Not exact matches
These and other findings from a new study conducted
by researchers at Montefiore Health System and Albert Einstein College of
Medicine of Yeshiva University, offer the first clinical recommendations for making diagnostic decisions about
headaches in pregnant women.
The research, published in JAMA Internal
Medicine by a team from the U-M Department of Neurology, uses national data on
headache - related doctor visits and neuroimaging scans
by people over age 18, and calculates estimated total costs across multiple years.
Patients with temporal - type migraine derive similar and significant improvement from techniques that relieve pressure on (decompression) or remove a portion of (neurectomy) the nerve responsible for triggering their
headaches, reports the study
by ASPS Member Surgeon Bahman Guyuron, MD, Emeritus professor of plastic surgery at Case School of
Medicine, Cleveland, and colleagues.
For most people those symptoms are all too familiar:
headache, achiness, tremulousness, diarrhea, loss of appetite, fatigue, and nausea — all of these are cited
by Jeffrey G. Wiese and colleagues in a 2000 metastudy on hangovers published in the Annals of Internal
Medicine.
A recent study of 422 adults
by Robert Nicholson and his colleagues at the St. Louis University School of
Medicine found that suppressed psychological stress may be a major trigger for those who are prone to
headaches.
Why it works «Since it's a relaxation technique,» says Melissa Young, MD, an integrative
medicine specialist at the Cleveland Clinic Center for Integrative Medicine, «it makes sense that it helps with issues that are exacerbated by stress, like headache
medicine specialist at the Cleveland Clinic Center for Integrative
Medicine, «it makes sense that it helps with issues that are exacerbated by stress, like headache
Medicine, «it makes sense that it helps with issues that are exacerbated
by stress, like
headache.»
Cannabis appears in almost every known book of
medicine written
by ancient scholars and was used as a treatment for
headaches, asthma, pain, depression and epilepsy.
Green tea has long been used
by the Chinese as
medicine to treat
headaches, body ache, poor digestion, and improve well - being and life expectancy.
BOOKS (67) http://www.amazon.com/Bioelectromagnetic-Healing-Rationale-its-Use/dp/0964107058 Bioelectromagnetic Healing: A Rationale for its Use
by Thomas Valone 2003 (68) http://www.amazon.com/Energy-
Medicine-Scientific-James-Oschman/dp/0443062617 Energy
Medicine: The Scientific Basis
by James L. Oschman 2000 Therapeutic Uses of Pulsed EMF (69)(70)(71)(72)(73)(74)(75) http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/163/1/88 A Randomized, Controlled Trial of Sequential Bilateral Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Treatment - Resistant Depression, Am J Psychiatry 163:88 - 94, January 2006 (70) http://www.ondamed.net/publication/html/en/article15.html Impulse magnetic - field therapy for migraine and other
headaches: a double - blind, placebo - controlled study.
Once, years ago, one letter written
by a doctor to the New England Journal of
Medicine in 1968 caused a sort of anti MSG hysteria, attributing it mainly to a
headache the doctor had after eating some food that contained the substance.
I was brushed off
by Western
medicine because symptoms like
headaches, constipation, and stomach pain are difficult to diagnose and after a while, they said, «There is nothing you can do.»