by NDNR | Apr 11, 2008 | 2008 | April, Autoimmune/Allergy Medicine, Nature Cure, Pain Medicine
Fateh Srajeldin, ND The purpose of this case report is to present the treatment of severe, long-standing adult onset asthma using alternative therapies, including IV therapy. The patient had a lengthy history of upper respiratory tract infections that were treated...
by NDNR | Apr 11, 2008 | 2008 | April, Autoimmune/Allergy Medicine, Bacterial/Viral Infections, Detoxification Medicine, Endocrinology, Homeopathy
Robert Schwartz, ND, LAc As NDs, we are the best physicians at taking care of disease utilizing natural substances, but we also need to be the best at diagnosing the true cause of the dis-ease. We are getting better all the time. I hope you find a piece of this...
by NDNR | Apr 11, 2008 | 2008 | April, Education
David Schleich, PhD The “natural medicine” family tree has innumerable roots and branches. The complexity of those limbs makes it increasingly important to settle on a definitional framework that makes sense to the political, social and educational...
by NDNR | Apr 11, 2008 | 2008 | April, Autoimmune/Allergy Medicine, Gastrointestinal, Pain Medicine
Steven Sandberg-Lewis, ND, DHANP As NDs, we are aware of the central role the digestive tract plays in the general health of patients. This article will focus on autoimmunity and the gastrointestinal organs, including the stomach, pancreas and intestines. Autoimmune...
by NDNR | Apr 11, 2008 | 2008 | April, Anxiety/Depression/Mental Health, Mind/Body, Women's Health
Pamela Milroy, ND At a seminar in Toronto, I was discussing with a colleague a recent Canadian study published in the American Journal of Epidemiology, which identified a 73% higher rate of suicide among women with breast implants compared to the general population....
by NDNR | Apr 11, 2008 | 2008 | April, Autoimmune/Allergy Medicine, Dermatology, Homeopathy, Pain Medicine
Joseph Kellerstein, DC, ND Case Study 1 David first visited my office in June 1989. The presenting complaint was a severe eczema of the fingers. He had had it “forever.” It was between the digits and on the dorsum. The evolution of each cycle was typical: It began as...