H1N1 Flu (Swine Flu)

>> Thursday, August 20, 2009

Also called: Swine flu

Swine flu is an infection caused by a virus. It's named for a virus that pigs can get. People do not normally get swine flu, but human infections can and do happen. The virus is contagious and can spread from human to human. Symptoms of swine flu in people are similar to the symptoms of regular human flu and include fever, cough, sore throat, body aches, headache, chills and fatigue.

There are antiviral medicines you can take to prevent or treat swine flu. There is no vaccine available right now to protect against swine flu. You can help prevent the spread of germs that cause respiratory illnesses like influenza by

  • Covering your nose and mouth with a tissue when you cough or sneeze. Throw the tissue in the trash after you use it.
  • Washing your hands often with soap and water, especially after you cough or sneeze. You can also use alcohol-based hand cleaners.
  • Avoiding touching your eyes, nose or mouth. Germs spread this way.
  • Trying to avoid close contact with sick people.
  • Staying home from work or school if you are sick.

Read more...

Swine fleu N1H1 vaccination and home treatment remedies

>> Thursday, August 13, 2009

Vaccination

WHO does not expect the swine flu vaccine to be widely available until the end of 2009, noting that current production "yield" was only about half as much as expected and would cause timeline delays.[263] Vaccine producers can normally produce about a billion doses of any single vaccine each year and as a result WHO anticipates a "global shortfall," Keiji Fukuda said in May.[264]
There is also concern that countries which produce vaccines, 70 percent of which are in Europe, may delay sending swine flu vaccines to other countries as they may come under "tremendous pressure to protect their own citizens first," note some experts. Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota said that as 80 percent of the United States' pandemic vaccine supply will be coming from abroad, he is very concerned about when it might arrive. "Timing could be everything to avoid a vaccine spat."[265]
Although WHO reports that a fully licensed vaccine might not be ready until the end of 2009, some experts feel that with "little or no safety data about a swine flu vaccine," governments that are planning to roll out mass campaigns are "taking a gamble," since any rare side effects won't show up until millions of people start getting the shots.[265] Nonetheless, in late July, some European countries were planning to accelerate the approval process for the vaccine, and countries like Britain, Greece, France and Sweden all say that they will start using the vaccine once it is given approval, which could happen within weeks. Some European officials feel that "the benefit of saving lives is worth the gamble," and are letting companies skip testing large groups of people before the vaccine is approved. The U.S. is taking a more cautious approach, however.[266]
U.S. and local health officials are monitoring the Southern Hemisphere, where the "virus is already on an unstoppable course" and where it's feared it might combine with the seasonal flu strain and develop drug resistance.[267] The U.S. goal of pandemic plans is to make 600 million doses in six months, enough for two doses for each American, according to experts, with an estimated cost of $8 billion.[146]
Although the seasonal flu vaccine provides little or no protection against H1N1 swine flu, health experts recommend immunization to help prevent people from being infected with both at once. "Vaccination against seasonal influenza should begin as soon as vaccine is available and continue throughout the influenza season," the CDC's Anne Schuchat said, and wants 83 percent of the population to get an annual flu vaccine," noting that only 40 percent of the U.S. population received one last year.[268]
Two injections will be required three weeks apart for the swine flu and a third will be needed for seasonal flu to provide maximum immunity. Children younger than 9 years old will need four shots.[269] The CDC plans to administer the vaccine through clinics set up by state health organizations, but some experts feel that health departments are under-funded and could get "fatigued."[269]
Treatment


Home treatment remedies

The Mayo Clinic and Medline list a number of ways to help ease symptoms, including adequate liquid intake and rest, soup to ease congestion, and over-the-counter drugs to relieve pain. Aspirin, for instance, "is very effective for treating fever in adults" in children and adolescents, aspirin is not usually given due to the risk of Reye's syndrome.[ over-the-counter drugs relieve symptoms, they do not kill the virus.[ Most patients were expected to recover without medical attention, although those with pre-existing or underlying medical conditions were more prone to complications.

Antiviral drugs

Recommended usage and availability

According to the CDC, antiviral drugs can be given to treat those who become severely ill, two of which are recommended for swine flu symptoms: oseltamivir (Tamiflu) and zanamivir (Relenza). To be most useful, they must be taken within 2 days of showing symptoms. They work by deactivating an enzyme the virus needs to grow and spread. Therefore, when taken soon after symptoms are noticed, "they may shorten the illness by a day or so," according to the Mayo Clinic. Oseltamivir is an oral medication, but zanamivir is inhaled through a device similar to an asthma inhaler and shouldn't be used by anyone with respiratory conditions, such as asthma and lung disease.[270]
Furthermore, as the flu spreads, there could be temporary shortages of these drugs. The U.S. CDC therefore recommends Tamiflu treatment primarily for people hospitalized with swine flu; people at risk of serious flu complications due to underlying medical conditions; patients at risk of serious flu complications because they are pregnant, under age 5, or over age 65; and to prevent infection of people at risk of serious flu complications who have been exposed to someone with swine flu.

Anti-viral resistance risk

Marie-Paule Kiely, WHO vaccine research director, said that it was "almost a given" that the new strain would undergo reassortment with resistant seasonal flu viruses and acquire resistance, but it was not yet known at what level resistance would appear.[275] If the virus develops oseltamivir resistance, the "world’s Tamiflu stockpiles will be all but worthless," and doctors would have to switch to the more expensive and harder to take, Relenza.[274] [276] At least five recent instances of Tamiflu-resistant viruses were reported in July. There have also been reports of summer camps urging children to bring the antiviral drug Tamiflu and take it as a preventative measure, but that has concerned the CDC since widespread use could also lead to increased resistance. Currently, almost all seasonal flu strains are resistant to the drug and the genes for such resistance could be very easily transmitted to the new virus, the CDC warns.

Possible side effects

Both medications can cause side effects, including lightheadedness, nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite and trouble breathing and it is recommended that patients discuss possible side effects with their doctor before starting any antiviral medication. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has required the maker of Tamiflu to include a warning that people with the flu, particularly children, may be at increased risk of self-injury and confusion after taking Tamiflu and that individuals with the flu who take Tamiflu be closely monitored for signs of unusual behavior.[270]
Warnings of online purchasing
When buying these medications, some agencies warn against buying from online sources, with WHO estimating that half the drugs sold by online pharmacies without a physical address are counterfeit.

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Swine flue N1H1 Symptoms and expected severity

The signs of infection with swine flu are similar to other forms of influenza, and include a fever, coughing, headaches, pain in the muscles or joints, sore throat, chills, fatigue and runny nose. Diarrhea, vomiting and neurological problems have also been reported in some cases. A study concluded on May 5, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, found that 94% of confirmed patients had fever and 92% had cough.[206] People at higher risk of serious complications included people age 65 years and older, children younger than 5 years old, pregnant women, and people of any age with underlying medical conditions, such as asthma, diabetes, obesity, heart disease, or a weakened immune system (e.g., taking immunosuppressive medications or infected with HIV).[204][207] According to the CDC, more than 70% of hospitalizations in the U.S. have been people with such underlying conditions.[208]
Most cases mild
Evidence mounted through May 2009 that the symptoms were milder than health officials initially feared. As of May 27, 2009, most of the 342 confirmed cases in New York City had been mild and there had been only 23 confirmed deaths from the virus.[209] Similarly, Japan has reported 1,048, mostly mild flu cases, and no deaths,[210] with the government reopening schools as of May 23, stating that the "virus should be considered more like a seasonal flu."[211] In Mexico, where the outbreak began in April, Mexico City officials lowered their swine flu alert level as no new cases had been reported for a week.[212]

Symptoms that may require medical attention

Certain symptoms may require emergency medical attention. In children signs of respiratory distress, for instance, those might include blue lips and skin, dehydration, rapid breathing, excessive sleeping, seizures[213] and significant irritability that includes a lack of desire to be held. In adults, shortness of breath, pain in the chest or abdomen, sudden dizziness or confusion may indicate the need for emergency care. In both children and adults, persistent vomiting or the return of flu-like symptoms that include a fever and cough may require medical attention.

Underlying conditions may worsen symptoms

WHO reported that almost one-half of the patients hospitalized in the United States had underlying conditions.[214] "Among 30 patients hospitalized in California," stated the WHO report, "64 percent had underlying conditions and two of five pregnant women developed complications, including spontaneous abortion and premature rupture of membranes." And on June 5, health officials in six states that reported deaths from swine flu said that all six patients had been diagnosed with other health problems.[215]
However, doctors in New York suggested that people with "underlying conditions" who had flu symptoms should consult their doctors first. "Visiting an emergency room full of sick people may actually put them in more danger," wrote the New York Times. Dr. Steven J. Davidson, the chairman of emergency medicine department at Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn commented "Like the asthmatics, we’d really prefer that pregnant women would stay away from the emergency departments." Approximately one-third of New Yorkers have one of the underlying conditions recognized by the city.[207] However, no statistics for people with underlying conditions who die from seasonal flu have been reported by the media thus far.

Pneumonia

Influenza infection can cause pneumonia leading to death. This is typically described as either viral pneumonia, which has a rapid onset, often within one day after infection, or bacterial pneumonia, which often begins a week after infection after symptoms have begun to subside.[216]
Viral pneumonia has sometimes been attributed to "cytokine storm", in which an overly active immune response damages the lungs. Reports of deaths among healthy young people during the first weeks of the 2009 flu pandemic were attributed to this cause.[217]
Bacterial pneumonia is a secondary infection resulting from a weakened ability to clear common bacteria from the lower lungs, combined with reduced alveolar macrophage activity which makes it more difficult for the body to fight infection. Bacteria that cause pneumonia include Pneumococcus, Staphylococcus, and Hemophilus influenzae.[218] Bacterial pneumonia has been credited for a large proportion of deaths in the 1918 flu pandemic.[219]
Recent data has suggested that these two forms of pneumonia are not entirely unrelated. A study of 37,000 children in South Africa who received a pneumococcal vaccine (PncCV) found that they were on average one-third less likely to suffer viral pneumonia following infections with seven different respiratory viruses, as well as being protected from bacterial pneumonia afterward.[220]

Prevention

Personal hygiene

The Mayo Clinic has suggested personal measures to avoid seasonal flu infection which should be applicable to the 2009 pandemic: vaccination when available, thorough and frequent hand-washing, a balanced diet with fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains, and lean protein, sufficient sleep, regular exercise, and avoiding crowds.

Airborne virus prevention

Masks may be of benefit in "crowded settings" or for people who are in "close contact" with infected persons, defined as 1 meter or less by the World Health Organization and 6 feet or less by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration. In these cases the CDC recommended respirators classified as N95, but it is unknown whether they would prevent swine flu infection.[222] According to mask manufacturer 3M, there are no "established exposure limits for biological agents" such as swine flu virus.
The UK Health Protection Agency considers facial masks unnecessary for the general public[223] and some experts feel it may lead to a false sense of security. Masks are not generally provided by airport security or airlines although the CDC recommends the use of surgical masks in some circumstances.[224] other U.S. officials stated in May that if the flu virus does in fact reach pandemic proportions, "there won't be enough face masks to go around."[225] A recent internal CDC briefing noted, "20,000 people die from novel 2009-H1N1 and everybody wants to wear a mask. 9 million people die from AIDS and no one wants to wear a condom."
Pork safe to eat
The leading international health agencies stressed that the "influenza viruses are not known to be transmissible to people through eating processed pork or other food products derived from pigs."

Airline hygiene precautions

U.S. airlines have made no major changes as of the beginning of June, but continued standing practices that include looking for passengers with symptoms of flu, measles or other infections, and rely on in-flight air filters to ensure that aircraft are sanitized. "We take our guidance from the professionals (such as the CDC)", stated an Air Transport Association spokesman. The CDC has not recommended that airline crews wear face masks or disposable overcoats. Alaska Airlines removed all pillows and blankets from its fleet in late April/early May.[228]

Outside the U.S. however, some airlines have modified hygiene procedures to minimize travel health risks on international flights. Asian carriers have stepped up cabin cleaning, installed state-of-the-art air filters and allowed in-flight staff to wear face masks, with some replacing used pillows, blankets, headset covers and headrest covers, while others have begun disinfecting the cabins of all aircraft. In China, some airline flight attendants are required to wear disposable facial masks, gloves and hats and even disposable overcoats during flights to select destinations.[229]
Singapore has been thermal-screening everyone coming into the country, with Singapore Airlines giving passengers traveling to the United States health kits that include a thermometer, masks and antiseptic towels. Its cabin and flight crews are getting mandatory temperature checks before flights. The government recently quarantined a passenger who was later found to have the flu along with about 60 other people on the same flight who were sitting within three rows.[229] A consultant for the microbiology division at National University Hospital in Singapore, said hygiene practices such as covering the nose and mouth when sneezing or coughing in confined areas may be the best way to limit infection and safety measures such as costly air filters may be of limited use for carriers.[229]
Further information: Influenza prevention and standard personal precautions against influenza
Containment


Chinese inspectors on an airplane, checking passengers for fevers, a common symptom of swine flu
On April 28, 2009, WHO's Dr. Keiji Fukuda said that it was too late to contain the swine flu. "Containment is not a feasible operation. Countries should now focus on mitigating the effect of the virus," he said.[230] He therefore did not recommend closing borders or restricting travel, stating that "with the virus being widespread... closing borders or restricting travel really has very little effects in stopping the movement of this virus."[230] However, on April 28, the U.S. CDC began "recommending that people avoid non-essential travel to Mexico."[231] Many other countries confirmed that inbound international passengers would be screened. Typical airport health screening involves asking passengers which countries they have visited and checking whether they feel or appear particularly unwell. Thermographic equipment was put into use at a number of airports to screen passengers.[232] A number of countries also advised against travel to known affected regions, while experts suggested that if those infected stay at home or seek medical care, public meeting places are closed, and anti-flu medications are made widely available, then in simulations the sickness is reduced by nearly two-thirds.

Quarantines

Some countries began quarantining foreign visitors suspected of having or being in contact with others who may have been infected.

Read more...

swine fleu n1h1 virus characteristics

Virus characteristics


The virus is a novel strain of influenza. Existing vaccines against seasonal flu provide no protection, and there is no vaccine for this strain. A study at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published in May 2009 found that children had no preexisting immunity to the new strain but that adults, particularly those over 60, had some degree of immunity. Children showed no cross-reactive antibody reaction to the new strain, adults aged 18 to 64 had 6-9%, and older adults 33%.[169][170] It was also determined that the strain contained genes from four different flu viruses: North American swine influenza, North American avian influenza, human influenza, and two swine influenza viruses typically found in Asia and Europe. Further analysis showed that several of the proteins of the virus are most similar to strains that cause mild symptoms in humans, leading virologist Wendy Barclay to suggest on May 1 that the initial indications are that the virus was unlikely to cause severe symptoms for most people.[171] Scientists in Winnipeg completed the first full genetic sequencing of the virus on 6 May.[172]

Virus origins

On June 23, the New York Times reported that U.S. federal agriculture officials, "contrary to the popular assumption that the new swine flu pandemic arose on factory farms in Mexico," now believe that it "most likely emerged in pigs in Asia, but then traveled to North America in a human." They emphasized that there was no way to prove their theory, but stated that there is no evidence that this new virus, which combines Eurasian and North American genes, has ever circulated in North American pigs, "while there is tantalizing evidence that a closely related 'sister virus' has circulated in Asia."[141]
In early June 2009, using computational methods developed over the last ten years at Oxford, Dr Oliver Pybus of Oxford University's Department of Zoology and his team attempted to reconstruct the origins and timescale of the 2009 flu pandemic. He claims "Our results show that this strain has been circulating among pigs, possibly among multiple continents, for many years prior to its transmission to humans." The research team that worked on this report also believe that it was "derived from several viruses circulating in swine," and that the initial transmission to humans occurred several months before recognition of the outbreak. The team concluded that "despite widespread influenza surveillance in humans, the lack of systematic swine surveillance allowed for the undetected persistence and evolution of this potentially pandemic strain for many years."[173]


Structure of the influenza virion. The hemagglutinin (HA) and neuraminidase (NA) proteins are shown on the surface of the particle. The viral RNAs that make up the genome are shown as red coils inside the particle and bound to ribonucleoproteins (RNPs).
According to the researchers, movement of live pigs between Eurasia and North America "seems to have facilitated the mixing of diverse swine influenza viruses, leading to the multiple reassortment events associated with the genesis of the (new H1N1) strain." They also stated that this new pandemic "provides further evidence of the role of domestic pigs in the ecosystem of influenza A."[135] Some experts also suspect that a leading cause of the new virus outbreak is insufficient surveillance by the pork industry and the fact that "animal husbandry now more closely resembles the petrochemical industry than the happy family farm"[174]
Estimates of total cases
On July 24, Keiji Fukuda, WHO's Assistant Director-General for Health Security and Environment said the pandemic was still in its early stages globally and two billion infections over the course of the pandemic was "a reasonable ballpark to be looking at."[175] On the same day, the Anne Schuchat, director of the U.S. CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, estimated that without a swine flu vaccine, current trends suggest 12% to 24% of Americans might get swine flu this fall and winter. But if large enough numbers of people get the vaccine before the next waves of the pandemic sweep the nation it would "put a dent in the pandemic," she said. Initial availability of vaccines is expected by mid-October, although healhcare workers and people most at risk would likely get them first.[176]
As for the current totals, in early July WHO officials gave up trying to count the number of cases, saying the best they can do is estimate the spread of the "unstoppable" virus. And the CDC's Schuchat declined even to hazard a guess, saying it was "more than a million." Officials do not have the tools they need to count, she pointed out. "Most people who have respiratory illnesses don't find out exactly what caused it. Even most people with influenza don't know exactly which type of influenza caused their illness."[177]
In late June, the CDC estimated that 1 million Americans had so far contracted the flu. By comparison, an estimated 15 million to 60 million Americans are infected with the seasonal flu each year, leading to roughly 36,000 deaths.[178] According to the CDC, however, only about one in 20 cases was being officially reported in the U.S. in late May.[179] In the U.K., some experts thought the number of cases was potentially 300 times more than early published estimates,[180] warning that case estimates by the U.K. and other governments were "meaningless" and hiding its true extent. There were also estimates that Japan may have had approximately 30,000 cases by late May.[180]

Virulence

The CDC has noted that most infections continue to be mild—similar to seasonal flu—and recovery is extremely quick.[181] Some experts point out that the deaths so far are "a tiny fraction" of people who die every year from seasonal flu - with barely a public murmur." One doctor said that "when there's something that's new and unknown, it scares people."[182] Some medical journalists suggest that the news media may be overreacting to the new virus and have not compared its virulence with that of the regular "seasonal" flu.[183]
Mutation potential
On May 22, 2009, WHO chief Dr. Margaret Chan said that the virus must be closely monitored in the southern hemisphere, as it could mix with ordinary seasonal influenza and change in unpredictable ways. "In cases where the H1N1 virus is widespread and circulating within the general community, countries must expect to see more cases of severe and fatal infections," she said. "[184] Experts writing in the July New England Journal of Medicine note that "historically, pandemic viruses have evolved between seasons, and the current strain may become more severe or transmissible in the coming months." They therefore stress that "international cooperation will be crucial" to engage in proper surveillance to help monitor changes in the virus's behavior, which will aid in both "vaccine targeting" and interpreting illness patterns in the fall of 2009.[143]
Other experts are also concerned that the new virus strain could mutate over the coming months. Guan Yi, a leading virologist from the University of Hong Kong, for instance, described the new H1N1 influenza virus as "very unstable", meaning it could mix and swap genetic material when exposed to other viruses. During an interview he said "Both H1N1 and H5N1 are unstable so the chances of them exchanging genetic material are higher, whereas a stable (seasonal flu) virus is less likely to take on genetic material." The H5N1 virus is mostly limited to birds, but in rare cases when it infects humans it has a mortality rate of between 60% to 70%.[185] Experts worry about the emergence of a hybrid of the more virulent Asian-lineage HPAI (highly pathogenic avian influenza) A/H5N1 strain (media labeled "bird flu") with more human-transmissible Influenza A strains such as this novel 2009 swine-origin A/H1N1 strain (media labeled "swine flu"), especially since the H5N1 strain is and has been for years endemic in birds in countries like China, Indonesia, Vietnam and Egypt.[185][186] (See the suite of H5N1 articles for details.)
Nor had federal health officials in the U.S. dismissed the possibility that the worst was yet to come. "Far from it," Ann Schuchat of the CDC says, noting that the horrific 1918 flu epidemic, which killed hundreds of thousands in the United States alone, was preceded by a mild "herald" wave of cases in the spring, followed by devastating waves of illness in the autumn. "That 1918 experience is in our minds," she said.[187]
As of late July, U.S. health officials said that the swine flu "isn't yet mutating to become more dangerous," but they are closely tracking that as the virus continues to circle the globe.

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Oriental Medicine Programs

>> Friday, April 17, 2009

Ready to earn your degree or certificate in Oriental medicine? Today,
there are several Oriental medicine programs from which to choose.
Whether you decide to pursue training in acupuncture, Tuina, or want
to achieve your Masters or Doctorate in Oriental medicine, candidates
now have the option to do so when they apply and enroll at one of the
growing number of modern acupuncture and Oriental medicine schools.

In comprehensive oriental medicine programs, students learn the
fundamentals of TCM (Traditional Chinese Medicine), including
acupuncture point location and meridian theory, acupuncture needling
techniques (including auricular [ear] acupuncture), Chinese herbology,
nutrition, Chinese medicine philosophies, Tuina (Chinese medical
massage), Qigong, Tai Chi, moxibustion, cupping, anatomy, physiology,
pathology, biomedical sciences, and more.

Oriental medicine programs that result in certification, like the
certificate in Chinese herbal medicine (CCHM), are often offered as a
post-graduate course to licensed acupuncture practitioners interested
in enhancing credentials and education in herbology.

Tuina training, one of the many Oriental medicine programs available
today, is a Chinese medical massage modality that can be completed in
three to six months; however, there are more advanced training
programs that may exceed one year's time. These courses generally
integrate more in-depth studies in Traditional Chinese Medicine, as
well as acupressure/Shiatsu. In addition to Chinese medicine colleges,
Oriental medicine programs in Tuina may be offered at a number of
massage therapy schools.

To earn your doctorate, there are Oriental medicine programs
specifically designed to help you achieve your DAOM (Doctor of
Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine) credentials. These courses often
require standard educational prerequisites (usually a master's degree
in acupuncture and Oriental medicine) and may take up to four years to
complete. Subject matter in these Oriental medicine programs includes
anatomy, biochemistry, physiology, TCM fundamentals and diagnosis,
Chinese Materia Medica, Medical Chinese language, microbiology.
Biophysics, acupuncture therapeutics, pathology, and clinical
internship, and more.

If you (or someone you know) are interested in learning more about
these or other healing arts programs, let professional training within
fast-growing industries like massage therapy, naturopathy,
acupuncture, Chinese medicine, Reiki, and others get you started!
Explore Oriental medicine programs near you.

Oriental Medicine Programs

© Copyright 2008

The CollegeBound Network

All Rights Reserved

NOTICE: Article(s) may be republished free of charge to relevant
websites, as long as Copyright and Author Resource Box are included;
and ALL Hyperlinks REMAIN intact and active.

_By: *CarolAnn Bailey-Lloyd*_

*About the Author:*

*Resource Box:* CarolAnn Bailey-Lloyd - Freelance Writer and Web
Consultant for *HolisticJunction.com* [1], _in association with
CollegeSurfing.com_ - Educational Resources for *Chinese Medicine*
[2], *Oriental medicine programs* [3], and other unique healing arts
programs.

Links:
------
[1] http://www.holisticjunction.com
[2] http://www.holisticjunction.com/categories/HAD/Chinese-medicine.html
[3] http://www.holisticjunction.com/categories/HAD/acupuncture-and-oriental-medicine.html

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Back to Nature-southindian Herbals and Their Medicinal Uses

*BACK TO NATURE-SOUTHINDIAN HERBALS AND THEIR MEDICINAL USES*

*INTRODUCTION*

          

Man has been using plants as medicine from time immemorial. All major
civilization in the past had developed their own system of medicine,
mainly based on herbs of all such system perhaps most comprehensive
and scientific is that of ancient India, known as Ayurvedic
development during the Vedic period by our sages and seers. They had
identified hundreds and hundreds of plant species capable of
functioning as medicine in the human body and curing its maladies.

 

Green medicine have been proved to be highly effective and a
successful mode of therapy to cure various diseases caused by
microorganisms. Present, *300* plants extracts and tinctures are
utilized in modern medicine. The World Health Organization (WHO) has
estimated that about 90 percent of people in the world rely on
traditional medicine primary health needs chemical investigation and
biological screening of about *300* wild tribal medicinal plants have
been carried out by many researchers.

 

A survey indicates that *393* medicinal plant species are used in
traditional formulations and are sold in commercial outlets of the
*393* species distributed in *103* families; *Leguminosae* emerges as
the largest family of Pharmacological importance with a total of 41
medicinal Plants used in the traditional formulations. *Asteraceae* is
the second family with respect to ingredients of traditional
formulations (*19* species). *Zingiberaceae* and *Apiaceae* have *13*
species each, followed by *Euphorbiaceae* with *12* species that one
used in various formulations.

 

Herbs form a major segment of medicinal plants used in traditional
formulations with a total of *158* species. Trees and shrubs from the
next dominant group with *95* and *80* species used in the formulation
of drug respectively.

 

Based on the factual information, few medicinal Plants were selected
for gain the knowledge of herbs which enrich your health under the
followings.

*�*

*Holy Plants*

 

*S.No*

*Botanical Name*

*Family*

*Common Name*

*Preparation Method of the Medicine, Uses*

1.

Ocimum sanctum

Laminaceae

Tulasi

Take 10 fresh leaves daily which cures the cold and develop your
immunity power.

2.

Aegle marmelos

Rutaceae

Vilvam

Shade dry the leaves and power. Powder + 5 peppers mixed and add. Take
with milk in empty stomach. It will cure the Asthma.

3.

Ficus religiosa

Moraceae

Arasu

Shades dry the young leaves and power it. Take twice daily with Hot
water. This cures the uterus related problems.

4.

Azadirachta indica

Meliaceae

Vembu

The leaf, seed oil is used as a medicine. Antiviral Tree.

5.

Cynodon datylon

Poaceae

Arugu

Take 150 gm of fresh leaves, make it juice and take it daily. Which
purify the blood and cool your body temperature

6.

Leucas aspera

Laminaceae

Thumbai

Take 150 gm of these flowers Freshly and fry with ghee. Take weekly
once which cures the cold.

7.

Tabernaemontana Coronaria

Apocynaceae

Nanthiyar- -vattam

The flower juice cures the eye problems. Particularly for the reddish
eye

8.

Ficus bengalensis

Moraceae

Àlamaram

Shade dries the young leaves, powder it. Take twice daily, with hot
water which cures the uterus related problems

9.

Santalum album

-

Santhanum

Anti heat agent which equalize your body temperature.

10.

Ealeocarpus tuberculatus

Elaecocarpaceae

Ruthratsam

Anti – Radiation Effect

 

*Memory Plus*

 

*S.No*

*Botanical Name*

*Family and Common name*

*Uses*

1.

Hydrocotyle asiatica

*Apiaceae*

vallarai

Memory generator

2.

Acthyranthus aspera

*Amarantaceae* Naiyooruvi

Extra memory creator

*�*

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

*Brain Growth and Development*

 

*S.No*

*Family*

*Botanical name*

*Common Name*

*Preparation method of medicine and uses*

1.

Rutaceae

Aegle marmelos

Vilvum

Take the fruit twice in a month which will help to develop your brain.

2.

 

 

Perkankai

Dry the vegetable and powder it. Make it decoction and take it once in
a week which provide stamina (or) power to the brain.

3.

 

Phyllanthus embilica

Nelli

Take one Nelli daily which helps the brain function. 

4.

 

Coccus nueifera 

Coconut

6-10 pieces of coconut in fresh form take daily. It will cure the
wounds which present in the brain.

5

Amarantaceae

Achyranthus aspera

Naioruvi

Take leaves monthly ones in form of Juice which helps with Nervous
system of the brain.  It also cure the brine nervous disorder 

*�*

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

*For Health and Development*

*S.No*

*Diseases*

*Botanical name and common name*

*Paration of the medicine*

1

Sugar

Gymnema sylvestre

 

Sarkaraikolli

The leaves were shade dried and powdered. The powder was taken half
teaspoon daily morning in empty stomach, with milk or buttermilk.

2

Blood pressure

Rauwolfia sarpentina

 

Sarpaganthi

The leaves were shade dried and powdered. The powder was taken half
teaspoon daily morning with butter milk after food

3

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Heart

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nelumbium speciosum

 

thamarai

 

 

 

 

 

The flowers petals are shade dried and powdered and was used to make
decoction and it was taken twice in a day.

 

*Herbs for common diseases*

*�*

*S.NO*

*DISEASES*

*PLANTS*

*1*

Cold

 

Ocimum santum       

Solanum trilobatum        

Leucas aspera           

*2*

Cough

Adatoda vasica              

Vitex negundo            

Abies webbiana          

Oldanlandia umbellate          

*3*

Digestion

Zingiber officinalis       

Cissus quadrangularis 

Cuminum cyminum  

*4*

*Gas trouble*

Cuminum cyminum        

Ferula asafetida       

Cissus quadrangularis 

*5*

*Wound healing*

Tridax procubens      

Acalypha indica   

*6*

*Teeth ache*

Zingiber officinalis          

Jussiaea suffruticosa   

Pisidium gaujava         

*7*

*Rheumatism*

Delonix regia     

Dolichos biflorus   

*8*

*Reduce the body heat*

Aloe vera  

Euphorbia thymifolia 

*9*

*To burn the fat*

Solanum malaginella   

Dolichos biflorus 

*10*

*Head ache*

Brassica nigra 

Zingiber officinalis

 

*�*

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

* Conclusion*

*       �*

*       �* Indian system of medicine particularly Ayurvedic,
Siddha and Unani have contributed to development of modern medicine
and are still practiced

          To treat and benefit a large number of patients.
Even the world health organization in its meeting held in 1980
considered that for certain diseases like peptic ulcer, diabetes, high
blood pressure, a stone in the kidney and infective jaundice, no
satisfactory treatment is available in modern system of medicine and
suggested deeper study of indigenous system of medicine.

 

 

_By: *DR.V.R.BRINDHA SIVAGAMINATHAIYER*_

*About the Author:*

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Herbal Medicine Into the Spotlight Once Again

Longtime regarded as ineffective by many contemporary medical
scientists - exclusivist adepts of modern medicine, herbal medicine
(commonly referred to as alternative or parallel medicine) has
recently become unexpectedly popular among many different categories
of people all around the world. The increasing global interest and
trust in traditional herbal medicine come as very good news,
considering that natural remedies are not only very efficient in
curing a wide spectrum of ailments and diseases, but are also very
safe to use compared to most synthetic drugs overused in today's
scientific medicine. With the appearance of so many specialized books
and online resources that educate people on the remarkable benefits
of using medicinal herbs as cures or means of prevention against
disease, everyone will soon realize the advantages offered by
traditional, herbal medicine and become more open-minded and
acceptant towards this form of medicine and its practices.

With the discovery of so many new synthetic drugs in the last century,
some people have forgotten about herbal medicine or have completely
turned away from this traditional form of medicine in favor of
scientific medicine. Even more, some medical scientists have denied
the benefits of medicinal herbs and herbal supplements for a long
time, engaging in an ongoing propaganda for synthetic, pharmaceutical
drugs instead. As presented by the Chinese proverb: "A single untried
popular remedy often throws the scientific doctor into hysterics",
many adepts of modern medicine fought a long and needless war against
traditional herbal medicine.

Fortunately, the situation has changed dramatically over the last few
decades and nowadays herbal medicine is once again respected and
properly valued. However, what many persons still don't realize at
present is that traditional medicine and modern medicine are
complementary concepts which share a common background, not
antithetic, opposing notions. Idealistically, there should be no
contradiction between herbal medicine and modern, scientific medicine,
as they both fight for the same cause: to restore the health and
wellbeing of patients afflicted by disease. On the contrary, both
forms of medicine should compensate for each other's minuses in order
to provide patients with better healthcare.

For thousands of years, herbal medicine has been using natural
remedies with strong curative effects to successfully treat an
extensive series of diseases and disorders. Nature is an infinite
source of natural ingredients which act as antibiotics, analgesics,
sedatives, anti-inflammatory agents and so on, being used either to
alleviate existing symptoms or to fight against the actual cause of
disease. Undoubtedly, herbal medicine has a long and respected history
and numerous studies conducted in the field have clearly revealed that
the therapeutic benefits and the healing ability of various medicinal
herbs and herbal supplements can be very significant if they are used
wisely along with a healthy lifestyle.

Medicinal herbs and herbal supplements are very affordable (sometimes
they can even be directly picked from nature), easy to find, contain
ingredients with strong curative effects and have little or no
side-effects at all! Medicinal herbs and herbal supplements can be
used under the form of tinctures, capsules, pills, ointments and
lotions, or can be used in teas or even cooked with food. Properly
used and corroborated with a proper food regime and a healthy
lifestyle, medicinal herbs and herbal supplements are equally
efficient in fighting against disease and helping you stay
disease-free. By uncovering and exploiting nature's wisdom, one can
substantially improve one's health, ensuring the wellbeing of one's
body, mind and spirit altogether.

If you are looking for great information on herbal supplements or
different medicinal herbs please visit this links.

_By: *Groshan Fabiola*_

*About the Author:*

If you are looking for great information on herbal supplements [1] or
different medicinal herbs [2] please visit this links.

Links:
------
[1] http://www.herbal-supplement-resource.com
[2] http://www.herbal-supplement-resource.com

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