Townsend Letter for Doctors and Patients - Articles

3,218 total articles

Professional journal covering alternative healthcare.

Recently added articles from Townsend Letter for Doctors and Patients:

4th German workshop on clinical metal toxicology.

Jan 01, 2006 ... Another Ibcmt-approved workshop was successfully completed in Hersbruck, near Nuremberg, Germany. Lectures were held in the German language by Dr. Raymond Pahlplatz MD of the Netherlands and E. Blaurock-Busch PhD, Germany. Particular attention was given to the correct use of a variety of ...

Intravenous vitamin C is selectively toxic to cancer cells.

Jan 01, 2006 ... National Institutes of Health scientists have confirmed the concepts that vitamin C is selectively toxic to cancer cells and that tumor-toxic levels of vitamin C can be attained using intravenous administration. The article, published in the September 12, 2005 issue of the Proceedings of ...

Self-injury in autistic teens.(care and treatment)

Jan 01, 2006; Klotter, Jule ... Bernard Rimland, PhD, gives an overview of factors that contribute to aggression and self-injury among autistic teens in a 2005 article for Autism Research Review International. Physical pain from migraine, chronic infection, stomach pain, and, oddly, hypersensitive hearing often underlies ...

Vitamin C effective for melasma ...(Brief Article)

Jan 01, 2006; Gaby, Alan R. ... Sixteen women with idiopathic melasma were randomly assigned to apply 5% ascorbic acid cream on one side of the face and 4% hydroquinone cream on the other side, each night for 16 weeks. Sunscreen was applied daily throughout the study. The best subjective improvement was reported on the ...

... and vitamin C lowers uric acid levels ...(Brief Article)

Jan 01, 2006; Gaby, Alan R. ... One hundred eighty-four nonsmoking volunteers (mean age, 58 years) were randomly assigned to receive, in double-blind fashion, one of the following for two months: 1) vitamin C 500 (mg/day), 2) vitamin E (RRR-alpha-tocopheryl acetate, 400 IU/day), 3) both supplements, or 4) placebo. The ...

Topical garlic extract heals warts and corns.

Jan 01, 2006; Gaby, Alan R. ... Twenty-three patients with 2 to 96 warts (all on the hands except for two cases with plantar warts) and 9 patients with 1 to 2 corns on the feet applied a lipid extract of garlic twice a day until full or best recovery was seen. Complete recovery was seen in all cases with warts after 1 to ...

Can DHEA help prevent diabetes?(dehydroepiandrosterone)(Brief Article)

Jan 01, 2006; Gaby, Alan R. ... Twenty-eight women (mean age, 50.2 years) with hypoadrenalism due to Addison's disease (71%) or bilateral adrenalectomy for Cushing's disease (29%) were randomly assigned to receive, in double-blind fashion, 50 mg/day of DHEA or placebo for 12 weeks. Compared with placebo, DHEA ...

Does watching television make kids fat?(Brief Article)

Jan 01, 2006; Gaby, Alan R. ... Sixteen non-overweight children (aged 12-16 years) were studied during three separate three-week periods: 1) baseline, 2) increasing targeted sedentary behaviors by 25-50% (increase phase), and 3) decreasing targeted sedentary behaviors by 25-50% (decrease phase). Sedentary behavior was ...

Nutrigenomic testing and the methylation pathway.

Jan 01, 2006; Yasko, Amy ... Many factors influence susceptibility to disease. These include an individual's stress load, environmental toxins, the exposure to infectious agents, as well as underlying genetic susceptibility to these diseases. The precise combination of components that interact to cause multifactorial ...

Noninvasive assessment of intestinal inflammation: inflammatory bowel disease vs. irritable bowel syndrome.

Jan 01, 2006; Quig, David W. ... Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) are two chronic conditions associated with diarrhea and abdominal pain, and these symptoms are among the most common reasons that patients seek medical advice. Differential diagnosis between IBD and IBS is very important ...

Assessment of biochemical and nutritional individuality through organic acid testing.

Jan 01, 2006; Burdette, Cheryl K. ... Organic acid testing was developed to detect devastating pathology which is why it is the first test that is run on most all of us at birth. Before a newborn is able to leave the hospital, "Inborn Errors of Metabolism" (IEOM) are universally screened for. If these inborn errors of ...

Do patients with the same symptoms need the same intervention?(TRIAD profile for clinical assessment)

Jan 01, 2006 ... Patients with similar symptoms can have remarkably different metabolic and nutritional needs. Contrastingly, patients with comparable laboratory results often exhibit widely divergent symptoms. The TRIAD[TM] Profile helps you target each patient's specific needs by integrating three ...

Functional lab tests to evaluate immune competencies in chronic illness and chronic infection.(part 1)

Jan 01, 2006; Jaffe, Russell ... Aspects of immune function of clinical importance: Brief overview This article addresses the following question: What immune defense and repair system (IDRS) functional tests evaluate individual health status in a way that allows diagnostically predictive and therapeutic outcome ...

Recent peer-reviewed research on serum IgG-based food allergy tests.

Jan 01, 2006; Friel, Patrick ... <Pre> "I thought of that old joke, y'know, this guy goes to a psychiatrist and says, 'Doc, uh, my brother's crazy. He thinks he's a chicken.' And the doctor says, 'Well, why don't you turn him in?' And the guy says, 'I would, but I need the eggs.'" --Alvy Singer, in Annie Hall ...

The validity of urinary neurotransmitter measurements.

Jan 01, 2006; Kellermann, Gottfried ... Background Many diseases are associated with specific chemical alterations; these alterations are commonly called biomarkers and are routinely used to determine if a medical event or process will occur, is occurring, or has occurred. While they may be indirect, the interest in ...

Assess and correct: neurotransmitter imbalances.

Jan 01, 2006 ... Neurotransmitters are brain chemicals that relay signals between nerve cells (neurons). When neurotransmitter levels are too high or too low, they send the wrong signals, triggering serious health problems. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] NeuroScience, a world leader in ...

Interview with Dr. Bernie Siegel.(Interview)

Jan 01, 2006 ... Why did you write 101 Exercises for the Soul? How does it relate to your previous books? I wrote it to help people connect with what lies within each of us but at a deeper level of meaning. Most of us work at the thinking, ego, external, material level while what is of ...

Undeclared war and Celiac disease.

Jan 01, 2006; Solomon, Susan ... There is an undeclared battle going on in medicine, and I am not referring to how insurers and doctors get reimbursed or patient approval for treatment. I am referring to the growing divide between conventional and alternative medicine. And patients are caught in the middle. ...

Importance of magnesium in cardiac health.

Jan 01, 2006; Fredin, Jerri Spalding ... While I have long been interested in the mineral magnesium--because of personal health problems as well as my professional training in hospital dietetics--I have found no other book on the subject that describes in lay language the complexity of magnesium metabolism and the many health ...

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy.(Letters to the Editor)

Jan 01, 2006; Martin, Wayne ... In the June 2005 issue of the Townsend Letter you published my letter about my daughter. In May of 2003 she had surgery. The day following surgery she had a seizure which left her completely disabled. She was completely blind and otherwise could not walk, dress herself or feed herself. ...