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Chinese Alternative Diagnosis of Hemorrhoids

Posted on February 20th, 2008 in Information by hemroids

Chinese herbal remedies are said to be powerful in treating certain ailments. It is also reported to be a good first aid option while waiting for clinic day. Chinese alternative diagnosis of an ailment is also a good option, especially for checking for hemorrhoids. Here’s an example of how the wonders of Chinese herbal medicine diagnosis checks patients for hemorrhoids.

When reading Chinese herbal medicine treatments, instructions may sound easy enough to do. But that is better left to the experts to do. It’s safer to tinker with Chinese alternative diagnostic procedures instead. This literature is merely for detecting symptoms or patterns indicating a possible hemorrhoids case.

A note of caution on treatment: laymen who are not experts in Chinese herbal medicine ought to restrain from trying anything read from Chinese herbal medicine materials concerning hemorrhoids treatment.

In Chinese alternative diagnosis, there are major hemorrhoids symptoms. These are similar to what Medical Science has found about hemorrhoids patterns. They may manifest together or singly in different people, depending on the severity of the hemorrhoids problem. It’s not necessary that all symptoms must appear; sometimes they overlap each other, sometimes they seem to appear with other complications. In fact, some hemorrhoids cases don’t even show any symptom or pattern for a certain period.

Initially, a suspected hemorrhoids patient may examine the presence of certain symptoms for a possible case of the illness. The patterns enumerated below may serve as a guideline for self-examination. Its nature of being herbal (as opposed to synthetic or traditional medicine) makes Chinese herbal medicine and its alternative diagnosis safe hemorrhoids alternative procedures.

The major hemorrhoids symptoms or patterns observed (from initial to advanced symptoms) are:

The so-called Intestinal Wind. This includes bleeding right before or after a bowel movement. Blood may also be on the toilet paper used. Often, the hemorrhoids at this stage have no clear systemic hint.

Then there’s the dry intestine symptom. This is commonly linked with regular constipation. The dry intestine pattern indicates a blockade or a movement difficulty in the bowels. The resulting problem is severe straining during defecation which put a lot of undue strain and pressure on the anal and rectal veins. The veins are then inflammated, resulting in varicose veins at the anal area.
 
Another hemorrhoids symptom is the damp or heat. This is often connected with swelling, unsettling pain, anal puffiness and uncomfortable heat sensations.

Chinese herbal medicine sees hemorrhoids in similar ways as do medical science.

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Three Hemorrhoid Remedies Most People Ignore

Posted on February 2nd, 2008 in Home Treatment by hemroids

This may be news for some people, but we have to see that there’s more to life than being too engrossed with hemorrhoid troubles. There are practical ways of dealing with hemorrhoids.

Always go for soft and easy stools. It’s all so easy. The thing is to make the main thing in hemorrhoid treatment the main thing—avoid constipation. That’s all there is to it, most times at least. Get rid of constipated bowel movement and hemorrhoids won’t even dare take peeks at us. What makes us sit there on the throne for eternities, twisting faces and moaning ghoulish grunts just to successfully move bowels? Constipation? Well, not exactly. It’s really wrong diets to blame. Too less fiber constipates, that’s the rule. And constipation gives birth to the dreaded hemorrhoids when undue pressures are on our rectal or anal veins. If we just keep our diets extra fibrous each meal—lots of fruits and veggies, plus fruit juices like pineapple and prune juice—we won’t even know how hemorrhoids is spelled. The illness won’t touch us.

Add in some jelly works. Jelly works? Apparently, petroleum jelly (the generic for a gentle cream-like petroleum by-product said to be very harmless and helps in putting a slippery touch on our anal canal) makes things extra effortless at the rectal or anal area. Thus, an extra fibrous diet each meal each day (for an extra soft stool), plus an extra slippery anal canal equals an extra efficient bowel movement—as easy as one, two, three. With a clean cotton swab or bud or your finger, gently spread the jelly work about half an inch deep into the rectum area.

A little self-respect won’t hurt. After the soft stool has emerged from the easy bowel movement next comes cleaning and washing. Some people prefer toilet paper, some washing with soap and water. Make sure the water or toilet paper is clean. Some people wet the toilet paper a bit before applying. Just make sure no paper bits are left in the anal area. Modern toilet bowls are fitted with strong but gentle sprinklers. This helps for a more thorough cleaning and washing. Never use detergent soaps. Mild non-fragrance soaps are advised. Avoid using rough and scratchy toilet paper. More so, those with chemical irritants. If possible, use colorless or simply white toilet paper.

The point is, to avoid or deal with hemorrhoids, remember to keep fit, eat right, and keep clean. Do this religiously and bid hemorrhoids farewell.

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