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Friday, September 28, 2018

What Can Cause Vertigo and How to Prevent It?


The journal Frontiers in Neurology has just printed a study by scientists from Baylor College of Medicine and Rice University that shows specific job types can cause vertigo and dizziness. Read on to find out how you can prevent vertigo from happening to you.

Click HERE to Discover How You Can Heal Your Vertigo and Dizziness Permanently in Just 15 Minutes




What Kind of Jobs Can Cause Vertigo?

The journal Frontiers in Neurology has just printed a study by scientists from Baylor College of Medicine and Rice University that shows specific job types can cause vertigo and dizziness.

And it’s caused by a weird pressure in the job impacts to your ears. Pressure you may never have realized you’re under.

If you have ever heard a military airplane break the sound barrier near your house, you know that it is not the loudness of the sound that is the problem, but rather the intense sensation of movement and disorientation that follows it.

Those are the effects of extremely high atmospheric pressure caused by an explosion.

The American scientists subjected mice to a 63 kPa blast wave, which can also be expressed as approximately nine pounds of pressure per square inch, a blast that can severely damage concrete buildings or even bring them down.

They then examined the ears of these mice to see precisely what the consequences were.

They found perforations in their tympanic membranes (or eardrums), the membrane that separate the outer from the middle ear.

They also found damage to the hair cells in the cristae and maculae, two parts of the middle ear. These hair cells are the main vibration (sound) receptors in the ear, and the scientists judged that this damage in the mice was probably permanent.

When they placed the mice on a rotating rod on which they could normally remain standing upright, the mice could suddenly no longer balance on it anymore, an effect that lasted for weeks. This probably happened because they felt dizzy.

The eye movements normally triggered by head movements were also disrupted. If you turn your head, your eyes moved to stabilize the images you see, but this no longer happened in the mice; an almost certain sign of vertigo.

But you don’t have to be exposed to military planes to experience explosions and the consequent damage to your ears and balance.
If you ever worked in mining or quarrying, you will almost certainly encountered explosions when you need to break through rock.

Other people have to design and dispose of explosives for industrial, engineering, and construction use.

It’s even possible that close encounter to trains or other loud noises could do the same damage to your balance system and cause vertigo.

Watch these 2 Videos below








This post is from the Vertigo and Dizziness Program, which was created by Christian Goodman. This is an all-natural system that utilizes the power of exercises to permanently cure your vertigo and dizziness. This will help to eliminate tension and improve your blood flow and balance.

From this Vertigo Relief Program, you will learn to strengthen your tongue, achieve whole-body balance, relieve tension and enhance your overall well-being.

To find out more about this program, click on Vertigo and Dizziness Cure 

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Thursday, September 27, 2018

What Do the Brains of Vertigo Sufferers Look Like?


If you are looking for a permanent cure to your vertigo and dizziness, read on here to find out more about this all-natural way to help you to fight your vertigo, improve your balance and enhance your overall well-being.

Click HERE to Discover How You Can Heal Your Vertigo and Dizziness Permanently in Just 15 Minutes





Vertigo is normally definitively diagnosed by a doctor who examines your eye movements in response to head movements.

But authors of a new study in the journal Human Brain Mapping were wondering what the brains of vertigo sufferers looked like and whether the changes are reliable enough to be able to serve as a diagnostic criteria for doctors to use.

This may not be as crazy as it sounds.

Many previous studies have concluded that vertigo is one of the most common, if not the most common, complaint with which patients present at the intensive care units of hospitals.

People with severe vertigo often panic because they think they are having a stroke, and duly get themselves to the nearest hospital.

Because vertigo is quite common, this can easily overwhelm emergency room personnel, but they cannot send these patients away, just in case they are indeed suffering a stroke and require urgent treatment.

In response to this problem, the authors of the new study wondered whether it would be possible for a computer to distinguish vertigo from stroke cases based on a resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rsfMRI).

They examined and compared rsfMRI data from 38 patients with persistent postural perceptual dizziness and 38 people without this condition.

They then tested the ability of a computer to predict whether people had vertigo or not from imaging data given to it.

Without getting into the incomprehensible medical terms that refer to the brain regions, the scientists basically found that patients with vertigo displayed a decline in connectivity between brain regions involved in multisensory vestibular processing and spatial cognition, and an increase in connectivity between regions that linked visual and emotional processing.

The decreased connections in regions that deal with vestibular processing and spatial cognition is unsurprising, as your vestibular system is the system that helps you to balance and to orientate yourself in space so that you can move correctly. These processes are severely compromised in people that have vertigo.

Because of the anxiety that results from the lack of balance and from our inability to make sense of perceptual input during vertigo attacks, it is also not surprising that our brains become overactive at perceptual and emotional processing.

The researchers also found, to their delight, that their computer could predict cases of vertigo from brain scan data with an accuracy level of 78.4%.

MRI scans are unfortunately very expensive, so each hospital will have to calculate whether it would be a saving or an extra expense to scan everyone automatically that present signs of vertigo at their emergency room.

However, this also shows that a big part of vertigo is caused by the brain. I have helped people battle vertigo using simple exercises that increase the blood flow up to your brain for years.

Watch these Videos –









This post is from the Vertigo and Dizziness Program, which was created by Christian Goodman. This is an all-natural system that utilizes the power of exercises to permanently cure your vertigo and dizziness. This will help to eliminate tension and improve your blood flow and balance.

From this Vertigo Relief Program, you will learn to strengthen your tongue, achieve whole-body balance, relieve tension and enhance your overall well-being.

To find out more about this program, click on Vertigo and Dizziness Cure 

You may also like:






























Wednesday, September 26, 2018

What is the Difference between IBS Pain and Appendicitis?

What is the Difference between IBS Pain and Appendicitis? How do you know if your pain is related to IBS or appendicitis? Read on here to find out more.

Click on HERE to Discover How To Treat Irritable Bowel Syndrome Fast & Naturally






Is My Bowel Pain Appendicitis?

Recently there have been many questions asked about symptoms related to bowel and abdomen pain. One asked specifically about treating appendicitis.

This raises red flags for a couple of reasons. Appendicitis is a serious condition that, left untreated, can actually kill a person.

Lumping this problem into the category of general bowel problems that one can treat naturally is not going to end well.

So, we decided to have a look at appendicitis and explore the symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment plan.

To begin with, it is important to know just what the heck an appendix is. Where is it? What does it do?

The appendix is a little pouch, or closed tube that juts out from the large intestine right before the ascending colon.

As for what it does…even despite centuries of speculation and research, no one knows really. There are some pretty good theories, to be sure, but none have ever been able to be proven.

What everyone can agree on, however, is that it isn’t exactly a critical organ and we can live without it and not even have any bad consequences.

Anytime the suffix ‘-it is’ is used, it means an inflammation, usually as a result of infection. When the appendix becomes infected and inflamed, it doesn’t fix itself.

There are no potions, herbs, exercises, or meditations that will cure it. Appendicitis is one of those conditions that is considered progressive, meaning it will just get worse and worse.

The swelling appendix will burst if not treated immediately, and this puts the entire body at risk of a septic emergency.

But let’s back up. What are the symptoms?

Generally, they are the same for most people. They include intense pain at the lower abdomen near the right side of the body. It can even start at the bellybutton and intensify as it moves downward.

With abdomen pain will also generally come loss of appetite and nausea or vomiting. A lot of times a fever will develop as well.

The problem sometimes arises when people confuse severe constipation, gas, and nausea with what actually is appendicitis. These symptoms are also present in IBS and other gastrointestinal conditions.

The key differences are the timing of the symptoms and whether or not a fever is present.

By timing I mean when and how the symptoms start. Was it sudden or did it develop over a number of days? Appendicitis is usually something that comes on fairly suddenly and doesn’t improve over time.

IBS can be sporadic. Periods of pain, diarrhea and constipation followed by relative peace are the more likely scenarios.

The fever is a bigger giveaway. IBS doesn’t typically ever include fever. A distended bowel isn’t always going to accompany IBS but many times will with appendicitis. While IBS sufferers have had some bloating, actual distention is altogether different.

When is it time to call the doctor? Look at the collection of symptoms.

Pain starting at the navel and intensifying as it goes south, fever, vomiting, loss of appetite and distended belly are the red flags. Your doctor will let you know If you need to go to the emergency room.

However, most folks know by the level of pain, vomiting, and other symptoms when it’s time to skip the phone call to the doctor and just go straight to the ER. Let your body guide you and be sure to listen to it.

However, as mentioned above, only a doctor or mid level can diagnose this condition. He or she may, in addition to questioning you, palpate the area (place his or her hands on the lower bowel), listen with a stethoscope, take some blood to look for infection, test urine to rule out other conditions, and order radiology services such as a sonogram or CT scan.

After a diagnosis is made, treatment begins. Unfortunately, there is no treatment other than surgery that has ever been shown to be effective at eliminating the problem. An appendectomy removes the failing, infected organ and usually won’t leave much of a scar if caught early enough.

If the appendix ruptures and causes peritonitis (infecting the rest of the abdominal cavity), then a larger incision is generally needed because the bowel will have to be irrigated.

Antibiotics are given to guard against further infection complications.
Depending upon the severity of the infection and the invasiveness needed to correct it, recovery time can be anywhere from 3 days to even 2 weeks. Usually a week is standard if there are no complications.

At the same time that there is no alternative to surgery once appendicitis is discovered (if you want to actually recover), there is also no real way to prevent it. However, studies have shown that people who eat a very high fiber diet are less likely to be afflicted with it.

Hopefully, this can be good information to share with the family to help discern between a chronic bowel issue and a medical emergency.

Watch these Videos –










If your problem is just IBS and you want a natural, prescription-free way to manage and conquer it, I encourage you to try the Treat IBS Naturally  guide today.

All the Best,
Julissa Clay

This post is from Julissa Clay’s IBS Solution Program. This program is a step-by-step 21-day plan for relieving irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) for good, 100% naturally and without side effects. You will regain your normal social life again with no more pain, cramps, bloating and “emergency” trips to the bathroom.

To find out more about this program, go to Treating Irritable Bowel Syndrome Naturally

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Friday, September 21, 2018

What Is So Bad About Calcium Channel Blockers?

What can be the side effects of Calcium Channel Blockers especially if you have irritable bowel? Read on here to find out more

Click on HERE to Discover How To Treat Irritable Bowel Syndrome Fast & Naturally





Calcium Channel Blockers and Irritable Bowel

Recently we had a woman write in regarding concerns she had with her prescription medications – calcium channel blockers.  She had talked to her doctor about it, but was frustrated by his lack of interest in her concerns and having given her what she called “the kiss off.”

She was concerned that one of her medicines was giving her an irritable bowel and she was getting frustrated because of the stomach upset that was becoming more frequent.

The medicine in question was a calcium channel blocker.  This drug has been shown to increase the blood flow and available oxygen to the heart, while also relieving the workload or stress the heart is under.  She was taking a long-acting version to treat high blood pressure and had been on it for some time.

Calcium channel blockers are also used to treat specific types of heart failure and also some migraine conditions, so these types of drugs are very widely used.  Many have seen relief from their cardiac symptoms while using them, but at the cost of introducing a host of side effects.

Even though she had been taking her prescription for a number of years, she was surprised when she started in with the stomach upset since it seemed to be a relatively new symptom.

Her assumption at the time was that she had gotten hold of some bad food.  Then when it persisted, she thought maybe she had gastroenteritis.

But as the weeks dragged on and the stomach pain and constipation persisted, she wondered if it could be due to medications.  She was already experiencing occasionally low heart rates and passing dizziness, which she understood was a known side effect, but the pain was a new symptom altogether.

Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease, or GERD, is a known side effect of calcium channel blockers.  So is constipation.  Both of these symptoms are painful, and pain increases a person’s blood pressure.  She said she felt like she was causing high blood pressure by treating high blood pressure.

There was also a concern that she was showing the early signs of osteoarthritis and osteoporosis, and she had always been told not to take a calcium supplement because of the calcium channel blocker.  Similarly, grapefruit is also on the “no” list, as the “grapefruit effect” occurs with this drug in a similar way as it interferes with statin absorption.

Frustrated and worried, she went to her doctor to see if he could reconcile the pain, supplement and medication quandary with which she was faced.

He apparently just gave her the standard answer of, “Well, we can adjust your dosage.  We’ll also need to consider starting a prescription GERD medication and you’ll need to look at maybe a laxative a couple times a week.”

After that there was a discussion of timing… when to take which pill, how long to wait before the next, which ones required a full stomach, which ones couldn’t work together, etc.  It was apparently more than she was able to process and she left the doctor’s office angry, frustrated, and still in pain.

We hear stories like these so many times and it is frustrating every time we hear it.  While the stories are all different, they resonate with one common theme, which is dumping more medicine to undo side effects of medicine that is used to treat preventable (in many cases) or naturally treatable diseases.

Our advice to her was not exactly what she wanted to hear, but it’s the only thing that safely works to resolve all the issues she was having.  That is basically to march back into the doctor’s office with the list of complaints and this time the list of goals.  The goals being specifically, not to have to take more pills and to resolve all the conditions in a natural way, where possible.

It was a tough conversation because she had already decided the doctor wouldn’t listen to her.  But she pressed on anyway, citing that she was not going to take the GERD medication, didn’t want laxatives, and wanted to come to some agreement regarding the current dose of her calcium channel blocker.

He was apparently glad she went this direction and had a lot of feedback for her about ways to get the blood pressure under control, and referred her to a dietician who could help her to get the bowel irritations resolved using diet and supplements that wouldn’t interfere.

The diet plan was also more concentrated on bone health, so that helped to get on the right track with that problem as well.

While we don’t have the details yet on how she’s doing, I did want to write about our correspondence so far, mostly because the point can still be made that if you suspect that your medications are causing side effects that you are not willing to live with, take the bull by the horns and talk to the doc.  You might be able to find a new treatment plan that is much easier (and safer) to live with.




For natural, drug-free ways to conquer high blood pressureacid reflux, and irritable bowel syndrome that are easy and safe, click on the links here or have a look at the guides in our library, listed on the right side of the page.

Warm regards,
Christian Goodman

This post is from Julissa Clay’s IBS Solution Program. This program is a step-by-step 21-day plan for relieving irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) for good, 100% naturally and without side effects. You will regain your normal social life again with no more pain, cramps, bloating and “emergency” trips to the bathroom.

To find out more about this program, go to Treating Irritable Bowel Syndrome Naturally

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