Hub You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > News and Society > Pure Opinion > Second Opinion: Hey Doc, What Should I Use - Heat or Ice?

Tags

  • bring
  • applied
  • vessels
  • opposite acutely
  • minutes every
  • cheap property

  • Links

  • Beginners Guide on Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
  • More Upper Body Exercises for Computer Users
  • Negotiate - Show Your Cards, Not Your Emotions
  • Hub You - Second Opinion: Hey Doc, What Should I Use - Heat or Ice?

    5 Powerful Ideas to Get Website Traffic - Targeted
    Website owners and especially internet marketers desire not just any kind of traffic, but targeted traffic. These are the kind of visitors who are interested in the topic of the site, and will benefit more on what the site has to offer. There's no doubt about it: most sales and sign-ups are from targeted traffic instead of untargeted.But you may wonder "just how do I get website traffic that's targeted?"Here
    ings get stagnant and needs more blood flowing. Heat opens the blood vessels to bring fresh blood, oxygen, nutrients, wash debris away, increases the cellular metabolism. Sounds good to me, plus most people prefer heat. What kind of heat you ask, moist heat, something damp, for about 15-30 minutes.

    In a recent study, researchers examined the effectiveness of heat or cold treatment for low back p

    Cheap Property For Sale – Getting More Bang for Your Buck
    All property investors want to do it - buy cheap property for sale and sell it at maximum profit quickly.This article is all about the best locations to do this in and how to get the biggest capital gain with the lowest risk in the shortest period of time.We all know the North American and European markets look vulnerable as economic growth slows and interest rates rise. It’s an economic fact that property pri
    My niece is living with me right now and woke up Monday with acute knee pain after a big hike in the mountains on Sunday. She asked me if she should use heat or ice. People ask me this question every day, hey doc what should I use, ice or heat? This question always brings up debate.

    Like I told my niece, when tissue in our body get injured, cells die, and the signals go out in full force through the blood. Mast cells release histamine to make the blood vessels and capillaries leaky so white blood cells can leak out of the blood and into the tissue to clean up the debris, wall off the injury, release fibrin and other connective tissue cells and fix what ever is broken. The cool thing is you don’t need to know that for it to work perfectly. As you can see inflammation is part of the healing. By the way, my niece has a little tendonitis on the quadriceps muscle. No big deal.

    Acute injury creates inflammation. Inflammation has 4 features: heat, redness, swelling and pain. Heat is in the equation, so ice would feel good and do well. In Chinese medicine, the idea of yin/yang is generally treating the symptom with the opposite. Acutely, in the first 24-48 hours, ice will help with pain, swelling and redness. It will help slow down the leakiness of the blood vessel. My niece knew this, applied it and felt better. 15 minutes every 2 hours will work.

    What do you use when you have had a problem for a long time, like low back pain? In my practice I use physiological principles of the body and yin/yang principles, again from Chinese medicine. When a problem has been long standing, things get stagnant and needs more blood flowing. Heat opens the blood vessels to bring fresh blood, oxygen, nutrients, wash debris away, increases the cellular metabolism. Sounds good to me, plus most people prefer heat. What kind of heat you ask, moist heat, something damp, for about 15-30 minutes.

    In a recent study, researchers examined the effectiveness of heat or cold treatment for low back pa

    Blast From The Past - Retro Games Are Hot Again
    Miss the brainlessly simple and extremely addictive games from the 80s? Find out which game developers feel the same. Dozens of teams are creating new games based on the old classics. Here are just a few of them.Bugatro Gold http://www.deprice.com/bugatrongold.htmBugatron Gold is a well-designed space-shooter game borrows ideas from classics such as Galaga. In Bugatron, you must eradicate the evil alien
    the blood. Mast cells release histamine to make the blood vessels and capillaries leaky so white blood cells can leak out of the blood and into the tissue to clean up the debris, wall off the injury, release fibrin and other connective tissue cells and fix what ever is broken. The cool thing is you don’t need to know that for it to work perfectly. As you can see inflammation is part of the healing. By the way, my niece has a little tendonitis on the quadriceps muscle. No big deal.

    Acute injury creates inflammation. Inflammation has 4 features: heat, redness, swelling and pain. Heat is in the equation, so ice would feel good and do well. In Chinese medicine, the idea of yin/yang is generally treating the symptom with the opposite. Acutely, in the first 24-48 hours, ice will help with pain, swelling and redness. It will help slow down the leakiness of the blood vessel. My niece knew this, applied it and felt better. 15 minutes every 2 hours will work.

    What do you use when you have had a problem for a long time, like low back pain? In my practice I use physiological principles of the body and yin/yang principles, again from Chinese medicine. When a problem has been long standing, things get stagnant and needs more blood flowing. Heat opens the blood vessels to bring fresh blood, oxygen, nutrients, wash debris away, increases the cellular metabolism. Sounds good to me, plus most people prefer heat. What kind of heat you ask, moist heat, something damp, for about 15-30 minutes.

    In a recent study, researchers examined the effectiveness of heat or cold treatment for low back p

    Explore Your Digital Dreams with Latest Mobile Phones
    Looking for an ultra-cool handset at the cheapest price? Then the cost-effective mobile phone deals are the right answer for you. Check out the numerous contract mobile phones available in the online market and select the best handset for you.Mobile manufacturing giants like Nokia, Sony Ericsson and Motorola are concentrating on innovative technology and state-of-the-art style while producing the latest handsets. Now
    By the way, my niece has a little tendonitis on the quadriceps muscle. No big deal.

    Acute injury creates inflammation. Inflammation has 4 features: heat, redness, swelling and pain. Heat is in the equation, so ice would feel good and do well. In Chinese medicine, the idea of yin/yang is generally treating the symptom with the opposite. Acutely, in the first 24-48 hours, ice will help with pain, swelling and redness. It will help slow down the leakiness of the blood vessel. My niece knew this, applied it and felt better. 15 minutes every 2 hours will work.

    What do you use when you have had a problem for a long time, like low back pain? In my practice I use physiological principles of the body and yin/yang principles, again from Chinese medicine. When a problem has been long standing, things get stagnant and needs more blood flowing. Heat opens the blood vessels to bring fresh blood, oxygen, nutrients, wash debris away, increases the cellular metabolism. Sounds good to me, plus most people prefer heat. What kind of heat you ask, moist heat, something damp, for about 15-30 minutes.

    In a recent study, researchers examined the effectiveness of heat or cold treatment for low back p

    An Interesting Call I Received Yesterday
    I wanted to share the details of an interesting call that I received yesterday from a new member of my team.I was on the way to getting lunch and my phone rang. It was answered by a voice that I had never heard before. This wasn't very surprising because I'm used to this now.Actually I've gotten into the habit of answering my phone by saying "This is Daegan Smith" instead of the normal hello because I get
    welling and redness. It will help slow down the leakiness of the blood vessel. My niece knew this, applied it and felt better. 15 minutes every 2 hours will work.

    What do you use when you have had a problem for a long time, like low back pain? In my practice I use physiological principles of the body and yin/yang principles, again from Chinese medicine. When a problem has been long standing, things get stagnant and needs more blood flowing. Heat opens the blood vessels to bring fresh blood, oxygen, nutrients, wash debris away, increases the cellular metabolism. Sounds good to me, plus most people prefer heat. What kind of heat you ask, moist heat, something damp, for about 15-30 minutes.

    In a recent study, researchers examined the effectiveness of heat or cold treatment for low back p

    Writing an Annual Report - How to Put Together the Lists
    Lists of donors, board members, and sometimes staff are included in a nonprofit annual report, often on the report’s final pages. Here are five frequently asked questions about these lists.Do we need to list absolutely everyone who donated any amount of money?No. Many organizations set a minimum dollar amount for inclusion in the annual report to keep the donor list to a reasonable length (one or two pa
    ings get stagnant and needs more blood flowing. Heat opens the blood vessels to bring fresh blood, oxygen, nutrients, wash debris away, increases the cellular metabolism. Sounds good to me, plus most people prefer heat. What kind of heat you ask, moist heat, something damp, for about 15-30 minutes.

    In a recent study, researchers examined the effectiveness of heat or cold treatment for low back pain. A total of 1,117 patients were involved in the study, with various forms of heat and cold therapies used for different lengths of time. Results showed that the use of heat was effective in treating back pain. In two studies of people with acute and subacute low back pain, heat wrap therapy significantly reduced pain after five days compared to a placebo. In another study, people with acute low back pain treated with a heated blanket reported a significant reduction in pain immediately after the blanket was applied.*

    Sounds like heat is the winner. In the practice, I also like to uses heat on for 1 minute, ice for 1 minute for several intervals. For thing like tennis elbow, ice massage can be great. Fill a small dixie cup, ? full and freeze. Tear off the top and apply with a circular massage motion. Try all of these things, see which helps you the most. The bottom line, is do what makes you feel the best. Listen to your body.

    Keep in mind this publication is solely meant to be informative and entertaining and not an alternative to proper medical diagnosis or treatment. Seek proper medical care if you have any symptoms.

    And look for a Second Opinion next week.

    *French SD, Cameron M, Walker BF, et al. Superficial heat or cold for low back pain. The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2006, Issue 2. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD004750.pub2.

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.iadvice.info/article/195862/iadvice-Second-Opinion-Hey-Doc-What-Should-I-Use--Heat-or-Ice.html">Second Opinion: Hey Doc, What Should I Use - Heat or Ice?</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.iadvice.info/article/195862/iadvice-Second-Opinion-Hey-Doc-What-Should-I-Use--Heat-or-Ice.html]Second Opinion: Hey Doc, What Should I Use - Heat or Ice?[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Online Advertising - The Ideal Marketing Tool

    Generational Marketing

    Do's and Don'ts of Launching a Small Business Website

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com