Massage Oils for Pain Relief Do They Work?

Posted by admin | Health Articles,Magnetic Pain Relief | Wednesday 1 July 2009 11:06 pm

Magnetics Healing Naturally

Alternative treatments may not be main stream,  but for many who seek naturally pain relief they are pleasantly surprised by how effective magnetic therrapy is for arthritis pain.  Check Out All The Articles and videos At Magnetic Pain Relief For Arthritis Pain .

Using Massage Oils for Pain Relief

Nowadays, a large number of massage oils have many uses. While a lot of oils are simply oils that are easily applied to your skin and allow hands to glide smoothly as well as leave your skin feeling soft, there are many others with much more to offer. Many of them are natural products. You may see avocado oil, sweet almond oil, and Jojoba oil commonly sold in stores. You can use one type of oil by itself or you can combine it with other oils to make your own favorite massage oil combination.

A lot of massage oils are very good as a pain reliever. These massage oils are more often blends of essential oils and other infused oils that are known to treat aches and pains. A massage oil called Narayana Oil, for example, is supposed to heal joint pain and also body aches. This oil is a natural herbal infused sesame oil. Licensed massage therapists usually offer a large selection of massage oils. When you have any pain or aches on your body, there is a large selection of natural massage oils that can help you reduce your pain and aches.

Massage oils that have healing properties cost more than just regular massage oils. Many people go for a therapeutic massage after they have suffered from a trauma or have had a surgery of some sort. Many massage oils help with joint pains and arthritis as well as other muscle pains. Some also help with muscle cramps, soreness, lupus, fibromyalgia, arthritis, sprains, hip discomfort, and more. Therapeutic and healing massage oils are usually very relaxing and soothing so when using them, you should feel more clam and your pain should subside.

When people are under a lot of stress, they experience a lot of pain. A therapeutic massage helps reduce stress and make you more relaxed. With the stress subdued or even gone, your body will have a better chance to heal the pains and aches that are plaguing you. Your body heals most effectively when you are not emotional.

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How To Easily Quit Smoking Using Nothing But Your Mind

Posted by admin | Magnetic Pain Relief | Friday 24 April 2009 12:15 am

This is a review of a quit smoking method that has helped 19 out of every 20 people quit smoking. That information alone should be powerful enough to recommend the system but this is a review and you will probably won’t to know a bit more about it than that!

If you’ve tried pills, gum or patches, then the chances are you have failed to stop smoking and are looking for something more effective. Your mind is far more powerful and does not need any bogus products, so maybe it’s time you used the power of your own mind to kick the habit. This is what the EasyQuit System will show you how to achieve. As long as you are one of the 96% that is! Many thousands of smokers have used this system to quit their habit and so can you, and you can do it with virtually no effort and without any horrible cravings.

The author of the system Peter Howells says that giving up smoking is easy and that it is only difficult if you don’t know how to do it. He uses the example that driving a car is difficult if you don’t know how to do it, but once you have learned the skills it is easy.

The EasyQuit System is a very simple system that helps you to overcome all of the problems associated with smoking cessation. The reason why the system is so successful is because it helps you overcome your desire to smoke. You don’t need to use will-power as the system teaches you exactly what to do without the usual side effects associated with quitting. You will not miss smoking, you won’t experience hunger or go on eating binges and gain weight, you won’t experience anxiety and neither will you need to keep a “smokers diary”.

The system teaches you to stop smoking by stopping you from even wanting to smoke. It does not do this via hypnotherapy, NLP or aversion therapy either. It simply teaches you a series of truths about the psychology of why you smoke and how you can stop. It only takes about 3 hours to work your way through the book and apply the techniques.

The system is based on a therapy called Cognitive Behavioral Therapy or CBT that was developed in the 1960′s. CBT has been used with great success by psychologists and psychiatrists to get patients off addictive drugs such as heroin and cocaine. The EasyQuit System uses CBT to change the way you think about why you smoke. It makes a big problem like quitting smoking become an easy problem to solve by breaking it down into lots of easily solved parts. The system identifies the individual components of your problem and deals with them one by one.

For more information about smoking cessation please visit…

EasyQuit System Review

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http://magneticarthritisrelief.com/lkj

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Magnetic Pain Relief For Migraines

Posted by admin | Magnetic Pain Relief | Tuesday 17 February 2009 5:43 pm

Magnetic Pain Relief For Migraines

Magnetic Pain Relief Can It Help Migraine Sufferers?

Some migraine sufferers may be able to avoid medication by zapping away their pain with a hand-held magnetic device, new research suggests.

Transcranial magnetic stimulation
magnetic migraine treatment

The hair dryer-size device, called a transcranial magnetic stimulation device, delivers brief magnetic impulses to the brain. The researchers, who presented their results today at the American Headache Society meeting in Boston, hypothesized that the magnetic field pulses could short-circuit the pain signals in the brain.


Doctors are quoted as saying “I think for migraine, it’s extremely likely that this magnetic therapy will become part of the therapeutic armamentarium,” said Dr. Richard Lipton, director of the Montefiore Headache Center in New York. “I think for some people who don’t like taking prescription medications … or for people who have side effects to these drugs, this will prove to be a very useful option.”


In the new study, researchers looked at 201 patients who suffered from a kind of migraine called “migraine with aura” — one that is often accompanied by vivid visual disturbances, or blind spots. These kinds of migraines, which 20 to 30 percent of migraine sufferers experience, are sometimes accompanied by other neurological symptoms such as numbness, weakness or unsteadiness.

Half the patients were given a genuine stimulation device, and the other half an identical-looking device that did not deliver any magnetic current. The researchers asked the patients to hold the device to the back of their heads as soon as they began to experience the aura signaling an oncoming migraine.
They found that 39 percent of those who used the real thing were pain-free two hours after using the device, compared with only 22 percent of patients who used the fake device.

Magnets, an Attractive New Option?

Proponents say the new option could be an important addition to migraine treatment, which more or less comprises three options. The first is to identify and avoid certain headache triggers, which can range from diet to the amount of sleep and exercise one gets. The second approach is called acute treatment, in which a patient takes medication — usually a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug or a prescription pain reliever — at the onset of a headache.

The final option is called preventative treatment, in which a patient takes prescription medication every day to prevent a headache from ever occurring. But this approach is generally only taken by those who suffer from severe migraines on a daily or almost daily basis. Despite the various treatment options available to migraine sufferers, most have not found one that works reliably.


Even with the new advent of modern technology  headache experts are still unsure of what exactly causes these migraines. This makes it difficult to offer migraine sufferers a treatment plan that is guaranteed to prevent 100 percent of their pain 100 percent of the time.

The treatment may be welcomed especially by migraine patients who either do not respond to traditional prescription medications or experience negative side effects from the drugs. For these patients, complementary and alternative medicine experts have been studying the use of magnets for the purpose of pain relief for years.

For instance, a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in 1982 found that Neuralieve Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, or TMS, electromagnets can be used to speed the healing of bone fractures. Another study published in the Journal of the Neurological Sciences in 2000 found that the stimulation device has an effect on the central nervous system that might relieve chronic pain.

Doctors at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City, said that the use of the stimulation device and other therapies involving magnets will allow many migraine patients to avoid prescription medication and the side effects associated with these drugs.

What’s to lose with this treatment?  Neuralieve Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation, or TMS, is a therapy using magnets is inexpensive and virtually free of side effects.

Doctors agree that  the TMS device definitely will and should join the treatment arsenal for migraines, and probably many other problems such as superficial sprains or fractures.

This bringing to light what many people have been saying all along..

Magnetic therapy does work, and it’s now a bunch of hooey!

If you are suffering with migraine headaches, why not try other magnetic products that can help alleviate pain associated with migraine headaches.


AceMagnetics.com

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Magnetic Therapy Studies Confirm Magnetic Therapy Is Not A Placebo

Posted by admin | Magnetic Pain Relief | Thursday 12 February 2009 1:47 pm

Magnetic Therapy Does Work Studies Confirm

Magnetic Therapy Study

Magnetic Therapy Gaining Strength As More Studies Prove It works.

You watched the video and you witnessed for yourself how the Mayo Clinic is finding medical magnetic therapy can work for migraine headaches. Migraine headaches cost individual time off from work, time with their family, and quality of life.  The following article will demonstrate how studies are finding more evidence of the power of magnetic healing.

Mayo Clinic

Image via Wikipedia

Many doctors of western medicine have claimed for years that any benefits that an individual received from using magnetic therapy products was due to a placebo effect: patients assumed that it worked, and so it probably did. But there’s now mounting proof that magnetic treatment can be effective. More than three hundred research groups around the globe, at establishments as celebrated and mainstream as Imperial University London, and California, Yale and Harvard schools, have found proof of positive effects. It can even, it is suggested, help to straighten crooked teeth, encourage bone to grow and help people who hear voices but have not answered to drug treatments. Back in ancient Egyptian times and beyond, it’s probable the original idea of magnet care flowered from the strange consequences of natural stones. There seems to be two main methods of using magnets for medical purposes.

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The high tech way is magnetic kick of the brain, while the more conventional method uses others sorts of magnet to excite express areas of the body. There is proof that both approaches work in different ways for different conditions.


One of the landmark studies for the high tech way has come out of an Israel Institute of Technology, which showed clearly that magnetic ignition of the brain eases serious depression.
Half of the patients also had little need for further treatment with electroconvulsive treatment, while all those who had received a placebo did end up needing treatment. In a study at the Medical Varsity of South Carolina, they took twenty depressed patients, who hadn’t found any relief from any medicine, had the treatment for twenty minutes a day for a couple of weeks, and 10 had a magnet applied to their scalp but no treatment.


In twelve the twenty patients, symptoms were reduced by fifty per cent, while not one of the group of ten improved. This permits us, for the 1st time, to stimulate the brain non-invasive while the person is awake and alert.

It was shown by Dr Declan McLoughlin, an advisor psychiatrist at the Institute of Psychoanalysis in London. He stated that it could be demonstrated quite easily. “For example, if I were to take a magnetic coil and move it over parts of the brain that control the movement of body parts, I could make the small finger, then the middle finger, and then the thumb move.”

left frontal lobe(red) and corpus callosum, di...

Image via Wikipedia


The trick with TMS is to put up the fields over the particular area of the brain that wishes retuning. It is understood from the outcome of scanning patients with depression that there’s reduced activity and blood flow in the left frontal lobe, an area of the brain above the forehead that is involved in thinking and planning. In the care, a wire coil is held near to the patient’s scalp above the left frontal lobe to provide a magnetic field that passes thru the skull and into the brain to get activity up to ordinary levels.


In the treatment, an electromagnet is put over the cerebral cortex. This high -tech approach has been used successfully, used in cases of epilepsy and schizophrenia. This magnetic therapy was also used by Yale analysts on patients who had been hearing voices. The analysts said these patients appear to take advantage of TMS for as much as a year, often more.


Researchers at the University of Washington did a study on patients who had suffered chronic pain for many years as a result of spinal-cord injury, they put a magnet on the shoulder of these patients, and after the magnet was put on the shoulder for one hour, pain levels were cut in half.

It was believed by the researchers that the treatment using the magnets might work by the magnet properties acting on the nerves, but it was inconclusive exactly how this action occurred. One thought was that the magnetic magnets worked on blood flow on the blood, research using animals has shown that blood flow does increase by the movement of magnetic fields through tissue. More thoughts by researchers suggest that magnet therapy may alter changes skin temperature; this action has an effect on iron in the blood; improves oxygenation of the blood; alters the pH balance; improves electrical conductivity of cells; or stimulates new cell growth.


An exciting addendum is that Canadian researchers, who reviewed all the research on magnetic therapy and osteoarthritis, propose that magnetic healing therapy stimulates new cartilage cells to grow. Sales of magnetic products such as magnetic bracelets, magnetic necklaces, magnetic back braces, and more extensive list are growing rapidly as more, and more information is proving that magnetic therapy is not a placebo, but the real deal!


AceMagnetics.com

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Can Magnetic Therapy Really Relieve Migraine Headaches?

Virtually everybody has suffered from a headaches at one time in their life.

Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Aborting Migraines Interview

Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) therapy for aborting migraines.

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Magnetic necklaces can help to relieve pain caused by migraines and headaches

Self Health Care: Do Magnetic Bracelets Ease Arthritis Pain?

A recent British Medical Journal study revealed that magnetic bracelets for arthritis.

Magnetic Pain Therapy: One Study Shows Promise For Osteoarthritis

That is to say, beccause magnet therapy has never been accepted by te medial cimmunity

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Magnetic Arthritis Relief- FDA Approves Magnetic Therapy Treatments

Posted by admin | Magnetic Pain Relief | Saturday 31 January 2009 9:28 pm

FDA Approves Magnetic Therapy Treatments

Magnetic Pain  Relief

Studies and patient trials are starting to point to medical magnets as a genuine course of treatment for many illnesses, and injuries. Medical magnets are finding their way into modern medical facilities to accelerate the healing process after surgery, or injury. Many physicians and everyday people roll their eyes and shake their heads at the thought of magnetic healing therapy. Scam is the word thrown around.

However, if you start to research the new findings and studies you can gain a better understanding of the function of medical magnets. You may decide that magnetic healing therapy is not a quackery of fools, and scam artists trying to make a quick buck.

Magnetic healing is actually an alternative form of healing with many benefits.

There may be some who will tell you that magnetic healing therapy can cure cancer, diabetes or other outrageous claim. You will not find that here. I make no claims of cures.

Magnetic healing has been around thousands of years, but it is just now finding roots in western medicine. Magnetic healing is finding a niche as an add on alternative treatment to modern medical treatments. Used together with other types of treatments to reduce pain and speed up the method of healing.


Where medical magnets shine is not in curing illnesses, but in their powerful ability to reduce pain.


Magnetic healing therapy can be used for arthritis pain relief, tennis elbow, back pain, and many more chronic pain conditions. Magnets work by balancing the body, increasing blood flow, and decreasing inflammation that causes pain. The Mayo Clinic the big wigs of medicine have a magnetic device to treat migraines. Mayo Clinic and they would not have it if it did not work!


Medical magnets to not require a prescription, and have no know side affect unless you have implanted devices, then you should steer clear of magnetic healing therapy.


If you can simply let go of some of your media generated biases toward alternative treatments you may find that magnetic healing is possible and may work for you. Not everyone will get the same amount of relief, but when you take medication no two people will have the same pain relief results either, so give it a try, and if you find out if it will work for you. Medical magnets are relatively inexpensive, but do not try to use your refrigerator magnets they are not strong enough and you might get a rash where you place them on your skin!


Read below an interesting article the new treatment using magnets for depression, and the FDA approves.


New Studies Show ThatMagnetic Treatments Lifts Some Depression

MENTAL HEALTH
By Shankar Vedantam
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — Steve Newman had suffered from major depression since age 13.

He had tried many treatments, including medications and psychotherapy. As he approached 60, single by necessity and friendless by choice, he decided that his train had only two stops left. One option: shock therapy, or ECT — a controversial technique that involves inducing seizures. He wasn’t eager to try it. He was working in Florida as an insurance agent when he heard about the other option. The idea sounded like science fiction: the use of high-power magnets to cure depression — a technique known as transcranial magnetic stimulation, or TMS.

“I would have jumped into a volcano to get better,” Newman said. “I decided I would try TMS and then ECT, and, if neither of them worked, I was going to consider suicide.”

He gave up his job and, in 2005, moved to Philadelphia, where he signed up for a magnetic-therapy trial at the University of Pennsylvania.

Weeks after the treatments began, he said, he awoke one morning and found that his depression had vanished.

“It was like a light switch went on and I had my life back,” said Newman, who works at the National Institutes of Health in Washington.

 medical magnets

In October, the Food and Drug Administration approved magnetic therapy as a treatment for major depression. Many scientists think the technique is a harbinger of things to come. Researchers are probing its effects on schizophrenia, post-traumatic stress disorder and bipolar disorder.

The basic principle behind the treatment is less kooky than it sounds and comes not from psychiatry but physics — the 19th-century discovery of electromagnetism.

TMS uses electromagnetism to induce small electric currents inside the brain. Patients are seated in what looks like a dentist’s chair, and a magnetic coil is placed by the left side of their foreheads. A powerful, fluctuating magnetic field is started.

The field stimulates neurons, or nerve cells, which are electrochemical agents. This alters blood flow and metabolic activity in the brain.

In the trial that Newman participated in, patients received about 3,000 rapid magnetic pulses in less than 40 minutes. Doctors aimed the magnetic field at the patients’ left prefrontal cortex (around the left temple), an area that has been implicated in depression. Patients sometimes reported a tingling in their scalp or slight pain.

“When you give an anti-depressant, the pill alters the electrochemical properties of the cell,” said Mark Demitrack, chief medical officer at Neuronetics, the Malvern, Pa., company that has developed the magnetic therapy device NeuroStar. “This is the flip side of the same coin. It is just a different way of getting at the same end effect: to change, restore or alter the functioning of nerve cells.”

No one really knows what is specifically happening in the brain to cause depression, and no one really knows why TMS, psychotherapy and other treatments work.

Newman’s case is striking but might not be representative. Many scientists think the jury is still out on the utility of TMS for depression.The FDA wrestled with the approval of the magnetic device for years. In early 2007, an advisory committee said it was unimpressed with the results of the trial in which Newman participated.

The concern wasn’t about safety — it seemed that TMS was much safer than medication and shock therapy — but whether it was effective. Only about one in six patients who received the treatment were cured in six weeks. So were one in 20 patients who got the placebo treatment.

A reasonable person could question whether the study had found any benefit at all, said Thomas Brott, the chairman of the FDA advisory committee and a Mayo Clinic neurologist in Florida.

The agency, said FDA spokesman Scott McFarland, determined that the treatment seemed especially effective for a subset of patients.

Patients who had unsuccessfully tried one antidepressant (as opposed to many treatments) seemed most likely to respond to TMS, Demitrack said.

The FDA approval last month recommends the magnetic therapy for patients who have failed one round of prior treatment.

Among patients who stayed on the therapy after the main study ended, Demitrack said, almost one in three were cured after six weeks — a measure, he said, of what patients might expect in real-world settings.

A course of TMS treatment might run $6,000 to $8,000 because insurance isn’t likely to cover it, said Philip Janicak, a professor of psychiatry at Rush University in Chicago who helped conduct the study.

The therapy, he said, is another tool for physicians.

“Is it the new standard of treatment for depression that will replace all other treatments and resolve all the problems we have with depression? No, it is not,” Janicak said. “We don’t have a treatment like that yet.”

http://www.columbusdispatch.com/live/content/life/stories/2008/11/21/1A_MAGNET_TREATMENT.ART_ART_11-21-08_D1_RDBU2K9.html?sid=101
For more information, call 1-877-600-7555 or visit www.neuronetics.com.


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