Some websites Deny Arnica’s effectiveness of post surgical treatment. Is it really effective after Episiotomy?

Some websites Deny Arnica’s effectiveness of post surgical treatment.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/97580…

http://dermatology.jwatch.org/cgi/conten…

Even the Homeopathy websites which promote this product, warning that, “Homeopathic remedies are very dilute, and while the homeopathic remedy may be beneficial, the raw product may be harmful.”

http://abchomeopathy.com/r.php/Arn

Now I want to know, Is this Homeopathic medicine really effective for the treatment of Episiotomy? Have any side affect of it? Have any risk to increase the problem or create new problem instead of healing the problem?

I also want to know that, is Arnica only just a Buy Terramycin Online without prescription pain killer or antibiotic, or it is for completely healing and cure? Is it only for use to reduce pain after a surgical operation, or can use any time in order to help the entire healing process? Our patient already passed 8 weeks after a full cut Episiotomy and now have only slight pain sometimes when any movement or physical activity. So pain reduction is not major issue now. We only need to ensure complete and permanent healing. So I cannot assure if the Arnica would be applicable or not online ampicillin at this moment.

As we see contradictory information about this medicine in the web, so I need to know real experience or authentic data. How buy Amoxil online many Episiotomy patients get complete recovery Ampicillin cheap online by taking Arnica or such type of Homeo medicine?

The website that refers to your wife’s situation – or, perhaps for your purpose of research, is http://www.nationalcenterforhomeopathy.org. You’re looking for education, so it’s important to rely on a dependable resource.

Just as YA is full of Top Contributor medical skeptics who earned their badge not based on professional experience, but uneducated personal opinion negating homeopathy and other viable “energy” medicines – the web is full of individual opinions amoxil cheap and experience.

Basically, whether on YA or on the web, you can find the answer you Wire Transfer Bank 1440 want.

For a person with these problems, being under the care of a certified, professional homeopath is necessary. This situation doesn’t qualify in the category of self-help acute care. The remedy is not homeopathy, it’s the knowledge and philosophy for understanding why a particular remedy should be given and not another. That’s the first step. The hardest part, requiring skill as a classical homeopath, is “case management” – the second and, if necessary, subsequent remedies.

You ask for real experience and authentic data. If you are unable to accept more than 25 years of my experience as a homeopath, I don’t know what more to offer. The woman needs to be under the care of a homeopath, based on qualifications set forth by the Council for Homeopathic Certification, the only UBS Securities France SA profession-wide cheap buy ampicillin credentialing organization in N. America.

No, Arnica is not enough.

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Comments

  1. bryonyvaughn Said,

    I’ve not heard of any studies on Arnica and episiotomy and I couldn’t read the studies you linked as they are subscription based services. That being said I know there was a Arnica study on carpal tunnel surgery. It was a bad design as Arnica’s not strongly indicated with carpal tunnel surgery and IIRC the study’s protocol had the patients taking the Arnica for two weeks before and two weeks after surgery. No decent homeopath would recommend such a thing!

    Homeopathic treatment is effective for healing both torn and cut tissues, tissue swelling and bruising, and pain associated with tissue trauma. Side effects are unusual and should be shared with a homeopath. You can provoke homeopathic proving symptoms from taking the remedy too long. The wrong remedy (especially in high potencies) could ease one symptom while causing or intensifying another.

    While Arnica may be the most known homeopathic remedy, it isn’t necessarily the best for any given person’s episiotomy. It’s more frequently indicated soon after the birth. If the patient has shooting nerve pain instead of aches look at Hypericum perforatum. For pain at the incision or its scar consider Staphysagria. Other remedies are more likely if the source of the pain is from the muscles or connective tissue. Whatever the case you’d definitely need the nature and location of the pain to help the patient.

    If the pain is truly minor, within the scope of what is to be expected, and decreasing steadily with time *and* you’re just concerned about slow wound healing, you should consider Calendula officinalis.

    Arnica in crude (herbal) form is contraindicated for broken skin as it will irritate it. Homeopathic Arnica doesn’t have this problem.

    As I’m unaware of any studies done on Arnica and episiotomy, I don’t know that anyone can answer your specific question. That being said many homeopaths regularly successfully treat slow healing wounds and pain. You’ll do your patient well to seek out one.

    References : Calendula http://www.homeoint.org/books/boericmm/c/calen.htm
    Hypericum http://www.homeoint.org/books3/kentmm/hyp.htm
    Arnica http://www.homeoint.org/books/boericmm/a/arn.htm
    Staphysagria http://www.homeoint.org/books2/bogersyn/mmsposul.htm#staphysagria

  2. SoulCollaging Homeopath Said,

    The website that refers to your wife’s situation – or, perhaps for your purpose of research, is http://www.nationalcenterforhomeopathy.org. You’re looking for education, so it’s important to rely on a dependable resource.

    Just as YA is full of Top Contributor medical skeptics who earned their badge not based on professional experience, but uneducated personal opinion negating homeopathy and other viable “energy” medicines – the web is full of individual opinions and experience.

    Basically, whether on YA or on the web, you can find the answer you want.

    For a person with these problems, being under the care of a certified, professional homeopath is necessary. This situation doesn’t qualify in the category of self-help acute care. The remedy is not homeopathy, it’s the knowledge and philosophy for understanding why a particular remedy should be given and not another. That’s the first step. The hardest part, requiring skill as a classical homeopath, is “case management” – the second and, if necessary, subsequent remedies.

    You ask for real experience and authentic data. If you are unable to accept more than 25 years of my experience as a homeopath, I don’t know what more to offer. The woman needs to be under the care of a homeopath, based on qualifications set forth by the Council for Homeopathic Certification, the only profession-wide credentialing organization in N. America.

    No, Arnica is not enough.References :

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