Guest guest Posted December 18, 2011 Report Share Posted December 18, 2011 Hi, My dear sister called me that her MRI report indicated there were several hernia dieks around her neck area. She felt numb from shoulder to her arms to the point it was hard for her to get decent sleep. Any alternative treatment you folks know about before she goes to dangerious neck operation. I felt her frustration/depression and I wish I can help her. Does DMSO or MSM will help her? Does magnet therapy will help? Or any device can help her relief presssure from her neck? Any supplements/herbs will be able hold her condition from getting worse? How about diets? Any inputs will be much appreciated. Thanks in advance. Helen Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2011 Report Share Posted December 19, 2011 Helen - slowly the medicos learned that most surgeries are useless and/or dangerous. In my case standard physio-therapy didn't achieve much. Then Dorn therapy reduced the pain level considerably. DMSO didn't help with pain (it helped others though). Patients should exercise but I have a funny condition: When I sit or lie down I have almost no pain. Walking increases the pain. So I have not yet found a way to be pain-free like before it shot on me (without any physical impact). Choose your therapeut carefully. After learning from a Dorn guy you can continue d.i.y. Regards At 6:52 Uhr +0000 19.12.2011, dingyung49 wrote: >Hi, My dear sister called me that her MRI report indicated there >were several hernia dieks around her neck area. She felt numb from >shoulder to her arms to the point it was hard for her to get decent >sleep. Any alternative treatment you folks know about before she >goes to dangerious neck operation. I felt her >frustration/depression and I wish I can help her. Does DMSO or MSM >will help her? Does magnet therapy will help? Or any device can >help her relief presssure from her neck? Any supplements/herbs >will be able hold her condition from getting worse? How about >diets? Any inputs will be much appreciated. Thanks in advance. >Helen > > > >------------------------------------ > >List Home Page: > >http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/DimethylSulfoxide-DMSO > >Books: >DMSO Nature's Healer by Morton >MSM The Definitive Guide by Stanely MD and Appleton, >ND Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2011 Report Share Posted December 19, 2011 Knees & hands don't usually have herniated discs tho? Jane Subject: Hernia disks, need help!!! >Glucosomine Chondritin has been stated as not effective< I'm curious about the person or organization which stated that glucosamine is not effective. I've never used chondroitin, so I can't speak about that (or about combinations of the two), but glucosamine healed my arthritic knees over ten years ago. It has also healed my daughter's hands. I don't believe everything that's stated, especially when it contradicts my own experience. Dianne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2011 Report Share Posted December 19, 2011 My dad used Bioflex glucosamine/condroitin on his laboradore retriever and she recovered use of her back legs again. She was in obvious discomfort and I told Dad to use that and he did. The next thing he knew, she surprised him and climbed 13 steps to get upstairs where his bedroom is and she jumped in bed with him. She recovered from there. I don't know any other testimony to give you, but a dog does not know anything about the placebo effect. I would say it at least worked at that time. This was about 6 years ago. Lyn Hernia disks, need help!!! >Glucosomine Chondritin has been stated as not effective< I'm curious about the person or organization which stated that glucosamine is not effective. I've never used chondroitin, so I can't speak about that (or about combinations of the two), but glucosamine healed my arthritic knees over ten years ago. It has also healed my daughter's hands. I don't believe everything that's stated, especially when it contradicts my own experience. Dianne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2011 Report Share Posted December 19, 2011 When the disc is at the lower end of the cervical vertebrae it affects ones hands. I don't know thru' which vertebrae nerves to the knees pass. In my experience many supplements help with joint pain; possibly even joint pain that begins in the spine but not sure of that one. The number one substance for joint prolems in my book is bone broth closely followed by gelatin. Of course, digestion has to be working for this to be helpful. There are innumerable supplements that work, depending on the origin of the problem and the environment (your body) into which they are ingested. Celadrin, Bicarbonate Magnesium, glucosamine, chondroitan, MSM, Mullein Root, Comfrey leaves/root, and many more. Just saw a friend in the hospital yesterday who had her knee replaced. She has some serious arthritis and the pain had become unbearable. She has never read anything by Dr. Childs much less attempted a nightshade-free diet for a week or four. Any supplements she has used, if they don't work in the same manner as drugs, she discards fairly quicky as not working for her. Lifestyle, diet and maybe genetics all played a role in getting her to the point where she opted for surgery. Changes therein could have postponed or eliminated the need for fake knees. But those kind of changes ARE work; we want to take a pill or close our eyes and in half an hour (or whenever the commercial comes on) it's all better. The television culture and the pharma agenda work together to create the underlying expectation of " effortless and instant. " Add pain to it and the way it dibilitates ones will and intiative and you end up with the shortcut from pain taking to that place of good intentions to which no one wants to go. Saralou ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Research snippets http://orthopedics.about.com/cs/herniateddisk/a/ruptureddisk.htm http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=knee+-+spine+nerve & hl=en & as_sdt=0 & as_vis=1 & o\ i=scholart http://www.erinelster.com/ConditionsDetail.aspx?ConditionID=5 http://www.spineuniverse.com/conditions/neck-pain/cervical-herniated-disc-patien\ t-history-case http://www.healthboards.com/boards/showthread.php?t=27228 http://mississaugachiro.com/interactive_flash_spinal_nerve_chart.php http://chiromt.com/content/16/1/2 Upton and McComas [1 <http://chiromt.com/content/16/1/2#B1>] formalized the hypothesis of the " double crush " syndrome (DCS). They suggested that compression of an axon at one location makes it more sensitive to effects of compression in another location, because of impaired axoplasmic flow. Hypothetically, two lesions with little or no independent clinical ramifications, when combined, lead to appearance or magnification of symptoms [2 <http://chiromt.com/content/16/1/2#B2>]. Two areas of compression affecting the same axons do not, alone, meet the criteria of the hypothesis. By definition, a first lesion must render axons more susceptible to effects of a second, leading to more than just the combined, independent effects of two lesions [2 <http://chiromt.com/content/16/1/2#B2>]. Upton and McComas [1 <http://chiromt.com/content/16/1/2#B1>] used the double crush hypothesis to explain why patients with carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) sometimes feel pain in the forearm, elbow, upper arm, shoulder, chest, and upper back. They also used it to explain failed attempts at surgical repairs when neither surgery nor CTS diagnosis appeared faulty. They claimed that most patients with CTS not only have compressive lesions at the wrist, but also show evidence of damage to cervical nerve roots. The double crush concept has gained some popularity among chiropractors because it seems to provide a rationale for adjusting the cervical spine when treating CTS. An example of this emphasis on spinal care, implicitly grounded in the double crush hypothesis, can be found on the Web: " 90% of all carpal tunnel patients are misdiagnosed. O*nly 10% of all carpal tunnel patients have the problem in their wrists*. Most often the problem exists in the cervical spine with compression or irritation of the nerve root. " [3 <http://chiromt.com/content/16/1/2#B3>]. Although the chiropractor making this claim may believe it, nothing in the scientific literature supports it. Other doctors of chiropractic accept that median nerve compression commonly occurs in the carpal tunnel but believe that neck problems also contribute to the syndrome. Although it seems that many of my chiropractic colleagues and students are unfamiliar with the term " double crush syndrome, " nearly all share the conviction that the cervical spine is involved in CTS. " The first area I examine in a CTS case is not the wrist, but the neck. It is here that a group of nerves known as the brachial plexus comes out of the mid to lower neck region, then branches out to the arms, hands and fingers.*If there is pressure on any of these nerves, especially the median nerve, the result may be CTS*. " [4 <http://chiromt.com/content/16/1/2#B4>] " ...*nerve compression in the neck can block the flow of nutrients to the nerves in the wrist, making it more susceptible to injury.* This is called the double crush syndrome. " [5 <http://chiromt.com/content/16/1/2#B5>] " ...we have a comprehensive and unique six-point treatment plan for Carpal Tunnel Syndrome... [including] chiropractic adjustments of neck, shoulder, elbow and wrist.... CTS usually is due to pressure on the nerve at more than one location. (this is known as 'double crush [phenomenon].') " [6 <http://chiromt.com/content/16/1/2#B6>] --- Hernia disks, need help!!! >Glucosomine Chondritin has been stated as not effective< I'm curious about the person or organization which stated that glucosamine is not effective. I've never used chondroitin, so I can't speak about that (or about combinations of the two), but glucosamine healed my arthritic knees over ten years ago. It has also healed my daughter's hands. I don't believe everything that's stated, especially when it contradicts my own experience. Dianne .................................. In a message dated 12/19/2011 12:52:50 A.M. Central Standard Time, dingyung49@... <mailto:dingyung49%40yahoo.com> writes: Hi, My dear sister called me that her MRI report indicated there were several hernia dieks around her neck area. She felt numb from shoulder to her arms to the point it was hard for her to get decent sleep. Any alternative treatment you folks know about before she goes to dangerious neck operation. I felt her frustration/depression and I wish I can help her. Does DMSO or MSM will help her? Does magnet therapy will help? Or any device can help her relief presssure from her neck? Any supplements/herbs will be able hold her condition from getting worse? How about diets? Any inputs will be much appreciated. Thanks in advance. Helen __._ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 19, 2011 Report Share Posted December 19, 2011 IIRC, it was Dr. Mercola and Mike (Health Ranger) who reported GC's ineffectiveness. YES, both offer their solutions. Bruce On Mon, 19 Dec 2011 09:09:52 -0800 (PST) Kore writes: >Glucosomine Chondritin has been stated as not effective< Hi Bruce, I'm curious about the person or organization which stated that glucosamine is not effective. I've never used chondroitin, so I can't speak about that (or about combinations of the two), but glucosamine healed my arthritic knees over ten years ago. It has also healed my daughter's hands. I don't believe everything that's stated, especially when it contradicts my own experience. Dianne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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