Archive for September, 2009

Mint.. Is the best for your joints

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009
Study suggests that drinking a cup of mint syrup can relieve pain equivalent to commercially available analgesics. A report of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) that over thousands of years, the traditional healers in Brazil, describe the mint syrup for the treatment of various pains such as headaches, stomach pains, fever and flu.
Has a proven team of the University of Newcastle in an experiment carried out on mice that traditional healers on the right. And to be able to simulate the traditional treatment as much as possible, conducted a survey in Brazil to learn how to prepare traditional drug and the dose that must be addressed.
The most common ways is boil the dried mint leaves for half an hour, and left to cool and then drink.The team found that when dealing with mint syrup dose similar to the dose prescribed by traditional healers, the drug is as effective as a drug similar to aspirin called Indomethacin. The group plans to conduct a clinical study to determine the effectiveness of the mint in pain relief patients

Study suggests that drinking a cup of mint syrup can relieve pain equivalent to commercially available analgesics. A report of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) that over thousands of years, the traditional healers in Brazil, describe the mint syrup for the treatment of various pains such as headaches, stomach pains, fever and flu.
Has a proven team of the University of Newcastle in an experiment carried out on mice that traditional healers on the right. And to be able to simulate the traditional treatment as much as possible, conducted a survey in Brazil to learn how to prepare traditional drug and the dose that must be addressed.
The most common ways is boil the dried mint leaves for half an hour, and left to cool and then drink. The team found that when dealing with mint syrup dose similar to the dose prescribed by traditional healers, the drug is as effective as a drug similar to aspirin called Indomethacin. The group plans to conduct a clinical study to determine the effectiveness of the mint in pain relief patients

Has a proven team of the University of Newcastle in an experiment carried out on mice that traditional healers on the right. And to be able to simulate the traditional treatment as much as possible, conducted a survey in Brazil to learn how to prepare traditional drug and the dose that must be addressed.The most common ways is boil the dried mint leaves for half an hour, and left to cool and then drink.The team found that when dealing with mint syrup dose similar to the dose prescribed by traditional healers, the drug is as effective as a drug similar to aspirin called Indomethacin. The group plans to conduct a clinical study to determine the effectiveness of the mint in pain relief patients