Archive for June, 2010

Osteoarthritis

hescaorg asked:


An entry from the 2009 Health and Science Communications Association (HeSCA) Media Festival. For more information, visit: www.hesca.org

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Out of Joint: A Private and Public Story of Arthritis (American Lives)
 
Manufacturer: University of Nebraska Press
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She begins, in the morning, by casing her joints: Can her ankles take the stairs? Will her fingers open a jar? Peel an orange? But it was not always this way for Mary Felstiner, who went to bed one night an active professional and healthy young mother, and woke the next morning literally out of joint. With wrists and elbows no longer working right, she’d discovered one of the first signs of rheumatoid arthritis, the most virulent form of a common disease. Out of Joint is her account of living through arthritis, a distinction she shares with seventy million Americans.
 
While arthritis pain affects one out of three Americans, this book is the first to tell the personal story of the nation’s most common yet neglected disease. Part memoir, part medical and social history, Out of Joint folds the author’s private experience into far-reaching investigations of a socially hidden ailment and of any chronic condition—how to handle love, work, sexuality, fatigue, betrayal, pain, time, mortality, rights, myths, and memory. Moving from the 1940s to the present, this story of one life with arthritis exposes little-known medical research and provocative social issues: alarming controversies over arthritis miracle drugs, intense demands concerning disability, and the surprising and disproportionate number of women affected by chronic illness. From this prize-winning historian comes a call for healing through history, a moving meditation on the way chronic conditions can be treated by enlisting the past.

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Out of Joint but In Synch
 
Review Date: February 28, 2006
Reviewer: A. Wexler,
Although I had intended to read Out of Joint slowly, chapter by chapter, once I began the momentum built until I stayed up extremely late one night to finish it. It is a gorgeous, haunting, painful, exhilarating, breathtaking book, and one that is as much poetry as powerful analysis. This is a deeply courageous book, one willing to stay inside the pain and the joints---I felt almost as if I were right in there, almost inside this body. The book conveys that bodily presence so beautifully, it is quite amazing. It also conveys both movement and stasis, a sense of the endlessness of pain, but through it all the movements of the author's mind, as she explored different facets of it, and in many different sites--library, clinic, home, mountainside, street, office, and classroom. I felt as if I were traveling along with her, on a sort of Pilgrim's Progress, on a quest, even if there is no ultimate resolution, though there are moments of release and exultation. This will become a classic text, not just about arthritis but about writing, and about memoir, and about the body. I hope it will be read widely everywhere. Many thanks for writing such a wise and generous and sensuous book, one that, even in the darkness, is full of light!



Thank You Mary Felstiner
 
Review Date: February 19, 2006
Reviewer: Katrina,
Finally, a book that addresses not only the physical effects but also the emotional effects of Rheumatoid Arthritis. Mary Felstiner graciously allows the reader to join her on an honest and difficult journey of pain and acceptance. She offers insight and understanding to a disease that does not get the attention it deserves. If you have an autoimmune disease or love someone that does, this book is a must read.
Beautiful Investigation of Connectedness
 
Review Date: March 14, 2006
Reviewer: Harriet Chessman, The Bay Area
I enjoyed this book so greatly. I love the way Mary Felstiner approaches the subject of joints, jointedness, connection, from such varied angles, using documents of cultural, personal, and medical history. Magnificent!! What a huge accomplishment this book represents. Apart from all else, I've learned a staggering amount from this gifted author about the body in a cultural context, and this has illuminated a lot of questions in my own life.
Appreciation for Out of Joint
 
Review Date: March 21, 2006
Reviewer: Chris Keats, Chevy Chase, MD United States
Buy this book! And discover the magic which Mary
Felstiner, a prize-winning professor of history,
brings to words. This story about rheumatoid arthritis
is a page-turner. Felstiner's gift for mixing plain
speech with the technical and erudite is totally
astounding. Further, she demonstrates the healing
potential of narrative, a multi-faceted narrative
glinting with allusion. Through her account, Felstiner
manages to make us proud to be human, capable at the
same time of suffering and transcendence. Five stars.
AN IMPORTANT BOOK
 
Review Date: March 23, 2006
Reviewer: Rachel Newman, New York, NY USA
Mary Lowenthal Felstiner has written an important book on many levels. Out of Joint should become the classic for anyone struggling with a chronic problem, be it physical or mental. Mary has an amazing ability to express what so many of us feel ...but in an original, refreshing, and totally unique way.
I loved her refusal to quit or to accept that nothing more could be done. Like that energetic bunny, she just kept on going, searching for probable causes, exploring possible cures, and keeping a constant, sometimes hilarious, dialogue with herself. This book is also a lesson in how to go about family life and love the RIGHT way...an inspiration to us all.
Arther asked:


Iv’e had surgery for my knees, but haven’t been able to stop or slow down deformity and pain in my finger joints. I would appreciate others with osteoarthritis replying with suggestions

Arthritis?

Tanuh asked:


im 13 years old and have a really bad habbit of cracking my toes. i ***** them all the time. but two toes on my right foot hurt now whenever i try to ***** them, is it maybe arthritis??


It is a predator that knows no boundaries. Young, old, black, white, male and female – this is an equal-opportunity predator that can render its victims immobile.

1. Who is this culprit?

Osteoarthritis.

Osteoarthritis goes by many names – degenerative joint disease, wear-and-tear-arthritis among them – but the facts remain. Osteoarthritis is the most common type of arthritis and affects an estimated 20 million Americans. Unlike other forms of arthritis, which are genetic, osteoarthritis can be linked to a number of causes – weight, age and injury among them. As with other forms of arthritis, there is no known cure for osteoarthritis, so recognizing the signs and symptoms of the disease early can be quite helpful in managing pain.

First, a little background. As its other names imply, osteoarthritis is inflammation caused by abnormal wear of the cartilage cushion in the joints. In a joint affected by osteoarthritis, this wear and tear leads to the degeneration of cartilage and the body is unable to replenish its own supply of this most precious resource. Inflammation causes mild to severe pain and, in some cases, degeneration is so severe that doctors will recommend replacement of the joint.

So what should you know about osteoarthritis? Here are three things to get you started.

2. Listen to your body.

Pain, particularly in the weight-bearing joints of the lower body, is a good indicator of osteoarthritis. Although osteoarthritis can affect any joint, particularly after traumatic injury or infection, most cases of osteoarthritis occur in the weight-bearing joints of the knees, hips, spine and ankles. Often, obesity or even moderately overweight can cause osteoarthritis pain to flare up. Losing a few pounds can help decrease pain, as can rest and judicious use of affected joints. For example, recurring pain in the knees is a good indicator that you might want to stop your rigorous running regimen, if only for a few weeks.

3. Early diagnosis is important for successful long-term pain management.

Although not all cases of osteoarthritis are visible on x-ray, your doctor – particularly if he or she is an internist or rheumatologist – can diagnose osteoarthritis with little problem. Medical history, physical examination and blood tests, along with MRI and x-ray offer reliable avenues for accurate diagnoses.

There is hope for osteoarthritis sufferers.

Osteoarthritis is degenerative – that means that the disease will get worse over time. The most commonly prescribed medications treat the pain by decreasing joint inflammation temporarily. Unfortunately, these medications – known as NSAIDs – also come with a host of dangerous and, in some cases deadly, side effects.

Non-prescription NSAIDs are also available over the counter – in the form of pills, potions and lotions – but the relief is short lived. Like their prescription counterparts, these chemically based medications only treat the symptoms. They mask the pain for a few hours and then the patient must take more. Over time, the body builds up a certain resistance and pain relief decreases.

There is hope, however, in the form of a natural treatment with no side effects. A treatment that treats more than the symptoms – it gets to the root of the problem by replenishing damaged cartilage in the arthritic joint.

Supplementation with all-natural glucosamine and chondroitin, the building blocks of healthy cartilage, has been shown to actually improve the condition of arthritic joints, without dangerous side effects. Pain relief and healing – a powerful combination.

By: Jack Russel

About the Author:
Leading the charge is America’s most trusted brand – Synflex Premium Liquid Glucosamine. With a unique liquid formula, Synflex (Syn-flex) stands out from the rest by offering an excellent and effective product at an affordable price.

With Syn-flex Premium Liquid Glucosamine formulas, Osteoarthritis relief is only a mouse click away. Visit http://www.syn-flex-usa.com today and find out how.

Dr. Max Gerson Healing the Hopeless

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Dr. Max Gerson Healing the Hopeless
 
Manufacturer: Quarry Health Books
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Life story of controversial health care pioneer, Dr. Max Gerson, including his dietary and detox therapies for treating cancer and chronic disease, including his well-known coffee enema. Dr. Gerson was the first medical ecologist, making the connection between health and environment. Born in Germany, he practiced medicine there until 1933 and made his reputation by curing tuberculosis and other degenerative diseases. He cured Dr. Albert Schweitzer's Type wife of lung tuberculosis with his special diet. Moving to the U.S., he wrote a controversial book on the links between nutrition and cancer: A Cancer Therapy: Results of 50 Cases(1958), and practiced medicine until his death in 1959. Undaunted by attacks on his ideas, Dr. Gerson founded nutritional treatment centers in New York State for cancer and other illnesses. The Gerson Institute in San Diego, CA, and the Gerson Clinic in Mexico, both founded by his daughter, Charlotte Gerson, still thrive.

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ABC World News Now Arthritis

bigboss969696 asked:


“The Laughing Taina” Hernandez and her pathetic Sidekick Ryan Owens laugh during the news. Iraq policies, fires, even arthritis make these two simpletons the most disturbing anchors ever in broadcasting history. It’s extremely sad to laugh at peoples misfortunes. ABC needs help. These two have no credibility.

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The Other Midlife Crisis: Arthritis and Those Other Aches and Pains
 
Manufacturer: Whiskey Hollow Press
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In The Other Midlife Crisis Dr. Wilson explains with clarity and humor where arthritis and all those aches and pains come from, what treatment strategies actually work and what doesn’t work. With plain language and his own illustrations he unravels for his fellow baby boomers, everything from carpal tunnel syndrome to backache to knee arthritis.

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arthritis ?

kinzj asked:


my fingers feel a little a sore when i bend them.
my left index finger is very tight and sore in the morning when i first get up. After i move it a little it doesnt hurt or bother me .Just in the morning when im getting up and iv been sleeping all night, Its very tight and sore.
is it arthritis? anything to take or do? jim
California Dreamer asked:


I am only in my late 40’s, I like to work a little bit more, thought not as much as before. I fell ill for Rheumatoid Arthritis for 4 years, and taking predisone for it. I went through hell dealing with the pains. Now, the spring water seems to work. However, I must move to a new place where I can find a job. Does anyone know of a non-desert place with weather that don’t inflict arthritis pains?
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