TIP For those with chronic pain

juco

Veteran Member
Marie, the link doesn’t work.

My cousin’s wife uses amber teething necklaces for her kids and swears by them.
 

jward

passin' thru
Fortunately all my pain is low level still- but thank you for sharing this useful tidbit.

..I'm sorry to confess I did not know you were suffering from anything, or else you'd have made the prayer circle list far sooner; but yer on it now! : )
 

Marie

Veteran Member
Fortunately all my pain is low level still- but thank you for sharing this useful tidbit.

..I'm sorry to confess I did not know you were suffering from anything, or else you'd have made the prayer circle list far sooner; but yer on it now! : )
Oh Thank you! A body gets used to it after awhile. But they are very much appreciated!
 

Walrus

Veteran Member
Marie, I see the amber necklace on that website but don't see anything regarding hazelwood with it. Where does the hazelwood come from?
 

TKO

Veteran Member
Never heard of such a device but I can see the utility behind it. I have chronic pain from arthritis...lots of inflammation. So far, a low carb diet helps with this and so does the following: cod liver oil(I buy Carlson's lemon), Moringa(capsules...but thinking of going to powders), Tart Cherry(capsules), and Quercetin. I hate taking so much stuff but it's better than burning my guts out with other stuff.
 

Marie

Veteran Member
Marie, I see the amber necklace on that website but don't see anything regarding hazelwood with it. Where does the hazelwood come from?
Well I'll be darned they don't sell the hazlewood anymore. I did a google search and found other places offered the amber /hazlewood combo. They might be having a problem with the procurement of hazelwood at inspired by Finn
 

Walrus

Veteran Member
Well I'll be darned they don't sell the hazlewood anymore. I did a google search and found other places offered the amber /hazlewood combo. They might be having a problem with the procurement of hazelwood at inspired by Finn
Great, thanks for the information!
 

Marie

Veteran Member
I just tried this new herb kava kava. It seems to act like a muscle relaxer.
3 nights I've taken it and all 3 my tension went away. that helped reduce the pain. Side effect unfortunately I fall asleep right after supper. However that isn't a whole lot earlier than the norm.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
I just tried this new herb kava kava. It seems to act like a muscle relaxer.
3 nights I've taken it and all 3 my tension went away. that helped reduce the pain. Side effect unfortunately I fall asleep right after supper. However that isn't a whole lot earlier than the norm.
Kava kava can really be great! And yes, it's sedative... but as long as it doesn't stir up latent sleep apnea (almost anything that makes you sleep deeply will do that- melatonin seems to be the exception, but it's not a CNS depressant), who cares... sleep is healing!

I make a tincture- the only tincture more bitter than kava kava is Kratom! Speaking of which, CAUTIOUS experimentation with the two together (probably starting at half normal doses, or even lower) *might* prove to be a valuable pain reliever for certain types of musculoskeletal pain.

A friend I gave the tincture to swore it worked well applied topically! I've never tried that...

Oh... it can get tough on the liver, in large amounts. Consider milk thistle.

Summerthyme
 
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rob0126

Veteran Member
Turmeric is also pretty amazing for inflammation. Just remember it will take a couple weeks of consistent usage to notice a difference.

Curamin is a terri naturally product that has worked well depending on how many you take and your ability to uptake it.(people on several drugs might have a problem with it being effective)

It is tumeric based.

Its a bit pricey but you can find good deals on ebay.
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
Never heard of such a device but I can see the utility behind it. I have chronic pain from arthritis...lots of inflammation. So far, a low carb diet helps with this and so does the following: cod liver oil(I buy Carlson's lemon), Moringa(capsules...but thinking of going to powders), Tart Cherry(capsules), and Quercetin. I hate taking so much stuff but it's better than burning my guts out with other stuff.
Here's what I do (I'm no doctor but have a crushed spinal cord) and am finally pain free:
have you tried NATURES WAY TURMERIC ?
You start out with 1 pill to make sure there is no problem with an allergy or any thing. Then go to 2 pills three times the first day, then go by your pain level.
if you still have pain the next(second) day take 2 turmeric morning and night. Again the next day you probably wont have pain the third day but if you do take 2 pills morning and night. When the pain goes away take one pill morning and night for a couple of days then drop down to one pill daily to keep the pain away.
 

TKO

Veteran Member
Here's what I do (I'm no doctor but have a crushed spinal cord) and am finally pain free:
have you tried NATURES WAY TURMERIC ?
You start out with 1 pill to make sure there is no problem with an allergy or any thing. Then go to 2 pills three times the first day, then go by your pain level.
if you still have pain the next(second) day take 2 turmeric morning and night. Again the next day you probably wont have pain the third day but if you do take 2 pills morning and night. When the pain goes away take one pill morning and night for a couple of days then drop down to one pill daily to keep the pain away.
Yep. I've tried high end turmeric with black pepper extract. Tried it once for 6 months and didn't notice too much. I tried a few brands. My wife still takes turmeric. I have a good system that will let me go full bore on supplements. UMMM...except MSM. I had to titrate that up. I have to say cod liver oil has been the best anti-inflammatory I've found. Close seconds are Moringa and Boswellia.

If you ever get "trigger finger" or "trigger thumb"...the cure for that is P5P. Just FYI. Thank goodness I found that on a forum for my wife. Her doc wanted to do surgery. She cured her trigger thumb using P5P.
 
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TKO

Veteran Member
What is SPM? I have heard of all the others.
SPM is specialized pro resolving mediators. SPM supplements are not cheap. I have taken a few brands but the one that works for me is SPM Active. One of my doctors prescribed it for me(you don't need a scrip for it). He knows his stuff. The other doctor I have is a junk primary care gate keeper doctor that works for the insurance company and the hospital group CEO. You need those sometimes. SPM supplements are bioactive lipids, and come from marine lipid concentrates. Some call them glorified fish oil but they aren't. I was a bit skeptical when I started them. I'm a believer now.


Abstract
Abstract Image

Chronic inflammation is a component of numerous diseases including autoimmune, metabolic, neurodegenerative, and cancer. The discovery and characterization of specialized pro-resolving mediators (SPMs) critical to the resolution of inflammation, and their cognate G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) has led to a significant increase in the understanding of this physiological process. Approximately 20 ligands, including lipoxins, resolvins, maresins, and protectins, and 6 receptors (FPR2/ALX, GPR32, GPR18, chemerin1, BLT1, and GPR37) have been identified highlighting the complex and multilayered nature of resolution.

Therapeutic efforts in targeting these receptors have proved challenging, with very few ligands apparently progressing through to preclinical or clinical development. To date, some knowledge gaps remain in the understanding of how the activation of these receptors, and their downstream signaling, results in efficient resolution via apoptosis, phagocytosis, and efferocytosis of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (mainly neutrophils) and macrophages.

SPMs bind and activate multiple receptors (ligand poly-pharmacology), while most receptors are activated by multiple ligands (receptor pleiotropy). In addition, allosteric binding sites have been identified signifying the capacity of more than one ligand to bind simultaneously. These fundamental characteristics of SPM receptors enable alternative targeting strategies to be considered, including biased signaling and allosteric modulation. This review describes those ligands and receptors involved in the resolution of inflammation, and highlights the most recent clinical trial results. Furthermore, we describe alternative mechanisms by which these SPM receptors could be targeted, paving the way for the identification of new therapeutics, perhaps with greater efficacy and fidelity.
 

Marie

Veteran Member
How does the necklace relieve pain?
I have no idea. I guess Mom's have been using it for teething pain. Which SIL told us about and she was adamant it helped. So we tried it for our injuries pain. It works. I'm always in fairly severe pain but it takes the edge off. So I don't have to use so much internal pain relief.
 
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