Monday, May 16, 2011

How to Spot Health Fraud

Source
by Paula Kurtzweil
You don't have to look far to find a health product that's totally bogus--or a consumer who's totally unsuspecting. Promotions for fraudulent products show up daily in newspaper and magazine ads and TV "infomercials." They accompany products sold in stores, on the Internet, and through mail-order catalogs. They're passed along by word-of-mouth.
And consumers respond, spending billions of dollars a year on fraudulent health products, according to Stephen Barrett, M.D., head of Quackwatch Inc., a nonprofit corporation that combats health fraud. Hoping to find a cure for what ails them, improve their well-being, or just look better, consumers often fall victim to products and devices that do nothing more than cheat them out of their money, steer them away from useful, proven treatments, and possibly do more bodily harm than good.
"There's a lot of money to be made," says Bob Gatling, director of the program operations staff in the Food and Drug Administration's Center for Devices and Radiological Health. "People want to believe there's something that can cure them."
FDA describes health fraud as "articles of unproven effectiveness that are promoted to improve health, well being or appearance." The articles can be drugs, devices, foods, or cosmetics for human or animal use.
FDA shares federal oversight of health fraud products with the Federal Trade Commission. FDA regulates safety, manufacturing and product labeling, including claims in labeling, such as package inserts and accompanying literature. FTC regulates advertising of these products.
Because of limited resources, says Joel Aronson, team leader for the nontraditional drug compliance team in FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, the agency's regulation of health fraud products is based on a priority system that depends on whether a fraudulent product poses a direct or indirect risk.
When the use of a fraudulent product results in injuries or adverse reactions, it's a direct risk. When the product itself does not cause harm but its use may keep someone away from proven, sometimes essential, medical treatment, the risk is indirect. For example, a fraudulent product touted as a cure for diabetes might lead someone to delay or discontinue insulin injections or other proven treatments.
While FDA remains vigilant against health fraud, many fraudulent products may escape regulatory scrutiny, maintaining their hold in the marketplace for some time to lure increasing numbers of consumers into their web of deceit.
How can you avoid being scammed by a worthless product? Though health fraud marketers have become more sophisticated about selling their products, Aronson says, these charlatans often use the same old phrases and gimmicks to gain consumers' attention--and trust. You can protect yourself by learning some of their techniques.
The following products typify three fraudulent products whose claims prompted FDA to issue warning letters to the products' marketers, notifying them that their products violated federal law. Two of the products also were added to FDA's import alert list of unapproved new drugs promoted in the United States. Products under import alert are barred from entry onto the U.S. market.
Take a look at these products' promotions. They are rife with the kind of red flags to look out for when deciding whether to try a health product unknown to you.
Paula Kurtzweil is a member of FDA's public affairs staff.

Tip-Offs to Rip-Offs

Product No. 1: Pure emu oil

FDA determined that a pure emu oil product marketed to treat or cure a wide range of diseases was an unapproved drug. Its marketer had never submitted to FDA data to support the product's safe and effective use.

One Product Does It All

" ... extremely beneficial in the treatment of rheumatism, arthritis ... infections ... prostate problems, ulcers ... cancer, heart trouble, hardening of the arteries, diabetes and more. ... "
"completely eliminating the gangrene ...
"... antibiotic, pain reliever ... ."
Be suspicious of products that claim to cure a wide range of unrelated diseases--particularly serious diseases, such as cancer and diabetes. No product can treat every disease and condition, and for many serious diseases, there are no cures, only therapies to help manage them.
Cancer, AIDS, diabetes, and other serious diseases are big draws because people with these diseases are often desperate for a cure and willing to try just about anything.

Personal Testimonials

"Alzheimer's Disease!!! My husband has Alzheimer. On September 2, 1998 he began eating 1 teaspoon full of ... Pure Emu Oil each day. ... Now (in just 22 days) he mowed the grass, cleaned out the garage, weeded the flower beds, and we take our morning walk again. It hasn't helped his memory much yet, but he is more like himself again!!!"
Personal testimonies can tip you off to health fraud because they are difficult to prove. Often, says Reynaldo Rodriguez, a compliance officer and health fraud coordinator for FDA's Dallas district office, testimonials are personal case histories that have been passed on from person to person. Or, the testimony can be completely made up.
"This is the weakest form of scientific validity," Rodriguez says. "It's just compounded hearsay."
Some patients' favorable experiences with a fraudulent product may be due more to a remission in their disease or from earlier or concurrent use of approved medical treatments, rather than use of the fraudulent product itself.

Quick Fixes

"... eliminates skin cancer in days! ..."
Be wary of talk that suggests a product can bring quick relief or provide a quick cure, especially if the disease or condition is serious. Even with proven treatments, few diseases can be treated quickly. Note also that the words "in days" can really refer to any length of time. Fraud promoters like to use ambiguous language like this to make it easier to finagle their way out of any legal action that may result.


Product No. 2: Over-the-counter transdermal weight-loss patch

FDA issued a warning letter to the marketer of the weight-loss product described here because it did not have an approved new drug application. Because of the newness of the dosage form--skin-delivery systems--FDA requires evidence of effectiveness, in the form of a new drug application, before the product can be marketed legally.

'Natural'

"Healthy, simple and natural-way to help you lose and control your weight."
Don't be fooled by the term "natural." It's often used in health fraud as an attention-grabber; it suggests a product is safer than conventional treatments. But the term doesn't necessarily equate to safety because some plants--for example, poisonous mushrooms--can kill when ingested. And among legitimate drug products, says Shelly Maifarth, a compliance officer and health fraud coordinator for FDA's Denver district office, 60 percent of over-the-counter drugs and 25 percent of prescription drugs are based on natural ingredients.
And, any product--synthetic or natural--potent enough to work like a drug is going to be potent enough to cause side effects.

Time-Tested or New-Found Treatment

"This revolutionary innovation is formulated by using proven principles of natural health based upon 200 years of medical science."
Usually it's one or the other, but this claim manages to suggest it's both a breakthrough and a decades-old remedy.
Claims of an "innovation," "miracle cure," "exclusive product," or "new discovery" or "magical" are highly suspect. If a product was a cure for a serious disease, it would be widely reported in the media and regularly prescribed by health professionals--not hidden in an obscure magazine or newspaper ad, late-night television show, or Website promotion, where the marketers are of unknown, questionable or nonscientific backgrounds.
The same applies to products purported to be "ancient remedies" or based on "folklore" or "tradition." These claims suggest that these products' longevity proves they are safe and effective. But some herbs reportedly used in ancient times for medicinal purposes carry risks identified only recently.

Satisfaction Guaranteed

"... Guarantee: If after 30 days ... you have not lost at least 4 pounds each week, ... your uncashed check will be returned to you ... ."
Here's another red flag: money-back guarantees, no questions asked.
Good luck getting your money back. Marketers of fraudulent products rarely stay in the same place for long. Because customers won't be able to find them, the marketers can afford to be generous with their guarantees.

Product No. 3: Unapproved weight-loss product marketed as an alternative to a prescription drug combination

FDA issued an import alert for a Canadian-made weight-loss product whose claims compared the product with two prescription weight-loss drugs taken off the market after FDA determined they posed a health hazard.

Promises of Easy Weight Loss

"Finally, rapid weight loss without dieting!"
For most people, there is only one way to lose weight: Eat less food (or fewer high-calorie foods) and increase activity.
Note the ambiguity of the term "rapid." A reasonable and healthy weight loss is about 1 to 2 pounds a week.

Paranoid Accusations

"Drug companies make it nearly impossible for doctors to resist prescribing their expensive pills for what ails you ... ."
"It seems these billion dollar drug giants all have one relentless competitor in common they all constantly fear--natural remedies."
These claims suggest that health-care providers and legitimate manufacturers are in cahoots with each other, promoting only the drug companies' and medical device manufacturers' products for financial gain. The claims also suggest that the medical profession and legitimate drug and device makers strive to suppress unorthodox products because they threaten their financial standing.
"This [accusation] is an easy way to get consumers' attention," says Marjorie Powell, assistant general counsel for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America. "But I would ask the marketers of such claims, 'Where's the evidence?' It would seem to me that in this country, outside of a regulatory agency it would be difficult to stop someone from making a claim."
Think about this, too: Would the vast number of people in the health-care field block treatments that could help millions of sick, suffering patients, many of whom could be family and friends? "It flies in the face of logic," Barrett says on his Quackwatch Website.

Meaningless Medical Jargon

"... Hunger Stimulation Point (HSP) ..."
"... thermogenesis, which converts stored fats into soluble lipids ..."
"One of the many natural ingredients is inolitol hexanicontinate."
Terms and scientific explanations such as these may sound impressive and may have an element of truth to them, but the public "has no way of discerning fact from fiction," Aronson says. Fanciful terms, he says, generally cover up a lack of scientific proof.
Sometimes, the terms or explanations are lifted from a study published in a reputable scientific journal, even though the study was on another subject altogether, says Martin Katz, a compliance officer and health fraud coordinator for FDA's Florida district office. And chances are, few people will check the original published study.
"Most people who are taken in by health fraud will grasp at anything," he says. "They're not going to do the research. They're looking for a miracle."


Truth or Dare

The underlying rule when deciding whether a product is authentic or not is to ask yourself: "Does it sound too good to be true?" If it does, it probably isn't true.
If you're still not sure, check it out: "Look into it--before you put it in your body or on your skin," says Reynaldo Rodriguez, a compliance officer and health fraud coordinator for FDA's Dallas district office.
To check a product out, FDA health fraud coordinators suggest:
  • Talk to a doctor or another health professional. "If it's an unproven or little-known treatment, always get a second opinion from a medical specialist," Rodriguez says.
  • Talk to family members and friends. Legitimate medical practitioners should not discourage you from discussing medical treatments with others. Be wary of treatments offered by people who tell you to avoid talking to others because "it's a secret treatment or cure."
  • Check with the Better Business Bureau or local attorneys generals' offices to see whether other consumers have lodged complaints about the product or the product's marketer.
  • Check with the appropriate health professional group--for example, the American Heart Association, American Diabetes Association, or the National Arthritis Foundation if the products are promoted for heart disease, diabetes or arthritis. Many of these groups have local chapters that can provide you with various resource materials about your disease.
  • Contact the FDA office closest to you. Look for the number and address in the blue pages of the phone book under U.S. Government, Health and Human Services, or go to http://www.fda.gov/AboutFDA/ContactFDA/FindanOfficeorStaffMember/FDAPublicAffairsSpecialists/default.htm on the FDA Website. FDA can tell you whether the agency has taken action against the product or its marketer. Your call also may alert FDA to a potentially illegal product and prevent others from falling victim to health fraud.
--P.K.

Joining Forces to Fight Fraud

Health fraud isn't confined to the United States only. It's worldwide, and to help combat it in North America, the United States has joined with Canada and Mexico to share knowledge and coordinate enforcement activities related to fraudulent health products, services and devices.
In announcing their decision in December 1998 to adopt the Joint Strategies Agreement, the countries agreed to:
  • share information on current trends in health fraud
  • cooperate in detecting health fraud along borders
  • share information about significant investigations in their country
  • consider each others' requests to investigate domestic activities and coordinate related enforcement activities
  • develop and distribute joint consumer and business education messages about health fraud.
--P.K.

Disorders of skin appendages (L60–L75, 703–706)

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

"Adaptógenos" y "la medicina sistémica"


Los adaptógenos son sustancias naturales que se encuentran solamente en unas cuantas plantas y hierbas raras. Las plantas y hierbas proporcionan nutrientes especiales que ayudan al cuerpo a alcanzar un rendimiento óptimo mental, físico y de trabajo.

Contenido

 

Historia

En los años de 1947 a 1991, durante la época de la llamada “guerra fría”, entre los Estados Unidos y la Unión Soviética existía un ambiente muy hostil y competitivo. Estas dos poderosas naciones del mundo competían en todos los niveles por ganar aliados a sus respectivas ideologías.
En aquella época los rusos trataban de demostrarle al resto del mundo que sus tecnologías, poder militar, capacidades físicas y deportivas eran las mejores. Ambas naciones competían en una carrera de lanzamientos espaciales y tecnología nuclear.
El científico ruso Dr. Nicolai Lazarev, que inventó el nombre "adaptógeno", descubrió los Adaptógenos en 1947.
Los adaptógenos son sustancias naturales que regulan la química interna del cuerpo en la dirección que sea necesaria para lograr un equilibrio. Aumentan la resistencia del cuerpo a cualquier situación estresante (sobrepeso, debilidad física, cansancio, estrés emocional, etc.) Dan la impresión de ser sustancias “inteligentes” que logran lo mismo aumentar que reducir lo que sea necesario en el cuerpo como para lograr un mejor nivel de adaptación y un equilibrio físico, mental y emocional.
Por muchos años los rusos condujeron estudios científicos secretos sobre los adaptógenos con la idea de obtener ventaja para sus soldados, atletas y cosmonautas. Hicieron extensos estudios con sus poblaciones para determinar las propiedades y los efectos de los adaptógenos. Estos estudios eran secretos del estado ruso y solamente trabajaban en ellos sus científicos contratados. Los atletas y los cosmonautas rusos usaban, de forma secreta, adaptógenos para obtener mayor resistencia, aumentos en la fuerza física, mejor concentración mental, mejor coordinación de reflejos y tiempos de reacción.

En 1991 se disolvió la Unión Soviética y cayó el régimen comunista que había dominado a Rusia por tantas generaciones. Desde ese día los científicos que habían trabajado en secreto con los adaptógenos quedaron sin trabajo. Muchos de ellos emigraron hacia Europa y Estados Unidos y con ellos nos llegó la información sobre la existencia de estas maravillosas sustancias naturales.
Cuando ya habían sido clasificadas 3,700 hierbas naturales con sus propiedades, solamente 11 de ellas habían sido consideradas “adaptógenos”. Para que alguna clase de hierba o planta natural sea considerada como adaptógeno debe tener la característica especial de poder trabajar en dos direcciones opuestas según le sea necesario al cuerpo. O sea, debe tener la característica de ser bidireccional en su funcionamiento. Hasta ese momento, sólo 11 de las hierbas o plantas del planeta cumplen con este requisito.
==============================
Fuente
"Eficaces e inocuos". "50.000 estudios serios". Más de "4.000 pacientes curados" desahuciados por la medicina convencional. Artilugios capaces de diagnosticar "140.000 enfermedades". Este es solo un pequeño fragmento del catálogo de maravillas que ofrece "Adaptógenos Internacionales", la empresa del ingeniero "especialista en satélites artificiales" José Olalde. 
Lo que se inició como una modesta empresa distribuidora de productos herbarios (manufacturados por Nulab Inc., de Los Angeles, Estados Unidos) ha evolucionado hasta convertirse en un impresionante maquinaria seudomédica, que incluye los pomposamente llamados "Centros Médicos Docentes Adaptógenos", su propia seudomedicina, creada ad hoc por Olalde y bautizada como "Sistemics", y la "graduación" de "especialistas" en un especialidad inexistente. Todo esto respaldado por una agresiva campaña de mercadeo y el uso "creativo" y a conveniencia de la bibliografía médica. Y por supuesto, contando con la perfecta indiferencia de las autoridades médicas y sanitarias, reacias a asumir las responsabilidades que son de su clara incumbencia.
Esta página sumariza todo lo que usted necesita saber sobre los adaptógenos, a pesar de que los coloridos folletos y las aparatosas promociones televisivas de José Olalde y Cia. se abstengan de decírselo.
La AREV y los "Adaptógenos"
Informe especial de Lúcido: "Adaptógenos": Una farsa "natural". 
Mas sobre los adaptógenos en Lúcido:
Crónicas adaptogénicas I  Lúcido N° 10 - Julio de 2003
Crónicas adaptogénicas II Lucido N° 12 - Diciembre de 2003



HEMEROTECA ADAPTOGÉNICA
Un "exito" adaptogénico Parientes cuestionan tratamiento del Centro Médico Adaptógeno. Familia denuncia mala praxis - Nélida Fernandez (El Universal - 31/03/2004)
La medicina sistemica ofrece su version de los hechos (El Universal - 31/03/ 2004) Olalde y Magarici culpan al Hospital Universitario de Caracas.
Opiniones
Adaptógenos y otras adaptosidades médicas - Eduardo Romero Vecchione (El Universal - 23/02/2004)
Organizaciones científicas, sanitarias y gremiales CONDENAN la seudomedicina sistémica:
Comunicado de la Red de Sociedades Científicas (pdf).
Ministerio de Salud adelanta investigaciones sobre adaptógenos - Nélida Fernández (El Universal, 15 de diciembre  de 2004)
Mundo científico nacional denuncia a la Medicina Sistémica - Nélida Fernández (El Universal, 14 de diciembre  de 2004)
Ministerio de Salud investiga adaptógenos - Nélida Fernández (El Universal, 02 de abril de 2004)
Posición del Ministerio de Salud en debate sobre Medicina Sistémica. Excesos en publicidad - Nélida Fernandez (El Universal, 26/02/2004) 
Una polémica medicina sistémica. Exigen estudios científicos que prueben la eficacia de los adaptógenos - Nélida Fernández (El Universal,  25/02/2004)
Min-Salud regulará publicidad para la venta de medicamentos - Marielba Nuñez (El Nacional, 20/02/2004)
Podrían sancionar a médicos que promocionan adaptógenos - Marielba Nuñez (El Nacional, 18/02/2004)
Comunicado del Tribunal Disciplinario de la FMV en relación a los adaptógenos - (El Nacional, 07/02/2004)
Defensoría pide veracidad en publicidad de adaptógenos - (El Nacional, 07/11/2003) 
Oncólogos piden a Capella modificar publicidad de adaptógenos - Marielba Nuñez (El Nacional, 05/11/2003).
Médicos denuncian publicidad engañosa de adaptógenos - Nélida Fernández (El Universal, 01/11/2003) 
Solicitan a Min-Salud que prohíba publicidad de adaptógenos - Vanessa Davis (El Nacional, 01/11/2003)
Asociaciones médicas cuestionan publicidad de producto natural - Marielba Nuñez (El Nacional, 27/10/2003). 
Medicina mágica se encuentra al servicio de la oportunidad (El Universal, 22/10/2003).
Comunicado de Academia Nacional de Medicina, Facultad de Farmacia, Facultad de Medicina de la UCV y Red de Sociedades Científicas Médicas Venezolanas. (El Nacional  24/11/2003). 
La Federación Médica de Venezuela finalmente habló: Posición doctrinaria de la Federación Médica de Venezuela en relación a los medicamentos adaptógenos (El Nacional 04/10/2003). 

Monday, March 28, 2011

Top 10 home remedies

Source 
The Doctor’s Book of Home Remedies
Inspired by a comment on the List Universe Forums, I decided to write a list of home remedies for some very common ills we all suffer.
10. Toothache
Most toothaches are due to bacteria and decay that have penetrated the tissue at the tooth’s center, according to Kenneth H. Burrell, D.D.S., director of the American Dental Association’s Council on Dental Therapeutics in Chicago. The subsequent inflammation causes pressure, which causes pain. Eugenol (oil of cloves) is available over the counter and provides exceptional temporary relief, especially for toothaches that are temperature-sensitive. Most drugstores sell eugenol toothache kits. You can even mix liquid eugenol with zinc oxide to create your own temporary fillings for painful cavities. A few drops on the tooth surface or in a cavity or crack should do the job until you can get to the dentist.
9. Headache
Americans spend more than $400 million a year on over-the-counter pain relievers, says Seymour Diamond, M.D., executive director of the National Headache Foundation and director of the Diamond Headache Clinic in Chicago. But before you spend yet another buck on pills that put down pain, here’s how to head off headaches the drug-free way. “You can ‘massage’ away headaches by pressing on certain acupressure spots,” says Dr. Sheftell. “One way is to squeeze the web of skin between your thumb and forefinger. Another area is the tiny ridge between your neck and the back of your head (approximately parallel with your earlobes).” You should also try to avoid bright lights and apply a cold compress to your head.
8. Chilblains
Chilblains are acral ulcers that occur when a predisposed individual is exposed to cold and humidity. Causes are idiopathic or manifestations of serious medical conditions that need to be investigated. A time proven method to reduce the itching and pain that goes with chilblain is to soak your feet in a pot of warm urine. Yes – that’s right – pee. Urine is highly alkaline.
7. Boils
Boils are the result of bacteria that invade through a microscopic break in the skin and infect a blocked oil gland or hair follicle. An abscess results when white blood cells, sent to kill the invaders, produce pus. Sounds nasty, but even though boils are sometimes painful and ugly, they’re rarely dangerous. A good home remedy for boils is using compresses of heated slices of tomato–or raw onion, mashed garlic or the outer leaves of cabbage. You can press these cut vegetables directly on the boil and see for yourself how well they work. Another kitchen compress: place a warm tea bag of black tea directly on the boil for 15 minutes several times a day.
6. Bee Stings
One of the best ways to remove a stinger–and avoid any additional pain–is to “scrape”–it out of the skin with a credit card, a knife or a long fingernail, advises John Yunginger, M.D., professor and pediatrics consultant at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. “The biggest mistake people make is trying to pull the stinger out. In doing that, you squeeze the tiny venom sac attached to the stinger and accidentally release more venom into your skin.” If you scrape the stinger out, this sac goes undisturbed. Some doctors say baking soda can help ease bee sting pain. Claude Frazier, M.D., an allergist in Asheville, North Carolina, recommends applying a paste of baking soda and water directly on the sting for 15 or 20 minutes. Another cure is to make a paste with meat tenderizer and water and apply it to the sting – the tenderizer breaks down the proteins in the venom, speeding up recovery.
5. Upset stomach
The cheapest home remedy (which is also available in most homes) is a glass of water with baking soda mixed in to it. This relieves stomach ache caused by gas, and helps to neutralize stomach acids.
4. Chafing
Mild chafing happens to everyone, and usually just applying baby powder or talc to the problem area will help keep your skin happy, however if the problem persists – or you don’t have talc at home, try this: take cornstarch, spread it out across a baking pan and warm it in an oven at 150° F for about ten minutes, so it’s really dry. Test the temperature first. Then lightly dust it onto the problem area.
3. Earache
A typical earache begins when a congested eustachian tube-which runs from the back of the throat to the eardrum-can’t regulate pressure or fluids in the ear. Pain starts when mucus or pus builds up behind the eardrum. The more the fluid builds, the greater the pressure and pain. Some people swear by old-time heat treatments like this: warm up an oven-safe plate, wrap it in a towel, and rest your aching ear right on it. The plate should be warm and comforting, not hot. If you get an insect stuck in your ear, flush it out with alcohol – do not try to work it out with your finger or other objects as it is likely to push it further in. Once you have flushed it out, rinse your ear out with warm water.
2. Cold Sores
Cold sores (also known as fever blisters) are uninvited guests. You may be free of them for months or even years … until one day when they drop in on you, usually at the worst possible time. Their stay may be merely inconvenient or downright painful, but it’s never pleasant. And once you get them, they stay a lot longer than a weekend. In fact, once you have the herpes simplex virus–which is what causes cold sores–you never permanently get rid of it. A compress of whole milk placed directly on the cold sore can ease pain and speed the healing process. Allow the milk to sit at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes before placing the compress on your skin. Be sure to rinse your skin afterward, because the milk can become sour smelling. Note: Whole milk, with its extra protein, works–other kinds don’t have the same healing effect. Alternatively, you can apply a high-alcohol content perfume to the area to dry it out. You will need to repeat this often and it can sting.
1. Burns
Milk is an excellent compress for minor burns; simply soak the burned area in milk for 15 minutes or so, or apply a milk-soaked washcloth to the area. Whole milk is effective: Its fat content soothes burns and promotes healing. But make sure to rinse your skin and the washcloth in cool water afterward, because the milk will smell. Additionally, Preparation H, the hemorrhoid treatment cream, is also incredibly effective when treating minor burns – just dab it on the area and you can cut 3 or more days off the healing time. This is because it contains a yeast derivative that speeds healing.
A word of warning about burns: You probably will instinctively reach for cold water to soothe a new burn. But don’t make it too cold. Using ice water can risk making the burn even worse, because extreme cold can kill just as many skin cells as extreme heat. (That’s why frostbite damage is very similar to the skin damage caused by a bad burn.) Cool, not cold, water will stop the burning from spreading through your tissues and will act as a temporary painkiller. So instead of running to the freezer, head to the kitchen faucet.

Antisépticos

Source


ORALES



Agua bicarbonatada (En 1 litro de agua hervida diluir 2 cucharadas de bicarbonato): 2 enjuagues de 1 minuto/día, 5-6 días. Gargarismos suaves sin tragar.
Agua de manzanilla (hacer infusión con las flores a granel y colar): 2 enjuagues con el agua templada de 1-2 minutos/día, 5-6 días. Gargarismos suaves sin tragar.
Agua salada ( En 1 litro de agua hervida diluir 2 cucharadas de sal): 2 enjuagues de 1 minuto/día, 3-4 días. Gargarismos suaves sin tragar.
Clorhexidina: 2 enjuagues de 1-2 minutos/día, 5-6 días. Gargarismos suaves sin tragar.
Hexetidina: 3 enjuagues de 1-2 minutos/día, 5-6 días. Gargarismos suaves sin tragar.
Peroxido de hidrógeno 3% (diluir al 50% en agua): 3 enjuagues de 1-2 minutos/día, 3-4 días. Gargarismos suaves sin tragar.
Povidona iodada: 3 enjuagues de 1-2 minutos/día, 5-6 días. Gargarismos suaves sin tragar.

ÓTICOS
 
Ácido acético: (Ácido acético al 2% en alcohol isopropílico al 60-70%, preparar 100 cc) 5 gotas cada 12 horas 10 días.
Alcohol boricado: (Ácido bórico al 5% en alcohol isopropílico al 60-70%, preparar 100 cc). Llenar conducto gota a gota cada 12 horas 10 días.
Violeta de genciana: (Violeta de genciana al 2% en alcohol al 95%, preparar 100 cc)
5 gotas cada 12 horas 10 días.
NASALES
Agua de mar hipertónica: 2 pulverizaciones cada 8 horas 7-10 días VN. En niños (más de 6 meses) 1 inhalación/8 horas VN.
Agua de mar isotónica: 2 pulverizaciones/ 6 horas 7-10 días VN. En niños 1 inhalación/6 horas VN.
Agua natural: 1 lavado nasal con jeringa/ 8 horas 7-10 días VN.
Agua salada: (En un litro de agua hervida diluir 1 cucharada de sal). Un lavado nasal con jeringa/8 horas 7-10 días VN.
Fusafungina: 1 inhalación/6 horas VO-VN.
Solución con clorato potásico + Bicarbonato sódico + Cloruro sódico: 1 lavado/8 horas VN.
Suero fisiológico con Cloruro sódico 0,9%: 1 lavado/8 horas 7-10 días VN.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Calomel

Mercury(I) chloride is thechemical compound with the formula Hg2Cl2. Also known as calomel (a mineral form, rarely found in nature) ormercurous chloride, this dense white or yellowish-white, odorless solid is the principal example of amercury(I) compound.

Contents

History

The name calomel is thought to come from the Greekκαλός beautiful, and μέλαςblack. This name (somewhat surprising for a white compound) is probably due to its characteristicdisproportionation reaction with ammonia, which gives a spectacular black coloration due to the finely dispersed metallic mercury formed. It is also referred to as the mineral horn quicksilver orhorn mercury. Calomel was taken internally and used as a laxative and disinfectant, as well as in the treatment of syphilis, until the early 20th century.
Mercury became a popular remedy for a variety of physical and mental ailments during the age of "heroic medicine." It was used by doctors in America throughout the 18th century, and during the revolution, to make patients regurgitate and release their body from "impurities". Benjamin Rush, a famed physician in colonial Philadelphia and signatory to the Declaration of Independence, was one particular well-known advocate of mercury in medicine and famously used calomel to treat sufferers ofyellow fever during its outbreak in the city in 1793. Calomel was given to patients as a purgative until they began to salivate. However, it was often administered to patients in such great quantities that their hair and teeth fell out.[3] Shortly after yellow fever struck Philadelphia, the disease broke out in Jamaica. 
A war of words broke out in the newspapers concerning the best treatment for yellow fever;
bleeding or calomel.
Anecdotal evidence indicates calomel was more effective than bleeding. [4]

Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound

Lydia Estes Pinkham (February 9, 1819 – May 17, 1883) was an iconic concocter and shrewd marketer of a commercially successful herbal-alcoholic "women's tonic" meant to relieve menstrual andmenopausal pains.

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Like many women of her time Lydia Pinkham brewed home remedies, which she continually collected. Her remedy for "female complaints" became very popular among her neighbours to whom she gave it away. One story is that her husband was given the recipe as part payment for a debt,[6] whatever truth may be in this the ingredients of her remedy were generally consistent with the herbal knowledge available to her through such sources as John King's American Dispensary which she is known to have owned and used.[4] In Lydia Pinkham's time and place the reputation of the medical profession was low. Medical fees were too expensive for most Americans to afford except in emergencies, in which case the remedies were more likely to kill than cure. For example a common "medicine" was calomel, in fact not a medicine but a deadly mercurial toxin, and this fact was even at the time sufficiently well known among the sceptical to be the subject of a popular comic song.[7] In these circumstances there is no mystery why many preferred to trust unlicensed "root and herb" practitioners, and to trust women prepared to share their domestic remedies such as Lydia Pinkham.[8]
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound  became one of the best known patent medicines of the 19th century.