As I said, this has been a lifelong condition for me, in its minor form. I've been through several anti-spasmodics and find that Baclofen works as well as any and has a lot less side effects than, for instance, Flexeril or Valium. It seems the doctors believed the drug company advertising and wanted to prescribe hard hitting drugs for me, but I need something subtle. I can't even take half a Flexeril without a 24 hour hangover (so I learned how to take a third of a pill). With Baclofen, I can take up to (3) pairs of pills a day without turning into a motionless lump.I use Baclofen for cramping.
Ingested or topically applied?Yellow mustard works wonders for leg cramps, just a little will stop them. Don't know if it would help other types of muscle spasms.
Interesting, I recently read an article about folk medicine / eastern medicine. How pharma companies initially poo-pooed eastern medicine and now they are using it as an inspiration or starting point for new active ingredients.Ingested or topically applied?
Cut out the liver of an adult male frog. Build a small fire using popsickle sticks. Wrap the frog liver in coconut leave and place in a small woven basket. Wave the basket over the fire and chant the following:I have long mourned the loss of ancient wisdom caused by the hubris of the, "scientific" approach.
I can live with that.Hubris? I call it humor. Sometime lost.
Interesting, I recently read an article about folk medicine / eastern medicine. How pharma companies initially poo-pooed eastern medicine and now they are using it as an inspiration or starting point for new active ingredients.
In yellow mustard, Turmeric seems to be the active ingredient for ingested anti-inflammatory use.
Mustard seed, or ground mustard seed poultice (applied externally) have been used for aches and pains but apparently can cause skin irritation and burns if left on too long.
Neither seem to be proven medicine and there are plenty of people who claim to have eaten mustard their whole lives and still have cramps, aches and pains. Unfortunately, nobody is going to fund a double-blind test on mustard because there is no money in it.
If it works, use it. If you think your friends will label you as a goon for believing in herbal remedies, keep your mouth shut.
Well, didn't work last night. Won't give up to see if it helps.A tablespoon or a sandwich's worth. Basically the cheap stuff, not fancy.
I think you'll agree, it doesn't matter whether you, "tricked" your spasm into stopping, as long as it stops!I wonder if the power of suggestion has anything to do with it. After about 5 minutes the spasms would subside. When I tried toughing it out they didn't.
Well I'm sure "Mount Rushmore" had a real name too before some white man discovered it. And just about everything else.Yep. That's hubris.
It's like pretending that the first white man with a college degree to see Uluru discovered it.
The placebo effect is huge, and many drugs that work in double-blind testing have difficulty showing efficacy beyond a placebo, because that hurdle is so high. There was an interesting radio show on the topic not too long ago, about trying to harness and maximize the effect, and teaching doctors to USE it, not to just whisk in and out of exam rooms without engaging with the patient.I wonder if the power of suggestion has anything to do with it.