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Alternative Medicine in the News May 2010 edition 71 published weekly
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Greetings!
I want to apologize for the messiness of last week's issue with wrong month and table of contents.
Other than that.......
I'm feelin' good these days, how about you?
Enjoy! Didi
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Children's Tylenol recalled over tiny particles and out-of-control manufacturing processes by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
Johnson & Johnson has issued a recall of over 40 Tylenol brand
children's products, including Concentrated Tylenol Infant Drops,
Children's Motrin, Children's Zyrtec, Benadryl and other
over-the-counter products. The recall was triggered by what the FDA
calls "manufacturing deficiencies." Douglas Stearn, a senior FDA
official, said the manufacturing process was "not in control", which is
the FDA's polite way of saying it was "out of control."
A press release on the McNeil Consumer Healthcare web page explains the reason for recall:
"Some
of the products included in the recall may contain a higher
concentration of active ingredient than is specified; others may
contain inactive ingredients that may not meet internal testing
requirements; and others may contain tiny particles." (http://www.mcneilproductrecall.com/...)
Tiny particles of what?
That's left unsaid, but it is likely to be tiny particles of paint or
metal from the machinery used to manufacture the products.
These
quality control problems have apparently existed for quite some time.
"This does go back in time" said Stearn from the FDA. "We have to try
to figure that out."
In other words, the manufacturing plant is
out of control, and it has been for a long time, and there are pieces
of something (perhaps paint or machinery) found in the medicines. They
don't say it that way, of course, but that's a reasonable conclusion
from the evidence made public so far.
And to think... this is medicine for children!
A history of quality control with Tylenol products The
Washington Post is now reporting that in January, "...McNeil recalled
49 types of Tylenol products made for adults and two Tylenol products
made for children after consumers complained of a mold-like odor and of
temporary and minor nausea, stomach pain, vomiting and diarrhea. The
company determined that some of the medicines had been contaminated by
trace amounts of a chemical that is sometimes present on shipping and
storage material." (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy...)
Shipping
material chemicals in the medicine? That sounds bizarre, but the really
bizarre part about this story is that even when Tylenol products aren't
chemically contaminated, they still contain questionable chemicals by design, such as aspartame.
The following Children's Tylenol products are all made with aspartame:
· Childrens TYLENOL acetaminophen Fruit Flavored Chewable Tablets · Childrens TYLENOL acetaminophen Grape Flavored Chewable Tablets · Childrens TYLENOL acetaminophen Cold Multi-Symptom Chewable Tablets · Junior Strength TYLENOL acetaminophen Fruit Flavored Chewable Tablets · Junior Strength TYLENOL acetaminophen Grape Flavored Chewable Tablets · PEDIACARE Cold-Allergy Tablets for Ages 6 to 12 · PEDIACARE Cough-Cold Tablets for Ages 6 to 12 · PEDICARE Childrens Cold Relief Tablets · TYLENOL Cold and Flu Hot Medication · TYLENOL Cold and Flu No Drowsiness Formula Hot Medication · Childrens Chewable CO-TYLENOL (http://www.wnho.net/use_of_aspartam...)
So
even with Tylenol products meet the FDA's requirements for
manufacturing, they still contain chemicals that no informed parent
would ever want to feed their child. And Tylenol products will never be
recalled just because they contain aspartame, since the FDA
ridiculously insists that aspartame is safe.
Safer than tiny
particles from machine parts, perhaps, but in no way is aspartame safe
to feed to children. In an honest world, the entire Tylenol product
line would be recalled due to contamination with aspartame and the fact
that many of its products can cause liver toxicity in both children and
adults. (http://www.naturalnews.com/019555_T...)
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Frankincense (tree sap) may be a cure for cancer
Frankincense may bring to mind thoughts of the three wise men, one of
whom brought this valuable tree sap as a gift for the newborn baby
Jesus. According to recent research, this ancient commodity, long
considered to be worth its weight in gold, may actually be a cure for
cancer.
Jeremy Howell, a reporter at the BBC, recently set out
on a trek to learn more about frankincense and to find out whether or
not the time-honored substance truly has anti-cancer characteristics.
After an 11-hour drive from Oman's capital, Muscat, Howell arrived in
the country's "Land of Frankincense" where he quickly discovered some
fascinating things about frankincense.
Frankincense is sap derived from a tree called Boswellia sacra
that grows in the Dhofar region of Oman. The warm winters and rainy
summers there create perfect conditions for the tree, which grows wild
all over the region.
According to Mohammed Al-Shahri, a local
tour guide, frankincense has been extracted, used, and sold in that
region as far back as 7,000 B.C. Passed on from generation to
generation, the traditional way of extracting frankincense is to cut
the bark of the tree, extract its impurities through the first sap, and
return days later to extract pure sap. The final product comes in an
array of colors including yellow, bright green, brown, or even black.
Families
in the Dhofar region made their livings by exporting frankincense
around the world. Camels would carry it to Egypt where it would be
shipped from ports to Europe and the Far East. Some religious
traditions would burn frankincense as an offering, lending explanation
for why one of the wise men brought it as a gift for Jesus.
This
Omali type of frankincense was a popular commodity back in the day, but
today it is hardly exported. This is partly due to the fact that little
Omali frankincense is even produced anymore. Most of the younger
generation has left the region to pursue jobs in government or with oil
companies, leaving only three people who still produce the sap.
However,
recent research by scientists showing that Omali frankincense containss
an agent that halts the spread of cancer may reignite its popularity.
According to immunologist Mahmoud Suhail, frankincense resets the DNA
code that has been corrupted by cancer cells and reprograms the correct
code back into the cell.
Frankincense also effectively
separates the nuclei of cancer cells from their cytoplasm bodies which
stops cancer cells from reproducing themselves and the corrupted DNA
codes. Because frankincense attacks only malignant cells while leaving
health cells alone, it could revolutionize cancer treatment protocols.
Currently,
scientists are working to isolate the agent within frankincense that
fights cancer and trials are currently being conducted to identify
which one it is.
Sources for this story include:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_e...
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New Study: Four Bad Habits can Shorten Your Life by Twelve Years
Four bad habits can shorten your life by 12 years according to a new study published this week in the Archives of Internal Medicine. The four bad habits are smoking, drinking too much, inactivity and a poor diet.
In
the study, researchers examined 4886 British adults who were age 18 or
older in 1984 and 1985. The risky health habits were: smoking tobacco;
downing more than three alcoholic drinks per day for men and more than
two daily for women; getting less than two hours of physical activity
per week; and eating fruits and vegetables fewer than three times
daily. The researchers then assigned a health score for each person
based on bad health habits. A score of zero was assigned to those who
had none of the four bad habits and it increased up to a score of four
for those who had all four.
Death certificates were checked for
the next 20 years and the researchers found that the higher the score,
the shorter the average lifespan was likely to be. The most common
causes of death included heart disease and cancer, both related to
unhealthy lifestyles.
During the 20 year average follow up time,
1080 of the participants died - 431 from cardiovascular disease, 318
from cancer and 331 from other causes. Compared with participants who
had none of the bad health habits, the risk of death increased with
each additional bad habit.
The healthiest group included
never-smokers and those who had quit; teetotalers, women who had fewer
than two drinks daily and men who had fewer than three; those who got
at least two hours of physical activity weekly; and those who ate
fruits and vegetables at least three times daily.
Lead
researcher Elisabeth Kvaavik of the University of Oslo said her results
are applicable to other westernized nations including the United
States. Kvaavik also noted that "you don't need to be extreme" to be in
the healthy category.
"These behaviors add up, so together it's quite good" said Kvaavik. "It should be possible for most people to manage to do it."
Kvaavik
said that the guidelines used for the study were modest and less strict
than many other guidelines. As an example, eating only one carrot, one
apple and a glass of orange juice would suffice for the fruit and
vegetable cutoffs in the study.
By comparison, the U.S.
government recommends four or more cups of fruits or vegetables daily
for adults, depending on age and activity level. The U.S. guidelines
also call for about 2 1/2 hours of exercise weekly compared to the two
hour cut-off for the study.
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Mobile phones could cause cancer, government agencies admit
28 April 2010
The possible health hazards from long-term use of mobile phones are
finally being taken seriously by agencies in the UK and USA after years
of denials that there was any risk.
In the USA, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is now
recommending that people use an earpiece or headset with a cell
(mobile) phone following reports that "wireless device use can be
linked to cancer and other illnesses", while the UK is starting a major
study of health problems from long-term use.
The FCC's latest set of guidelines represents a huge shift, and for the
first time acknowledges that there could be a health danger in using a
cell phone. Apart from using an earpiece or headset, it recommends that
users should keep phones away from the body, and should not attach them
to a belt or leave them in a pocket that's next to the body; users
should use the speaker option so that the phone is kept further away
from the head; and, wherever, possible, text rather than speak.
The FCC
also recommends people purchase a phone with a lower SAR (specific
absorption rate). The FCC says it has issued the new guidelines
following "recent reports by some health and safety interest groups
(that) have suggested that wireless device use can be linked to cancer
and other illnesses. These questions have become more pressing as more
and younger people are using the devices, and for longer periods of
time."
In the UK, researchers from Imperial College London have been
commissioned to carry out a major study into the health hazards of
long-term mobile phone use. The study is looking to recruit 250,000
participants aged from 18 to 69 years - although this leaves out the
most vulnerable group of young teenagers and adolescents.
The Cosmos (Cohort Study on Mobile Communications) research accepts
there is no reliable data on long-term use of mobile phones. One
researcher said: "We cannot rule out the possibility that mobile phone
use causes cancer."
(Source: FCC website; Cosmos website:
http://www.ukcosmos.org/index.html)
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Glass Houses: Cancer specialist attacks alternative therapies
30 November 2006
Everyone knows the old saying 'People in glass houses shouldn't
throw stones', everyone, that is, except Prof Jonathan Waxman, a cancer
specialist at Imperial College in London.
He's been throwing stones at the alternative medicine and organic
foods markets, which he says do nothing to help cancer patients other
than to give them false hope, and generate vast profits for themselves
in the meantime.
"It is the hope of clinicians that the snake oil salesmen that
peddle cures and exploit the desperate will be tipped in the
cobra-filled dustbin of oblivion," he writes in a vitriolic essay in
the British Medical Journal.
To that end, all alternative strategies should be reclassified as
drugs - as they all claim a cure (although few to our knowledge
actually do) - and legislate them out of existence, he says.
"Protect
our patients from vile and cynical exploitation whose intellectual
basis, at best, might be viewed as delusional," upon saying which he
went back into his house, made entirely from glass. First up with his own slingshot was Dr Damien Downing, medical
director with the Alliance for Natural Health, a group that is fighting
to safeguard alternative medicine against a barrage of EU legislation.
Prof Waxman assumes that, in contrast to alternative and
complementary medicine, conventional therapies are tested by sound
science. Sadly, that's not the case, says Dr Downing. A quick visit
to the BMJ Clinical Evidence website reveals that, of the 2,404
treatments surveyed, just 15 per cent were rated as beneficial, while
it's not known if 47 per cent are effective at all. Turn to Prof Waxman's own specialty of oncology and the picture
worsens. A study prepared in 2004 revealed that chemotherapy achieved
a five-year survival rate of less than 2.5 per cent. Dietary changes
are four times as effective in treating cancer, another study revealed.
Other doctors don't seem to share Prof Waxman's confidence in the
scientific basis of medicine. Writing in the same issue, Aubrey
Blumsohn, a consultant at the Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, says that
doctors have allowed the drugs industry to sabotage medicine. "We have
allowed (the drugs) industry to subvert the rules of science. We have
watched quietly as governments and academics have colluded with
industry to hide information critical to our patients. We have
remained silent as our medical schools have churned out graduates who
have no knowledge of the dilemmas and scandals of medicine. We have
allowed many of our medical journals to become corrupted and timid," he
writes.
Come to think of it, Prof Waxman's house isn't made of glass at all. It's constructed entirely from straw.
(Sources: British Medical Journal, 2006; 333: 1121 (Blumsohn) and 1129 (Waxman)).
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Warts and all . . .
The human papillomavirus (HPV) is the cause of the benign skin protrusions we call 'warts'. As an infection, they are transmissible, favouring sites of mild skin trauma on the hands, face, knees, feet, and genital and perianal areas. Very rarely, they may lead to squamous carcinoma.
Although orthodox medicine has no specific treatment for warts, there are a large number of possible treatments, including salicylic acid, picric acid, formaldehyde or podophyllin (all applied topically), as well as cautery, curettage and cryotherapy (using liquid nitrogen). Interestingly, it is often the case that one medical practitioner may be successful while a colleague using the same treatment may fail (Solomons B. Lecture Notes on Dermatology. Oxford: Blackwell Scientific Publications, 1975, pp 143-9). There are also many folk remedies that may or may not work.
The story of vitamin A
The physiological effects and benefits of vitamin A have been discovered in phases. The signs of deficiency of this vitamin were known more than a century ago, and included a dry scaly skin, occasionally with papules and warts (von Graefes Arch Ophthalmol, 1883; 29: 167). This was supported by similar observations made later by others (Jahrb Kinderheilk, 1904; 59:175).
The discovery of vitamin A itself was made in 1904, when it became clear that subnormal dark-adaption vision and systemic eye lesions improved with the consumption of retinol- and retinoid-containing foods. These names were derived from the word 'retina'; however, by 1917, they were collectively referred to as 'vitamin A'. The realization that the vitamin had beneficial effects on a number of cutaneous conditions was then confirmed by studies where general skin lesions and eruptions were also markedly improved (J Hyg [Camb], 1921; 19: 283-301).
Two studies reported on cases where the skin was dry and covered with flakes of horny epithelium (keratomalacia), and the arms and legs had a characteristic eruption of raised papules and "small skin protrusions of cornified material"-in other words, warts. In all cases, the skin was much improved by introducing a diet rich in vitamin A (Arch Ophthal, 1929; 2: 256-87; Arch Intern Med, 1931; 48: 507-14).
In East Africa and Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), the same skin conditions seen in prisoners on a prison diet were cured by introducing a diet high in vitamin A and no other treatment (Arch Derm Syphilol, 1933; 28: 700-8; Ind Med Gaz, 1933; 68: 681). In the UK, similar skin eruptions were described and cured by a similarly modified diet (Br Med J, 1934; 2: 113-26), as were comparable cases in the US (Am J Med Sci, 1938; 195: 644). More recently, on revisiting these early observations in depth, their findings were once again reconfirmed (Arch Dermatol Res, 1981; 270: 193-6).
Vitamin A has now been shown to stimulate and/or enhance numerous immune processes such as cell-mediated immunity against tumours, natural killer (NK)-cell activity, mono-cyte phagocytosis and antibody responses (JAMA, 1981; 245: 53-8; Fed Proc, 1973; 32: 947-51; Arch Surg, 1984; 119: 161-5; Br J Cancer, 1984; 49: 343-8).
However, as warts are a viral infection, what is of particular relevance is that vitamin A also demonstrates potent antiviral activity (Antimicrob Agents Chemother, 1980; 17: 1034-7). Indeed, the Toronto Naturopathic Clinic recommends applying vitamin A once a day-by breaking open a capsule (25,000 IU) and smearing the liquid onto the wart-as an effective treatment (see www.naturopathyclinic.com/thehealthyway. php?id=74 for details), and naturopath Dr Ben Kim makes a similar recommendation (see www.drbenkim.com/node/194).
The only caveat is to make sure that there are no open wounds or breaks in the skin that would allow large amounts of vitamin A to be absorbed directly into the bloodstream, as large doses of this vitamin can have toxic effects in the body. In my own practice, I have found that using this procedure usually takes two to three months to work, and it replaces the need to supplement with vitamin A orally.
Harald Gaier Harald Gaier, a registered naturopath, osteopath, homeopath and herbalist, practises at The Allergy and Nutrition Clinic, 22 Harley Street, London, and the Irish Centre of Integrated Medicine, Co. Kildare (www.drgaier.com).
More about vitamin A
Apart from skin health, vitamin A plays a role in a variety of bodily functions, including gene transcription, immune function, vision, bone metabolism, haematopoiesis (blood-cell production), antioxidant activity, embryonic development and reproduction. Along with its precursor carotene, vitamin A is present in many foods, especially those that are red/orange or brightly coloured, including: - liver (pig, chicken, mutton, turkey, goose, beef, duck) - root vegetables such as sweet potato and carrot - gourd vegetables such as pumpkin, gem squash and butternut squash - green vegetables such as broccoli (leaves have much more than florets), cabbage, bok choy, kale, collard greens, spinach, chard and cucumber peel (but never eat this if it's waxed) - fruits such as passion fruit (granadilla or maracuja), apricot, mango, papaya (pawpaw), cantaloupe and honeydew melon - seaweeds such as purple laver, Porphyra (better known as nori), wakame (used in Japanese miso soup) and kombu (edible kelp) - butter (made from goat's or cow's milk) - eggs (duck, chicken, goose, quail, ostrich).
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Antibiotics not in a store near you any time soon
28 April 2010
The drug companies' drive to put the first prescription-only antibiotic
onto supermarket shelves has been halted by the UK government.
The UK's Department of Health is concerned that uncontrolled access to
antibiotics could quickly lead to antibiotic resistance, and increase
the possibility of 'superbugs' that can't be knocked out by drugs.
The decision is a blow to the pharmaceutical industry which has been
pushing to put more prescription drugs onto the OTC (over-the-counter)
market, where people can buy them freely without needing a
prescription.
Two drug companies - Goldshields and Actavis - were in the vanguard to
have their antibiotics approved for the OTC market in a move that has
courted controversy since it was first mooted in 2008.
(Source: Pulse, April 1, 2010).
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Medical Disclaimer:
The information contained within does not take the place of medical diagnosis or
prescription. See your health care provider in case of sickness.
Editorial Disclaimer: Publication of these articles are to promote food for thought. The opinions expressed in these articles may not be the opinion of editors.
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