Painkillers... should I take them?
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Painkillers... should I take them?
I just had mouth surgery and I'm wondering about the use of painkillers... I don't usually take ANY type of pharmaceuticals but I would rather not have to suffer if I don't have to. Will it cause acne? If it will then I will endure, but if not then I need some relief!!!!
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painkiller
I have used Staphysagria (homeopathic) for pain; it is a very good remedy.
It is not poisonous in the way that 'you die if you have a bite' way, butCairidh wrote:I've not heard that before.....what does it do? How is it harmful?
It has been used as a medicine for thousands of years. It is important in Ayurveda, and was recommended by Hippocrates and Pythagoras. I've only ever heard good thing about it. How is it poisonous?
it contains compounds that are toxic on a cellular level, like most
non-Wai foods does, only more than say broccoli or garlic.
Indeed.
A disease is about an imbalance. Medicines are about stimulation or elimination of one or other side of that (im)balance. But medicines are not 'guided bombs'; they are generally taken orally or intravenously, and 'travel' before 'coincidentally' reaching their target.
If they 'work', they can and will do some damage.
All plants and their seeds that contain ingredients that have extreme/very specific properties, may have both elicit and beneficial effects, depending on what organ / group of cells you are talking about. Mostly, 'medicinal plants' contain an ingredient that is deadly for certain bacteria, viruses, parasites or specific cells, and simply because of those properties they will also be harmful for specific human cells when contacted.Cairidh wrote:It has been used as a medicine for thousands of years. It is important in Ayurveda, and was recommended by Hippocrates and Pythagoras. I've only ever heard good thing about it. How is it poisonous?
A disease is about an imbalance. Medicines are about stimulation or elimination of one or other side of that (im)balance. But medicines are not 'guided bombs'; they are generally taken orally or intravenously, and 'travel' before 'coincidentally' reaching their target.
If they 'work', they can and will do some damage.