In
addition to avoiding one's specific hypersensitivity triggers such as dairy
products, shellfish, or gluten, there are many proactive nutritional solutions
available. All will help restore the body's natural ability to create internal
balance and more normal functioning.
The most
important recommendation is to drink enough water. Most of us don't do this.
Coffee, tea, juice, and soda don't count. Water is the key - eight cups per day
are recommended. If you're not used to drinking water, start with four cups per
day, get used to doing that, and work your way up to eight cups per day.
Put
simply, if you're not drinking enough water, your internal metabolic environment
is toxic. For those with hypersensitivity problems, not drinking enough water
exacerbates the problem. Drink water!
Also,
make sure you're doing food combining, eating portions of protein and portions
of carbohydrate at each meal. Combining protein and carbohydrate is
metabolically efficient, keeping your blood sugar level throughout the day, and
removing unwanted stress on your endocrine and other systems.
Allergies
and asthma are big business. Approximately 50 million Americans suffer from
allergies, and approximately 20 million suffer from asthma. With some overlap
between the conditions, more than 60 million Americans experience either
allergies, asthma, or both.
The costs
for medications, hospital and emergency room admissions, and loss of business
productivity are huge - approximately $18 billion annually. And, the impact on
children is significant and ongoing - 14 million school days are missed
annually due to allergies and asthma. These disorders are the number one reason
for school absenteeism.
Standard
treatment for allergies and asthma consists of a variety of medications, and if
you have one of these disorders, you know all about the meds. For allergies,
typical medications include antihistamines and corticosteroid nasal sprays. You
may also undergo more aggressive therapy - desensitization injections, known as
immunotherapy, which are given regularly over a period of years.
For
asthma, the gold standard of medication is inhaled corticosteroids. Asthma
inhalers are now so much a part of daily life that they appear regularly as
props on television serials and in film. In plot-driven, contrived
"difficult" moments, lead actors - children and adults - pull out
their inhalers and take a quick dose.
The
challenge, of course, with allergy and asthma medication is there is no
end-point. There is no cure. Asthma and allergies, for the most part, are
lifelong conditions requiring lifelong medication. Might there be a better way,
an alternative solution?
"Alternative"
is the key word. Medical treatment is designed to combat symptoms, and is
successful to a certain extent with allergies and asthma. Underlying causes are
not addressed, however, and symptoms continue year after year. What else might
be done?
Enter
chiropractic care. Chiropractic health care, with its unique comprehensive
approach, is able to offer positive benefit to a variety of conditions and
ailments. In the case of allergies and asthma, these "hypersensitivity
conditions" may respond well to therapy designed to normalize the body's
flow of nerve signals. To use a metaphor, chiropractic treatment removes
roadblocks to the body's natural healing abilities. Restoring these imbalances
may help reduce such hypersensitivity reactions.
Chiropractic
care frequently includes nutritional counseling, a critical component for
people with allergies and asthma. Such individuals need as much physical
optimization as possible, and nutritional awareness is key. A balanced food
plan will help support all metabolic systems, reduce irritation caused by
deficiencies, and provide fuel for exercise programs.
The
benefits of chiropractic care are wide-ranging, and may be very useful in cases
of hypersensitivity disorders such as allergies and asthma. Schedule a spinal
check up to determine if spinal stress may be a factor affecting your health.
References:
Weiss
K: The costs of asthma. Asthma and Allergy Foundation, 1998 [updated 2001].
The
Condition of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, 2001.
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