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Chapter List For:
The Doctors Book of Home Remedies:
  1. Introduction to Doctors Home Remedies
  2. Acne
  3. Allergies
  4. Angina
  5. Athritis
  6. Asthma
  7. Athletes Foot
  8. Backache
  9. Bad Breath
  10. Bed-Wetting
  11. Belching
  12. Bites
  13. Black Eye
  14. Bladder Infections
  15. Blisters
  16. Blood Pressure
  17. Body Odor
  18. Boils
  19. Breast Discomfort
  20. Breastfeeding
  21. Bronchitis
  22. Bruises
  23. Bruxism
  24. Burns
  25. Bursitis
  26. Canker Sores
  27. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
  28. Cellulite
  29. Chafing
  30. Chapped Hands
  31. Chapped Lips
  32. Cholesterol
  33. Colds
  34. Cold Sores
  35. Colic
  36. Conjunctivitis
  37. Constipation
  38. Corns and Calluses
  39. Cuts and Scrapes
  40. Dandruff
  41. Denture Troubles
  42. Depression
  43. Dermatitis and Eczema
  44. Diabetes
  45. Diaper Rash
  46. Diarrhea
  47. Diverticulosis
  48. Dry Hair
  49. Dry Skin and Winter Itch
  50. Earache
  51. Ear Infection
  52. Earwax
  53. Emphysema
  54. Endometriosis
  55. Eye Redness
  56. Eyestrain
  57. Fatigue
  58. Fever
  59. Fissures
  60. Flatulence
  61. Flu
  62. Food Poisoning
  63. Foot Aches
  64. Foot Odor
  65. Forgetfullness
  66. Frostbite
  67. Genital Herpes
  68. Gingivitis
  69. Gout
  70. Hangnails
  71. Hangover
  72. Headaches
  73. Heartburn
  74. Heat Exhaustion
  75. Hemorrhoids
  76. Hiccups
  77. Hives
  78. Hyperventilation
  79. Impotence
  80. Incontinence
  81. Infertility
  82. Ingrown Hair - 10 Ways to Get a Clean Shave
  83. Ingrown Nails
  84. Insomnia
  85. Intermittent Claudication
  86. Irritable Bowel Syndrome
  87. Jet Lag
  88. Kidney Stones
  89. Knee Pain
  90. Lactose Intolerance
  91. Laryngitis
  92. Menopause
  93. Menstrual Cramps
  94. Morning Sickness
  95. Motion Sickness
  96. Muscle Pain
  97. Nausea
  98. Neck Pain
  99. Night Blindness
  100. Nosebleed
  101. Oily Hair
  102. Oily Skin
  103. Osteoporosis
  104. Perfect Posture
  105. Pet Problems
  106. Phlebitis
  107. Phobias and Fears
  108. Poison Ivy and Oak
  109. Postnasal Drip
  110. Premenstrual Syndrome
  111. Psoriasis
  112. Raynauds Syndrome
  113. Restless Legs Syndrome
  114. Scarring
  115. Shingles
  116. Shinsplints
  117. Side Stitches
  118. Sinusitis
  119. Snoring
  120. Sore Throat
  121. Stained Teeth
  122. Stings
  123. Stress
  124. Sunburn
  125. Swimmers Ear
  126. Tachycardia
  127. Tartar and Plaque
  128. Teething
  129. Tendinitis
  130. Tmj
  131. Toothache
  132. Travelers Diarrhea
  133. Triglycerides
  134. Ulcer
  135. Varicose Veins
  136. Vomiting
  137. Warts
  138. Wrinkles
  139. Yeast Infections
From the Rodale book, The Doctors Book of Home Remedies:
Edit id 2914

Nausea


Previous Chapter Muscle Pain
Next Chapter Psoriasis


Nausea

10 Stomach-Soothing Solutions

We took a survey of things that make tummies quiver and quake. In just half an hour we coughed up eggs, egg salad, eggs sunny-side up, needles, giving blood, seeing blood, hospital smells, hair in your food, bus exhaust, credit card bills, day-old grits, cooked carrots, Christmas morning anxiety, road kill, a graphic description of plastic surgery, greasy hamburger smells, "tee many martoonies," cigarette butts floating in a coffee cup, frying bacon, muck at the bottom of an old leaf pile, the smell of roasting chestnuts on the streets of New York City, a well-filled diaper, cat hairballs, bad fish, and other people being nauseous.

So how's your tummy, hmmmm? Are you a little queasy? What's that lump in your throat? Do you wish the world would end—and quickly? Well, don't worry. We've got some home remedies that will denauseate your tummy before you can say "tapeworm sandwich."

As beauty is in the eye of the beholder, so nausea is in the tummy of the nauseated. So, too, are the remedies. Keep trying until you find the one that works for you.

MEDICAL ALERT


It Could be Almost Anything

"There are at least 25 different diseases that could cause chronic nausea," says gastroenterologist Kenneth Koch, M.D. If your nausea just doesn't go away in a day or two, it's a good idea to see your doctor.

Let's get syrupy about it. If you're not that nauseated, "Coke syrup is something we use that seems to work real well," says pharmacist Robert Warren, Pharm.D., who heads Pharmacy Services at Valley Children's Hospital in Fresno, California. The noncarbonated syrup has concentrated carbohydrates that may help settle the stomach. In fact, Dr. Warren says, any soft drink liquid concentrate or even plain sugar syrup may help. The dose is 1 to 2 tablespoons for adults, at room temperature, as needed, and 1 to 2 teaspoons for children.

Or go for the uncola. Emetrol is "an over-the-counter product that works the same way as Coke syrup," Dr. Warren says, but is more expensive and without caffeine. It's a phosphorated carbohydrate solution containing the sugars glucose and fructose, and phosphoric acid.

Go for Bonine. These high-sugar syrups, however, are not for diabetics or for anyone who wants to avoid the calories. Instead, Dr. Warren says, an alternative is Bonine, a chewable antihistamine tablet with no sugar. Bonine is a motion sickness drug that works on your stomach. (Dramamine, another motion sickness medication, isn't effective against other kinds of nausea because it works on your inner ear.) As with any drug, be sure to read the precautions on the label first.

Keep in all clear down below. If you want food, stick to clear liquids like tea and juices, says nausea researcher Kenneth Koch, M.D., a gastroenterologist at Pennsylvania State University's Hershey Medical Center. These liquids should be warm or room temperature, not cold, to avoid further shock to your stomach. Drink no more than 1 or 2 ounces at a time.

Make it flat. "My mom used to give me 7-Up," Dr. Warren says. Other moms gave cola or ginger ale. Since our experts advise against cold beverages and carbonated ones, do as Stephen Bezruchka, M.D., an emergency physician at Providence Medical Center in Seattle, Washington, suggests. Let carbonated drinks stand until flat and lukewarm.

Eat carbos first. If you need something to eat, and your nausea isn't too bad, eat light carbohydrates in small amounts—toast or crackers, for instance, Dr. Koch says. As your tummy de-nauseates, graduate to light protein, like chicken breast or fish. Fatty foods are the last thing to add to your diet.

The Alternate Route


Press Your Luck

The Chinese have known for centuries that acupuncture is an effective, painless, drugless medication. Acupressure is needle-less acupuncture. "The idea is to use it before you start vomiting," says acupuncturist Joseph M. Helms, M.D., a family practitioner in Berkeley, California. Who knows, this method might work for you.

Apply pressure to the webbing between your thumb and index finder on either hand. Use firm, deep pressure and a rapid massaging movement for several minutes, Dr. Helms says. "I don't mean caress it."

Using the same kind of motion and pressure, Dr. Helms says, rub with your thumb or thumbnail on the top of your foot between the tendons of the second and third toes.

Get out of the pink. The stomach soother Pepto-Bismol and others such as Mylanta and Maalox are for disease-provoked stomach upsets, not for a queasy stomach. However, if your nausea is caused by inflammation or irritation, and if it's not too severe, Dr. Koch says, "they're reasonable to start with." But none of our experts wholeheartedly recommend them, because, as Samuel Klein, M.D., an assistant professor of gastroenterology at the University of Texas Medical School at Galveston notes, "none of them is specifically designed for nausea." And they're far from being the clear liquids doctors favor.

Try the ginger cure. Daniel B. Mowrey, Ph.D., a psychologist and psychopharmacologist in Lehi, Utah, who has been researching herbal medicine for 15 years, swears by gingerroot. "It will definitely take care of nausea," he says. Take capsules of the powdered root; the amount depends on how nauseated you are. "You know you've had enough when you burp and taste ginger," he says.

Make sure it's capsulized. Fresh ginger is too strong for most people in the amounts you have to take to get the same effect as with powder, Dr. Mowrey says. Ginger ale or ginger snaps may work if your symptoms are very mild.

End it all. One of the most effective ways to stop nausea is to allow yourself to vomit, Dr. Koch says. The nausea leaves you immediately, and maybe just one good upchuck will take care of it for good. At the very least you'll have a temporary respite from that queasy feeling. He doesn't, however, recommend making yourself vomit.

PANEL OF ADVISERS


Stephen Bezruchka, M.D., is an emergency physician at Providence Medical Center in Seattle, Washington, and author of The Pocket Doctor.

Joseph M. Helms, M.D., is a family practitioner in Berkely, California, and is president of the American Academy of Medical Acupuncture.

Samuel Klein, M.D., is assistant professor of gastroenterology and human nutrition at the University of Texas Medical School at Galveston. He is also an editorial adviser to Prevention magazine.

Kenneth Koch, M.D., is a gastroenterologist at Pennsylvania State University's Hershey Medical Center and a leading researcher for NASA into the causes of nausea.

Daniel B. Mowrey, Ph.D., of Lehi, Utah, is a psychologist and psychopharmacologist who has been researching the use of herbs in medicine for 15 years. He is author of The Scientific Validation of Herbal Medicine and Next Generation Herbal Medicine.

Robert Warren, Pharm.D., is director of Pharmacy Services at Valley Children's Hospital in Fresno, California.

Previous Chapter Muscle Pain
Next Chapter Psoriasis

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