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Over 4 million Americans are diagnosed annually with peptic ulcer
disease. Many learn to live with the resulting heartburn, acid
reflux, nausea, gas, and stomach pain with the help of
over-the-counter antacids. These products may stop the pain, but
only temporarily. Furthermore, the underlying condition can worsen.
But it doesn't have to be that way. "Ulcer Free!"is a practical
guide to understanding the causes of and effective treatments for
peptic ulcer disease. The book begins with a look at why we get
ulcers. It examines the "Helicobacter pylori bacterium--the culprit
behind the majority of stomach ulcers. It also discusses the
growing number of ulcers caused by NSAIDs--over-the-counter pain
relievers, more commonly known as aspirin, ibuprofen, naproxen, and
a variety of other products. The book then offers an unbiased look
at the treatments--conventional and alternative--that can stop the
symptoms of and actually heal ulcers. Finally, "Ulcer Free!
introduces the breakthrough nutrient Zinc-Carnosine, which can be
used in conjunction with other treatments or on its own. If you are
tired of being victim to continual gastric distress, "Ulcer Free!
can help. Up-to-date and accurate, it offers the key to permanent
relief.
While almost all mushrooms share beneficial properties which
heighten the immune system, the chapters of this book are dedicated
to mushrooms that are the most promising possibilities for healing
a variety of illnesses, including reishi (for liver disorders),
cordyceps sinesis (anti-ageing), maitake (cancer), and hericum
erinaceud (Alzheimer's Disease), among others. Mushrooms have been
found in human culture for thousands of years. They have been used
as a medicine since the very beginning, but in the past fifty years
several major advancements in medicine have come from mushroom and
other fungi, including the most famous of all, penicillin. This
book explores mushroom history, as well as their possible uses in
the future.
Essential oils, known for their healing properties as far back as
ancient Mesopotamia and Babylonia, have reached their zenith in
Madagascar, says Dr. Georges M. Halpern, author of The Healing
Trail: Essential Oils of Madagascar. This interesting, informative,
and clearly written new book is well-documented, with entertaining
historical stories sprinkled throughout, including how
eighteenth-century botanists succeeded in making this land a garden
for botanical study. Madagascar, the planet's fourth largest
island, has long been famous for the individuality of its flora and
fauna, and for the essential oils that many consider the best in
the world. This book explains why and tells us what makes these
oils so potent and effective. It details their use in aromatherapy,
a healing method almost as old as medicine itself, and their many
benefits to the perfume, cosmetic, and food industries; it
describes the successful efforts of villagers to create a
sustainable economy around them without having to cut down the
rainforest, and offers practical advice for people wishing to visit
this lushly beautiful island, "the naturalist's promised land." Dr.
Halpern gives the history and the chemical and botanical makeup of
eight essential oils (for example, tropical basil, cinnamon leaf
and bark, geranium leaf, ginger, and vanilla) and tells how they
are best used to promote physical and emotional health. We learn
where they are grown on the island, how they are cultivated, what
studies are being conducted, and what scientists believe might be
future uses for them.
The Healing Trail: Essential Oils of Madagascar is an essential
resource for learning how the unique aspects of this island have
coalescedto create superior essential oils like no others on earth,
and how these oils can be put to use for maximum benefit.
This third edition of Gershwin and Halpern's classic text,
Bronchial Asthma, has been completely rewritten and expanded to
include, from a variety of disciplines, the latest techniques and
developments in the clinical diagnosis and treatment of asthma.
With its new patient-oriented chapters on living with asthma, the
book will empower the internist, the family practitioner, and the
specialist in their struggle to reverse the current trend of
increasing asthma mortality and to improve the quality of life of
their patients and their families. The editors have selected
authoritative contributors to Bronchial Asthma, organizing it into
four comprehensive parts: I. Definitions and Host Responses to
Bronchospasm defines asthma by analyzing its epidemiology,
pathogenesis, and genetic roots, and illuminates the roles of mast
cells and eosinophils. Chapters also cover the use of the pulmonary
function laboratory and the differential diagnosis of asthma in
children and adults. II. Patient Management introduces the latest
thinking and techniques about treatment and management of patients,
including allergic evaluation, radiological treatment, the role of
immunotherapy, the differential management of status asthmaticus,
the management of pregnant asthmatics, and an evaluation of
unconventional therapies. III. Special Clinical Problems explores
respiratory tract infections, the roles of anti-inflammatory
agents, food additives, air pollution, aspergillosis, and
occupational asthma. Four new chapters analyze exercise-induced
asthma, asthma's relationship with chronic sinus disease, and the
cross-cultural treatment of asthma in Europe and Japan. IV. Living
with Asthma, an entirely new section, examines asthma in school
children, athletes and asthma, legal issues for asthmatics, the
psychology of asthma, and the use of prospective disease
management.
Although the mechanisms and triggers that stimulate and are
responsible for the natural history ofasthma are steadily being
more clearly defined, uncertainties still surround both the genetic
basis and the etiologyofone of the most common syndromes in the
world. In fact, it is ofconsider- able concern and interest that
the incidence of asthma today appears to be rising. These
statistical increments may only reflect an increasing awareness of
the disease, or its earlier and more sophisticated diagnosis. More
important, however, asthma mortality appears to be increasing. This
increase has occurred despite the continuing expansion of a diag-
nostic and management information base, and the developmentofnovel
andevermoreeffective therapeutic modalities. Severalexplanations
have been offered for this increase in mortality, including that it
may result from a statistical artifact [based on a change in the
coding criteria for asthma from the International
ClassificationofDiseases Version 8(ICD- 8) to ICD-9], worsened
pollution, delays in seeking medical help, behav- ioral changes,
deficits in the asthma education of both patients and primary
careproviders, toxicity ofbeta-agonists, and noncompliance with
instructions for the proper use of medications. It should also be
empha- sized that the increases in both incidence and mortality may
be a reflec- tion of accumulating body burdens of environmental
toxicants and of increased oxidativedamage. There has clearly
beenadegradation ofenvi- ronmental quality. And although
considerableattention has been focused on this possibility in both
the scientific and lay press, more research in this area is
definitely needed.
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