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- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!gatech!udel!princeton!phoenix.Princeton.EDU!rdnelson
- From: rdnelson@phoenix.Princeton.EDU (Roger D. Nelson)
- Subject: Re: Homeopathy
- Message-ID: <1992Dec25.184036.123@Princeton.EDU>
- Originator: news@nimaster
- Sender: news@Princeton.EDU (USENET News System)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: phoenix.princeton.edu
- Organization: Princeton University
- References: <6752@tuegate.tue.nl> <1hac1cINN4uf@grapevine.EBay.Sun.COM> <6762@tuegate.tue.nl>
- Date: Fri, 25 Dec 1992 18:40:36 GMT
- Lines: 38
-
- In article <6762@tuegate.tue.nl> wsadjw@urc.tue.nl writes:
- >In article <1hac1cINN4uf@grapevine.EBay.Sun.COM> greg@antizen.EBay.Sun.COM writes:
- >>
- >>Though I'm definately NOT an MD or possess anywhere near the education
- >>of one, I currently am aware of beta-agonist drugs (Ventolin, Alupent)
- >>bronchodilaters (Theophylline) and the corticosteroids.
- >>
- >>None of these drugs are particularly good for you. I don't want to
- >>have to take them, or even continue to have to be an asthmatic.
- >
- >Asthma isn't good for you either, and by the time you are 50 or 60,
- >you might find out that emphysema is even more unpleasant. Ask your
- >lung doctor about cromoglycates (like Intal or Lomudal). They reduce
- >allergic reactions by blocking the IgE receptors on the mest-cells in
- >the lungs.
- >
- There has been some decent research indicating that some of the
- "Behavioral Medicine" approaches are useful in treating asthma, and may
- help not only to mitigate symptoms, but in some cases reduce the
- fundamental disbalances that underly the syndrome. Meditation is an
- example of a non-invasive therapy with no adverse physical side effects,
- that has some potential. There is very clear evidence that ill effects
- of various sorts of stress are mitigated by regular evocation of what
- Herbert Benson calls the "Relaxation Response" in a book by that name.
- He and colleagues have recently published "The Wellness Book" which is a
- pretty good self-teaching guide to a number of techniques and practices
- that can put you in better shape. I don't think Benson's research
- includes asthma specifically, but there are some studies, e.g. Janssen,
- in the Nederlands Tijdschraft Voor Integralle Gneeskund, 1989, 5,
- 586-594, that do specifically examine effects of meditation and some
- related dietary intervention on asthma. Wilson, et al, for Kaiser
- Permanente (in press, but I don't know where) showed in randomized
- clinical trials that the behavioral approach could reduce office visits
- for acute asthma by 27 to 49% depending on the study subgroup.
-
- Worth checking out I think.
-
- Roger
-