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The Scuppers This is a new forum for the not necessarily fishing related topics... |
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10-17-2007, 11:35 AM
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#1
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Wipe My Bottom
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 1,911
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http://www.foxnews.com/printer_frien...302526,00.html
Quote:
Study: Chinese Herbs May Be Best at Relieving Menstrual Pain
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
A study involving nearly 3,500 women in several countries suggests Chinese herbs may be more effective in relieving menstrual cramps than drugs, acupuncture or heat compression.
Australia-based researchers said herbs not only relieved pain, but reduced the recurrence of the condition over three months, according to the Cochrane Library journal.
"All available measures of effectiveness confirmed the overall superiority of Chinese herbal medicine to placebo, no treatment, NSAIDs (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs), OCPs (oral contraceptive pill), acupuncture and heat compression,'' said lead author Xiaoshu Zhu from the Center for Complementary Medicine Research at the University of Western Sydney.
Period pain affects as many as 50 percent of women of reproductive age and between 60 percent to 85 percent of teenaged girls, leading to absences from school and work. While the cause is still under debate, it is believed to be linked to an imbalance in ovarian hormones.
Chinese herbal medicine has been used to treat the condition for hundreds of years and women are increasingly looking for non-drug treatments.
The survey involved 39 trials - 36 in China, and one each in Taiwan, Japan and the Netherlands. Participants given herbal concoctions were prescribed herbs that regulated their 'qi' (energy) and blood, warmed their bodies and boosted their kidney and liver functions.
Some of these include Chinese angelica root (danggui), Szechuan lovage root (chuanxiong), red peony root (chishao), white peony root (baishao), Chinese motherwort (yimucao), fennel fruit (huixiang), nut-grass rhizome (xiangfu), liquorice root (gancao) and cinnamon bark (rougui). In one trial involving 36 women, 53 percent of those who took herbs reported less pain than usual compared with 26 percent in the placebo group.
But the researchers said more studies were needed because of the relatively small numbers of participants in each of the trials.
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10-17-2007, 11:54 AM
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#2
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Georgetown MA
Posts: 18,203
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So....they're saying that when a woman is "Having the Painters In" she needs to start scarfing down the root......How come when I make that suggestion I get smacked. 
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"If you're arguing with an idiot, make sure he isn't doing the same thing."
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10-17-2007, 12:14 PM
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#3
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Wipe My Bottom
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 1,911
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The Dad Fisherman
So....they're saying that when a woman is "Having the Painters In" she needs to start scarfing down the root......How come when I make that suggestion I get smacked. 
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Hmmm. Heinrich Kramer says it best in his best-seller, the Malleus Maleficarum:
Quote:
Now the wickedness of women is spoken of in Ecclesiasticus xxv: There is no head above the head of a serpent: and there is no wrath above the wrath of a woman. I had rather dwell with a lion and a dragon than to keep house with a wicked woman. And among much which in that place precedes and follows about a wicked woman, he concludes: All wickedness is but little to the wickedness of a woman.
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10-17-2007, 12:16 PM
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#4
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DDG-51
Join Date: Mar 2002
Posts: 3,550
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Very very interesting, what I take out of this is
'Qi'
is a great scrabble word.
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