially Grown
    • $1.95/Oz. 0% off

    Orris root, pwd

    • Iris x germanica
    • Commercially Grown
    • $1.95/Oz. 0% off

    Osha root, whole

    • Ligusticum porteri
    • Organic
    • $4.98/Oz. 0% off

    P

    Parsley flakes

    • Petroselinum crispum
    • Organic
    • $1.55/Oz. 0% off

    Partridge berry herb (Squawvine), c/s

    • Mitchella repens
    • Wildcrafted
    • $6.65/Oz. 0% off

    Passion flower herb, c/s

    • Passiflora incarnata
    • Wildcrafted
    • $1.85/Oz. 0% off

    Patchouly leaf, pieces

    • Pogostemon cablin
    • Commercially Grown
    • $1.85/Oz. 0% off

    Pau D’Arco bark, c/s

    • Tabebuia heptaphylla
    • Wildcrafted
    • $1.25/Oz. 0% off

    Pau D’Arco bark, pwd

    • Tabebuia heptaphylla
    • Wildcrafted
    • $1.35/Oz. 0% off

    Pennyroyal herb, c/s

    • Mentha pulegium
    • Wildcrafted
    • $1.95/Oz. 0% off

    Peony rt, Red (Chi Shao Yao)

    • Paeonia veitchii
    • Sulfur-Free
    • $0.95/Oz. 0% off

    Peppermint leaf, c/s

    Plantain leaf, c/s

    Pleurisy root, c/s

    • Asclepias tuberosa
    • Wildcrafted
    • $2.15/Oz. 0% off

    Poke root, c/s

    • Phytolacca americana
    • Wildcrafted
    • $1.50/Oz. 0% off

    Poria fungus (Fu Ling)

    Prickly Ash bark, c/s

    • Zanthoxylum americanum
    • Wildcrafted
    • $2.95/Oz. 0% off

    Prince Ginseng (Tai Zi Shen)

    • Pseudostellaria heterophylla
    • Sulfur-Free
    • $1.65/Oz. 0% off

    Psyllium husk, pwd

    Psyllium seed, whole

    Psyllium seed, powder

    Q

    Quassia Wood chip, c/s

    • Quassia amara
    • Commercially Grown
    • $1.25/Oz. 0% off

    R

    Red Clover, blossom and leaf, c/s

    • Trifolium pratense
    • Organic
    • $1.90/Oz. 0% off

    Red Raspberry leaf, c/s

    Red Root, c/s

    • Ceanothus americanus
    • Wildcrafted
    • $1.95/Oz. 0% off

    Red Root, pwd

    • Ceanothus americanus
    • Wildcrafted
    • $2.43/Oz. 0% off

    Rehmanniae (Shu Di Huang)

    • Rehmannia glutinosa
    • Sulfur-Free
    • $1.50/Oz. 0% off

    Reishi Mushroom (Ling Zhi)

    • Ganoderma sinense
    • Sulfur-Free
    • $1.85/Oz. 0% off

    Rhodiola root, c/s

    • Rhodiola rosea
    • Commercially Grown
    • $2.20/Oz. 0% off

    Rhodiola root, powder

    • Rhodiola rosea
    • Commercially Grown
    • $1.50/Oz. 0% off

    Rooibos leaf, c/s (Red Tea)

    • Asplathus linearis
    • Organic
    • $1.75/Oz. 0% off

    Rosehips, c/s