Posts Tagged ‘Lifestyle Changes’

Diet and Lifestyle Changes For Sinus Infections

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Your diet plays a significant role in your everyday life. It can also serve as a basis for determining the health of an individual. If youre used to eating unhealthy choices of foods, then your body tends to be weak and cant resist viral and bacterial attacks. Sinus infections can be caused by bacteria, virus, and fungi. There are lots of treatments for this condition but prevention is still the best way to fight this infection. Having a healthy body and strong immune system will help you a lot in fighting infections, including that of the sinus.

Living a healthy life entails a lot of work. You need to be conscious about the foods youre eating and the mental activities that youre engaging. You must also ensure that youre getting enough exercise.

Making certian changes in your lifestyle may sound very difficult at first but if youre determined to prevent future health conditions, you will do everything in your power to incorporate these changes in your life.

For the prevention of sinus infections, here are some changes that you should do:

1.Drink enough water everyday; 8-10 glasses of water everyday can help you attain a healthier body

2.Fresh fruit juices are also good for your health; drink plenty of it as well

3.Eat your vegetables, just like your mother told you when youre still a kid; but you need to lessen your consumption of zucchini, sweet potatoes, cucumbers, and tomatoes.

4.Take lots of bitter tasting or pungent items; warm foods are also good for fighting sinus infections

5.Eat more of pear, apples, and other lighter fruits but reduce on sour fruits like oranges, pineapples, bananas, dates, figs, coconuts, avocados, and melons.

6.Eat cottage cheese and yogurt but eat less of dairy foods

7.Lessen your consumption of oily, heavy, and cold foods; as well as sour, salty, and sweet tasting foods

8.Consume less of millet and barley, rice or wheat

9.To relieve congestion, sinus pressure, and increase mucus flow, drink hot liquids

10.Take honey but avoid sugary products; you can also take boiled milk but only the low-fat ones

11.Include garlic in your diet

12.Avoid strongly scented perfumes, body and hair oils

13.Avoid taking frequent naps; if the weather is damp or cold, keep yourself warm all the time

14.Steam inhalation is very good for getting rid of the clogged mucus; add some eucalyptus oil to the water for better results

15.Early to bed and early to rise; and dont forget to do some yoga practices like fish, sun salutation, locust; you can also do some meditation and pranayama

16.Sesame oil massage is great but take a soothing warm shower first

17.Dont get too attached to emotional upsets; learn to let go

According to yoga and ayurveda specialists, sinus infections are caused by imbalanced doshas. In order to address your sinusitis, you have to be compassionate to yourself so that you can balance the doshas once more.

Yoga and other alternative treatments are quite effective but it will depend on your willingness to undertake some drastic changes in your life. True enough, you cant change overnight and so you need to introduce the changes gradually. If you start now, you will thank yourself in the near future. You will soon cure your sinus infections and other health conditions.

The Difference Between Arthritis and Rheumatism

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

The Difference Between Arthritis and Rheumatism
Leong Y.H..M.D

‘Rheumatism’ is a traditional and non-specific term used in the East and West to refer to a variety of conditions affecting the bones, joints, skin, heart, kidneys, lungs. This term is rapidly falling out of favour in the West today because modern medical science has discovered that most of these conditions have different aetiologies (causes) requiring very different treatments.
You can say that it’s a word mainly used in Chinese (& traditional) societies; it’s also used by a minority of Westerners into homeopathic and alternative medicine. The only common characteristics among these conditions are: 1) they cause long-term chronic pain, and 2) they are very difficult to treat.
‘Arthritis’ is a broad term refers to inflammation of the joints, but doesn’t say anything about the cause. Includes conditions like osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, infective arthritis, gouty arthritis, etc.
Generally, I’d divide arthritis into 2 big groups:
1) Osteoarthritis (OA)
This is primarily a ‘wear and tear’ condition affecting older people. Arises from overuse (e.g. marathon runners), previous injuries (football players), overweight, heredity. A lot of older Asian women get OA of the knees while the Americans and Europeans get it in the hips. The pain is more mechanical than inflammatory. So you get pain in the later part of the day after a lot of walking and climbing stairs.
Because it’s mainly a mechanical problem, treatment with painkillers is only a temporary solution. Long-term lifestyle changes are more important – reduce weight, mobility and muscle-strengthening exercises, reduce all kinds of weight-bearing activities (walking, jumping, running, carrying heavy objects). In severe cases, surgery may be warranted.

2) Inflammatory (‘Rheumatic’) Arthritis
This group comprises the various types of arthritis which are mainly inflammatory , not mechanical, in nature. They usually result from an auto-immune condition, which causes the body’s immune system to go haywire and attack the joints and other parts of the body. E.g. rheumatoid arthritis (RA), SLE (skin, kidneys, joints, brain), psoriasis (skin, joints), ankylosing spondylitis (back, heart), gout (joints, skin, kidneys), rheumatic heart disease/fever (joints, heart, skin). All these conditions require different forms of treatment.
I’ll talk a bit about RA, the commonest condition in this group. Unlike OA, RA can occur at any age and is usually hereditary (we now have a test for the RA factor in the blood). Pain is usually in the early morning, worse when it’s cold, and gets better with activity and use. That means an RA sufferer suffers from morning stiffness and pain, but gets better in the afternoon when it’s warmer and when he has moved around a bit.
Treatment, unlike OA, is mainly through drugs – painkillers, anti-inflammatory drugs like steroids, cytotoxic drugs like sulfasalazine and MTX. In Asia, treatment is mainly through accupuncture, medicated plasters and ointments. With the vast arsenals of drugs and non-drugs alternative treatments available today, RA can be controlled very well and the sufferer can actually lead a very active life. Many OA sufferers on the other hand may eventually require surgery since we don’t have very effective drugs for OA. About the Author
Dr Leong Y.H is a western trained medical doctor with a keen interest in Oriental medical treatment. He contribute articles to http://www.quick-pain-relief.com and http://www.chinese-culture.net. You may distribute this article as long as mention is made of the author and the website.