Benign prostatic hyperplasia

April 13th, 2009

Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), a noncancerous growth of the prostate gland, makes urination difficult and uncomfortable. The expanding prostate squeezes the urethra, the channel that carries urine from the bladder. Symptoms usually develop in men around age 50. At age 60, most men have some degree of BPH. At age 80, men have an 80 percent chance of experiencing urination problems caused by BPH. BPH is NOT cancer and it does NOT put you at increased risk for developing prostate cancer.

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Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) for Benign Prostate Hypertrophy

April 13th, 2009

Benign prostate hypertrophy (BPH) is a non-cancerous swelling of the prostate gland that may interfere with the flow of urine from the bladder in men. The condition is also known as benign prostatic hypertrophy and, more accurately, as benign prostate hyperplasia (the proliferation of cells in the prostate gland). BPH is a very common condition among men; nearly half of all men aged 50 have the condition, and by age 80, the percentage of men with BPH climbs to 75 percent. Benign prostate hypertrophy is treated by allopathic (conventional Western) physicians by changes in lifestyle, medications, and/or surgery. Practitioners of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) rely on methods that avoid the side effects of medication and surgery, such as acupuncture or herbal remedies, for treatment of the disorder.

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Gua Sha Scrape Therapy DVD

April 18th, 2008

Gua Sha Scrape Therapy DVD

scrape_therapy_dvd.jpgDub: chinese
Subtitle: English / Chinese
Licensed Official Release Documentary DVD !
Can be played on DVD players and Computers all over the world !
Regional Code: All

Gua sha involves firmly rubbing a person’s skin with a ceramic soup spoon or large coin. The goal is to relieve stagnation, or in other words, to clear some illness from the body by getting it to move.

Gua sha is used commonly on respiratory illnesses, for example, where the skin of the upper back, neck, and chest may be rubbed.

Gua sha is known for leaving red and purple marks on the skin that look painful but are not.

Well-meaning practitioners of western medicine are sometimes shocked at the sight of these marks and fear that a child with the marks has been abused.

For professionals in this position, it is helpful to be familiar with the appearance of gua sha marks and to understand its traditional therapeutic value.

It is helpful to be able to make the distinction between gua sha marks and signs of abuse. Gua sha is not known to be harmful. The technique called cupping also leaves distinctive, bruise-like marks on the skin, but is also harmless.

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 Get Gua Sha Scrape Therapy DVD

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Practice Gua Sha, get Gua Sha tools and Gua Sha Oil

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Conforming to the Four Seasons – Summer

April 4th, 2008

Summer is the hottest season in a year. Every living thing is flourishing and the Yang-Qi in the body is also apt to be expelled. The book Net Jing points out that in summer one should not go to bed too early at night but should get up early in the morning, should enjoy the longer daytime, should be full of energy and avoid getting angry, thus activating the function of Qi.  This is the way for health care in summer.

Without following it one will have his heart impaired and shall be attacked by malaria or other disease in the coming autumn or winter.

As regards diet, the book Qian Jin Yao Fang says that in summer people should have less food with bitter taste and more food with acid taste to nourish the lung-Qi, otherwise flaring heart-Qi may disturb the dispersal of the lung-Qi.

The book Yang Sheng Lun also tells that in summer it is suitable for people to have coarse cereals cold in nature other than wheat and rice hot in nature, and not to have greasy food. It points out, “In late summer or early autumn, many diseases are caused by too much greasy or fried food, which has the same effect as alcohol and fruit.” The book Yang Lm Feng Qin Shu also has a discussion on avoiding eating some cold, raw or greasy food in summer.

With regard to clothing, the book Sun Zhen Ren Wei Sheng Ge says, “Clothes should be thinner and often be changed and washed in summer, because hot weather makes people sweat too much.”

The ancients had strict claim on enjoying the cool. The book Yang Lao Feng Qin Shu holds, “In summer, it is hot and so is the earth. People should avoid enjoying the cool under the eaves, in a passageway or before a broken window for fear that the evil wind should harm the bodies.”

The book She Sheng Xiao Xi Lun has the same discussion as described above. It adds, “In summer it is appropriate for people to enjoy the cool at places such as in an empty room, a pavilion by the water or under a tree. Natural coolness there is more comfortable to the body and the mind. And people will feel as if there were a piece of ice at the heart and heat in the interior will then be cleared up.”

It continues, “People should not sleep in the open air during the night, or with the body fanned by somebody else.”

The book Li Xu Yuan Jian also points out, “People should avoid being attacked by coolness in summer and prevent wet pathogens in the whole course of summer.” 

All that described above is the summary of the experience of our Chinese people in the long history and all are still instructive now.

Cupping Therapy For Eczema

April 2nd, 2008

cupping_eczema.gifEvelyn Lim have a couple of subscribers to her regular eczema newsletter writing to her about Cupping therapy. Their Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) practitioners have advised them to try out Cupping therapy for eczema as part of their holistic treatment. While it is too early to report if the therapy has helped them, she proceeded to find out more about this practically unknown (at least to most of us) form of treatment. Read the rest of this entry »