|   | Naturopathic Medicine : Immunity |    | 
		 
	 
    
        
     
   
   
    
    
    
        Natural immunity is  something we've all heard of, and want to know
         more about.  It's a major buzz-word of the health awareness 
         movement because it represents an alternative to chemotherapies,
         radiation and surgery, vaccinations, hospital convalescence,
         untreatable chronic fatigue or degenerative diseases, and a host
         of other unpleasant, expensive options on today's medical 
         industrial menu.  This essay will give basic parameters for 
         wellness through immune support, as well as a brief introduction
         to three special modalities, namely nutritional supplements, 
         botanical medicine and hydrotherapy. 
 
      
         The Basics
         - Rest  
         
 - Work balanced by Play 
         
 - Healthy Diet including plenty of Fresh Water.
  
         Get plenty of rest.  Most people need 8 hours of sleep each day.
         Make it a habit to get to bed 8 hours before your alarm clock is
         set to go off.  That way you'll at least be more or less 
         horizontal for the full 8 hours...  In our culture most people
         work, work, work, then maybe, if there's time, do a little play.
         This is just not right.  Think about how it would be to play an
         hour for every hour you work.  Maybe you'd have to give some of
         that extra income that's going to pay off credit cards jammed with
         possessions you may or may not still need or use... Maybe the 
         extra playtime would render you so efficient at your work, because
         of added mental clarity and a light-hearted, healthy enthusiasm
         for life, you'd actually earn more per hour and not lose income
at 
         all!  Indoor play is fine, but outdoor play is excellent.  Deeply
         absorb the smell of a rising wind.  Feast your eyes on a 
         mountain top panorama.  Walk in forests.  Remember Nature.  Commune
         with Her...  Get lots of clean water -- 64 ounces daily.  Carry
         fresh water in your car and a smaller quantity in your purse or
         day pack.  Stay hydrated.  If you feel thirsty, you're already
         dehydrated.  Drink lots of water especially when coming down with
         a cold or infection.  It is important to provide the body with
         clear fluids to flush out the toxins.  Dilute fresh vegetable 
         broth, herbal teas or juices are also excellent to ward off flus
         or fatigue but they cannot replace pure clean water.  While 
         Seattle tap water is relatively high quality it is chlorinated
and 
         may contain more than desirable levels of heavy metals and 
         microbes.  Please consider using a water purification device. 
         Reverse osmosis or distillation under the boiling point are the
         two best options.  Also, please just say no to iced water.  It
is
         very hard on our stomach and in fact, sits there drawing in energy
         until it's at body temperature.  When you're eating out, remind
         the waitperson before they bring your water.  Another part of
         healthy diet is to LIMIT SUGAR INTAKE to less than 50 grams per
         day.  The average American consumes 150 g/day of simple sugars,
         and this does include fruit (fructose).  Sugar inhibits white 
         blood cell function (which is cleaning up toxins in the blood)
by 
         50% for 2 to 5 hours after consumption.  Sugar also competes with
         Vitamin C to get inside the cells.  That means that taking Vitamin
         C doesn't help much if you're also taking sugar. 
 
       
         Protect your natural defense system -- starting with the skin.
         Keep the skin clean and intact as much as possible.  Be kind to
         your mucous membrane tube (mouth to anus), which is the interface
         with the outside world.  Remember that what you put into your 
         mouth turns into your body.  Protect your lungs: don't smoke! 
         Protect your heart by eating a low-fat diet and getting adequate
         cardiovascular exercise, such as brisk walking.  Protect your
         emotional and spiritual well-being by taking regular quiet time
         for yourself, and expressing your needs, your ideas and your 
         dreams! 
 
 
        Nutritional Supplements   
         By quirk of nomenclature we can actually refer here to the ABC's
         of immune enhancement.  Let's start with good old Vitamin C.  C
is 
         a natural inhibitor of cellular destruction wreaked by foreign
         antigens, from viruses to particles of undigested food.  Vitamin
C 
         improves the ability of blood cells to engulf and excrete toxins.
         The best way to take Vitamin C is in powdered form, which is 
         readily digested and then available for immediate use.  Good 
         juiceable food sources of C are dandelion leaves, watercress, 
         nettles, alfalfa, cayenne (as seasoning), kelp, parsley, 
         raspberries, strawberries and papayas.  Vitamin C is depleted by
         antibiotics, aspirin and other pain relievers, coffee, cortisone,
         smoking anything, stress, DDT, burns and high fevers.  The B 
         vitamins help to reduce the load which stress puts on the body,
as 
         well as preserving the integrity of the nerves and nervous 
         responses, such as reflex actions.  A lack of B vitamins has been
         repeatedly shown to cause depressed immunity.  Food sources of
B 
         complex include parsley, comfrey and red clover.  Most other B
         vitamins are also high in alfalfa.  B 12 must be supplemented in
         strict vegetarians.  B vitamins are depleted by sleeping pills,
         insecticides, estrogen (the "Pill"), sugar and alcohol.
 Vitamin 
         A, which in it's precursor form is called "beta-carotene,"
         increases the number of helper-T cells in the blood.  
         Bioflavonoids (which cause the coloration of yellow and orange
         foods) are an example of beta-carotene and are found in chicory,
         watercress, garlic, parsley, squash, oranges and yams.  Vitamin
A 
         is depleted by fluorescent lights, mineral oil, coffee, alcohol,
         all kinds of drugs, excessive intake of iron and lack of available
         protein in the body.  We don't need much protein -- 5 ounces daily
         is plenty -- but we do need to be able to digest it.  Which brings
         up two "Z" supplements at the other end of the alphabet.
 These 
         are ZINC, the trace mineral, an important co-factor in most 
         digestive enzymes, and (EN)ZYMES themselves, the delicate dynamos
         which alone deserve volumes of discussion.  If you eat more than
         you need to in order to feel "satisfied," or ever notice
         undigested food particles in your food, consider consulting with
a 
         natural health care physician for a good source of PLANT (not 
         animal) enzymes. 
 
       
         Botanical Medicine 
         My favorites in immune enhancement are a combination of Echinacea
         angustifolia, Hydrastis canadensis (Golden Seal) and either Galium
         aparine (Cleavers) if the congestion is in the head, lungs or 
         upper body, or Phytolacca (Poke Weed) if the congestion is in the
         pelvis, gut or lower body.  Echinacea is known to neutralize
         viruses and activate the body's "natural killer" cells.
 Hydrastis 
         is very healing to mucous membranes, which, as stated above, means
         the entire tube from mouth to anus.  Galium promotes lymphatic
         pumping and draining, particularly of the head, neck and armpit
         nodes.  Phytolacca stimulates the T and B blood cells crucial to
         immune functioning.  WARNING!  Phytolacca is toxic at relatively
         low doses, and may only be administered under the guidance of a
         physician knowledgeable in plant medicine. 
 
     
         Hydrotherapy 
         In the 1850s "hydropaths," or physicians and lay persons
trained 
         in the use of water therapies, were the single largest group of
         health care practitioners besides standard, blood-letting, mercury-
         administering medical doctors.  The water-cure movement, which
         originated with Father Kneipp in Germany,  enjoyed 50 plus years
         of vogue in the U.S. with many well known advocates from writers
         such as Edgar Allan Poe and Harriet Beecher Stowe, to famous 7th
         Day Adventists and Abolitionists.  One of the central tenets of
         hydropathy was that the patients become responsible for their own
         health care.  The hydropath aspired to empower the patient with
a 
         recognition of their own wisdom.  Cold water was considered the
         universal elixir for disease... "God accomplishes his most
divine 
         work through the simplest agencies." 
 
         
         Why water?  Water is available readily almost everywhere and it
is 
         not in any way foreign to our system.  Water has chemical, thermal
         and mechanical properties.  It is essentially nontoxic except
in 
         places where it doesn't belong.  It is the universal solvent. 
It 
         can hold heat or pull heat away from the body.  Water can be 
         therapeutically applied in the form of bath, spray, whirlpool,
         vaginal douche, colonic irrigation (also ear and nose lavage),
and 
         of course, beverage. 
 
        
         One of the tried and true standbys of Naturopathic Medicine is
the 
         use of "constitutional hydrotherapy" which employs alternating
hot 
         and cold towels to an affected area of the body.  For example,
a 
         chest cold will benefit enormously from applying first hot, then
         ice-cold towels or compresses to the bared chest.  The technique
         calls for 3 minutes of hot followed by 30 seconds to 1 minute of
         cold.  This sequence is repeated at least three times, and always
         ends with cold.  The easiest, preventive, form of hydrotherapy
is  
         to chase your morning hot shower with all cold water for at least
         30 seconds and make sure to thoroughly cool the armpits, genital
         areas, head, hands and feet.  These are centers of lymphatic 
         drainage.  To embellish the treatment, firmly tap your upper 
         central chest just under the notch at the base of the throat, to
         invigorate the thymus gland.  This will actually keep you warmer
         on a winter's day because of the circulatory stimulation.  By the
         same principle one can achieve excellent results in bringing down
         a fever, especially in children, by applying frozen cold cotton
         socks to the feet and covering them with dry wool socks.  This
         will stimulate circulation in the lower extremities by requiring
         the feet to pull down heat, drawing it away from the head.  Put
a 
         feverish kid to bed with this double sock routine and their sleep
         is guaranteed to be more restful.  Be creative!  The basic idea
         of alternating hot (3 minutes) with cold (30 seconds to 1 minute)
         can work with sauna to cold plunge, 2 hip-bath tubs, running water
         from 2 faucets on a sprained wrist or ankle, etc. 
 
    
         Experiment with these health tips.  You know best what your body
         really wants.  The best way to distinguish a healthy craving from
         an unhealthy one is how whatever you decided to ingest makes you
         feel an hour later.  Check it out...   
 
          
         One final observation in immune enhancement:  Please don't let
         other people run your life.   Your friends and family may be  
         threatened when you start to make some changes for the better.
         Food and health are highly emotional issues.  Identify your 
         stressors, and get them down to a bare minimum.  Let go of people
         who can't support your total awakening.  Make a commitment to
         know thyself.  And, best of all, stay light! 
 
         
         References 
         All anecdotally supplied, or from personal lecture notes, by Susan
         Cayleff, Ph.D., Doug Lewis, N.D., Joseph Pizzorno, N.D., and Jeffrey
         Zavik of Immuno Laboratories. 
 
     
	
    
        
     
   	
	       
     
    
    
    
   
        
    
    
        
		
			  | A graduate of Bastyr University in Seattle, she completed both the Naturopathic and Acupuncture/Oriental Medicine programs. Her preceptor work (similar to residencies) took place in Seattle, West Virginia and China,......more | 
		 
	 
     
   
    
    
    
   
    
                  
            
                
    
        
     
   
                
                  
            
                
    
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