
Knowledge Base
Welcome to our extensive library of articles on health concerns and ailments, alternative therapies, nutritional supplements, and much more. Please mouse over the letters to get started. We hope you enjoy browsing.
-
A
- A Useful Book I Hope You Never Need
- Acetaminophen (Tylenol) and Your Liver
- Acidophilus
- Acne
- Acne and Diet
- Activated Charcoal
- Acupressure
- Acupuncture
- Adenosine Monophosphate (AMP)
- Adrenal Complex
- Aging
- Agrimony
- Alcoholism
- Alexander Technique
- Allergies
- Allium Compounds
- Aloe Vera
- Alpha-Linolenic Acid
- Alpha-Lipoic Acid
- Alternative Approach...
- Alzheimer’s Disease
- Amino Acids
- Anemia
- Anger
- Anger, Part 2
- Angina
- Anthocyanins
- Anti-Aging Industry
- Anti-Aging Medicine
- Anti-Aging Supplements
- Antibiotics: Maximiz...
- Antioxidants
- Antioxidants and Exercise
- Anxiety and Panic
- Apitherapy
- Applied Kinesiology
- Arginine
- Arnica
- Aromatherapy
- Aromatherapy and Menstrual Cramps
- Arrhythmias
- Arrogant Doctors
- Art Therapy
- Arthritis in Your Knees
- Artichoke Leaf
- Ashwagandha
- Asparagus Root
- Aston Patterning
- Astragalus
- Athlete’s Foot
- Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD)
- Avoiding Holiday Weight Gain
- Ayurveda
- Bromelain and Arthritis
- Can We Slow Down Aging?
- Can You Get Fried By An Airport Scanner?
- Do I Really Need My Antidepressants?
- Fibromyalgia and Acupuncture
- Healing Affirmations
- Hot Flashes and Acupuncture
- Integrative Fixes for Allergy Miseries
- It’s Allergy Season…
- It’s Official: Aspirin Prevents Cancer
- Less Stress: Aromatherapy
- Low Dosage Aspirin: ...
- Muscle Aches and Pains
- Q&A: Alcohol and Breast Cancer
- Q&A: Bromelain ...
- Q&A: Citicholine and the Aging Brain
- Q&A: How do Con...
- Q&A: Supplement...
- SAMe for Depression and Arthritis
- Sneezy, Dopey, Sleepy, Grumpy (Doc)
- Solving Adrenal Imbalance
- Stress Less: Acupuncture
- Supplements I Take: Acetyl-L-Carnitine
- Testing Your Adrenal Glands
- The Anxiety in Your Gut
- The Key to Anti-Aging?
- Vitamin A
- Will Alzheimer’s Skyrocket?
- Women and ADD: Part 1
- Women and ADD: Part 2
- Women in the Asylum
- Women, ADD, and the Drugs That Help
- B
- A Bubble About To Burst
- A Natural Bladder Product
- Bach Flower Therapy
- Bad Breath: Eight Ways to Sweeten
- Bake Sale for Health Care
- Baking Soda
- Basic Foods for Cupb...
- Bedbugs! (and a PS on Ticks)
- Bee Products
- Behavior Modificatio...
- Belly Fat! New Research Reveals…
- Beta-Carotene
- Beta-Sitosterol
- Bifidobacteria
- Big Pharma, Bad Medicine
- Bilberry
- Biofeedback
- Biography as Biology
- Bioidentical Hormones
- Biotin
- Black Cohosh
- Blackberry
- Bone-Building Formula
- Borage Oil
- Boron
- Boswellia
- Brain-Boosting Suppl...
- Breaking the Fast with Breakfast
- Breast Thermogram
- Breathing Out Stress
- Bromelain
- Bromelain and Arthritis
- Bromelain/Quercetin
- Bronchitis
- Buckthorn Bark
- Burns
- Butcher’s Broom
- Butterbur
- Europe Bamboozled By Big Pharma
- Europe Bamboozled by Big Pharma, Part 2
- Fibrocystic Breast Changes
- Flower Essence Thera...
- For Better Brain + Memory, Remember This
- High Blood Pressure
- High Blood Pressure
- Hopping for Strong Bones
- Hormones and Breast Cancer
- Hypnotized by Big Pharma
- Keeping Your Smarts as You Age
- Keeping Your Smarts, Part 2
- Less Stress: Flower Essence Therapy
- Let the Sun Shine: P...
- Low Thyroid and Taki...
- Menopause and Bioidentical Hormones
- More Sleaze from Big Pharma
- Pantothenic Acid (B5)
- Q&A: Alcohol and Breast Cancer
- Q&A: Brain-Healthy Diet
- Q&A: Bromelain ...
- Q&A: Chiropractor for Son’s Back Pain
- Q&A: Exercise and a Healthy Brain
- Q&A: Low Blood Sugar
- Q&A: Supplements for Better Breathing
- Saccharomyces boulardii
- Something New About Birth Control Pills
- Soy Foods and Breast Cancer
- Stress and Brain Fog...
- Stress Less: Flower ...
- The Night Shift and Breast Cancer
- Thiamin (B1)
- Three Foods for Easy Breathing
- Two Important Studie...
- Using Soy to Prevent Breast Cancer
- Vitamin B Complex
- Vitamin B12
- Vitamin B6
- What’s Happening to My Brain
- You! Off Your Duff and On Your Bike!
- Your Bones Need More Than Calcium
- Your Brain: Could It...
- Your Brain: Could Pr...
- Your Brain: Is Low Thyroid a Factor?
- Your Brain: It Could Be Low Serotonin
- Your Brain: Maybe It...
- Your Brain: Maybe Your Depressed
- Your Brain: Yes, It ...
- Your Sex Drive, the FDA, and Big Pharma
- C
- “You Are Corn”
- Activated Charcoal
- Calcium
- Calcium/Magnesium
- Calendula
- Can I Be Tested for ...
- Can You Lower Choles...
- Canada’s Medicine Explained
- Cancer
- Cancer and Vitamin D
- Cancer Prevention
- Cancer Prevention Clip ‘n Save
- Candida Overgrowth Syndrome
- Canker Sores
- Caprylic Acid
- Carnitine
- Carotenoids
- Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Cascara Sagrada
- CASE STUDY: C’est Moi
- Cat’s Claw
- Cataracts
- Catechins
- Cayenne
- Celery Extract
- Chamomile
- Charcoal Grilling an...
- Chasteberry
- Chelation Therapy
- Cherry Fruit Extract
- Chinese Medicine Tac...
- Chiropractic
- Chitosan
- Chondroitin
- Chromium
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
- Chronic Pain
- Circles of Light
- Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10)
- Cold Sores
- Colds
- Colloidal Oatmeal
- Colon Therapy
- Color Therapy
- Coltsfoot
- Complex Carbohydrates
- Congestive Heart Failure
- Conjugated Linoleic Acid
- Constipation
- Copper
- Coriander Seed
- Cough
- Cranberry
- Cranial Electrostimulation
- Craniosacral Therapy
- Creatine
- Creativity and Health
- Crestor: To Take or Not To Take
- Crohn’s Disease
- Crystal and Gem Therapy
- Cuts and Scrapes
- Fast Food Favorites: Chickpeas
- High Cholesterol
- Is Vitamin C Worthwhile?
- Lecithin and Choline
- Liquid C
- Melatonin for Mild Cognitive Impairment
- Nutritional Counseli...
- Preventing Cancer with One Good Choice
- Pumpkin (cucurbita) Seed
- Q&A: Alcohol and Breast Cancer
- Q&A: Chiropractor for Son’s Back Pain
- Q&A: Citicholine and the Aging Brain
- Q&A: Complex Carbohydrates
- Red Grapefruit and Cholesterol
- Reducing Your Risk of Ovarian Cancer
- Soy Foods and Breast Cancer
- Supplements I Take: Acetyl-L-Carnitine
- The Carrot and Your Longevity
- The Case of the Mysterious Rash
- The Chemistry of Stress
- The Night Shift and Breast Cancer
- Traditional Chinese Medicine
- Vitamin C
- Vitamin C and Flavinoids
- Welcome Casey Kelley, MD
- WholeHealth Chicago and Kids?
- Why I Dislike Drug Companies
- Your Bones Need More Than Calcium
- Your Colonoscopy
- D
- 48,328 Diet Books
- A Disgusting Taste in Her Mouth
- Acne and Diet
- Cancer and Vitamin D
- D-ribose: New Supplement of Note
- Dance Therapy
- Dandelion
- De-Cluttering Your Life
- Death By Cupcake
- Death By Medicine
- Dentist Anxieties? Fear of Flying?
- Depression
- Detoxification Therapy
- Devil’s Claw
- DHEA
- Diabetes
- Diarrhea
- Diet Drugs
- Diets
- Digestive Enzymes
- Digestive Enzymes
- Diindolylmethance (DIM)
- DLPA (D, L Phenylalanine)
- DMAE (Dimethylaminoethanol)
- Doctors and Lab Tests
- Don’t Shoot the Messenger
- Dong Quai (angelica)
- Drug-Free Hormone Balancing
- Eight Ways to Eat the Triple Whammy Way
- Herbal Decongestant
- Herbal Digestive Formula
- I Went to the Doctor...
- Important Depression Update
- Let the Sun Shine: P...
- On Their Knees: Doct...
- Our Deaf Ears
- Pre-diabetes Prescription Drugs
- Q&A: Brain-Healthy Diet
- Q&A: Tanning Be...
- Q&A: Vitamin D
- SAMe for Depression and Arthritis
- St. John’s Wor...
- The Dragon’s Way
- Vitamin D
- Vitamin D – Again
- Vitamin D and Fibromyalgia
- Vitamin D and Pain Control
- Vitamin D and Your Heart
- Vitamin D, Part 2
- Why Doctors Avoid Prescription Drugs
- Why I Dislike Drug Companies
- You! Off Your Duff and On Your Bike!
- Your Brain: Maybe Your Depressed
- E
- An Easier Way to Ove...
- Antioxidants and Exercise
- Astonishingly Unhealthful Eating
- Digestive Enzymes
- Earache
- Eat Food as Nouns, Not Adjectives
- Echinacea
- Echinacea: My Doubts...
- Eczema
- Elderberry and Elderflower
- Empty Nose Syndrome
- Endometriosis
- Energy Psychology
- Ephedra (Ma huang)
- Epilepsy
- Escaping Routine
- Eucalyptus
- Europe Bamboozled By Big Pharma
- Europe Bamboozled by Big Pharma, Part 2
- Europe’s Healthcare System
- Evening Primrose Oil
- Exercise and Weight Loss
- Fatigue
- Food Sensitivity Elimination Diet
- How Much Exercise?
- Natural Healing from Trauma
- Nutritional Health for Your Eyes
- Q&A: Exercise and a Healthy Brain
- Q&A: Increasing Your Energy
- Q&A: Vitamin E and Heart Attacks
- F
- Farmers Markets: The Way to Eat
- 14 Food Changes to Consider
- A Must Read for Those with Fibromyalgia
- Add Some Fat to Your Veggies
- Advances in Fibromyalgia
- Advances in Fibromyalgia: Part 2
- Advances in Fibromyalgia: Part 3
- Bach Flower Therapy
- Basic Foods for Cupb...
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
- Dentist Anxieties? Fear of Flying?
- False Unicorn Root
- Fast Food Favorites: Chickpeas
- Fast Food Favorites: Salmon in a Pouch
- Fast Food Favorites: Spinach
- Fasting
- Fatigue
- Fear Factor
- Feldenkrais Method
- Fennel
- Fertility: Six Natur...
- Feverfew
- Fiber, insoluble
- Fiber, soluble
- Fibrocystic Breast Changes
- Fibromyalgia
- Fibromyalgia and Acupuncture
- Fibromyalgia Explained: Part 1
- Fibromyalgia Explained: Why the Pain?
- Fibromyalgia is Real
- Fibromyalgia Quiz
- Fibromyalgia: An Almost Natural Approach
- Fibromyalgia: Conventional Treatment
- Fibromyalgia: Gender...
- Fibromyalgia: The Fatigue Part
- First Line Therapy
- Fish Oil and Your Child’s Brain
- Fish Oil Now by Prescription
- Fish Oils
- Five Steps to Exiting the Rut
- Flatulence
- Flavinoids
- Flaxseed Oil
- Flower Essence Thera...
- Flu
- Flu Shot: Do I Need One?
- Flu Shots, Mercury, ...
- Folic Acid
- Food Sensitivity Elimination Diet
- Forskolin
- FOS (Fructo-oligosaccharides)
- Franz Kafka’s The ...
- Functional Medicine
- Help! I’m Getting the Flu
- Less Stress: Flower Essence Therapy
- Medical Sexism and Fibromyalgia
- More on Lyrica, the Fibromyalgia Drug
- Name-That-Food Quiz
- Nicole’s Story and...
- Preventing and Treating the Flu
- Preventing Flu
- Q&A: Can Food Help Mood?
- Q&A: Flu Shot
- Q&A: Tamiflu
- Should I Get the Flu Shot?
- Should I get the Swine Flu Vaccine?
- Still More Benefits of Fish Oil
- Still More on the Flu
- Stress Less: Flower ...
- Swine Flu
- The Fox Guarding the Hen House
- The Frayed Doctor-Patient Relationship
- Toxic Food Syndrome
- Toxic Food Syndrome, Part 2
- Trimming the Tummy Fat
- Two New Drugs for Fi...
- Vitamin C and Flavinoids
- Vitamin D and Fibromyalgia
- Where Did This Tummy Fat Come From?
- Yet Another Reason to Enjoy Fruit
- Your Brain: Could It...
- Your Sex Drive, the FDA, and Big Pharma
- G
- Are You Reluctant to Get Well?
- Crystal and Gem Therapy
- GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
- Gallstones
- Gamma-Oryzanol
- Garcinia Cambogia
- Garlic
- Gelatin
- Ginger
- Ginkgo Biloba
- Ginkgo Biloba
- Ginkgo Biloba
- Ginseng (Panax)
- Glandular Therapies
- Glucosamine
- Glutamine
- Glutathione
- Gluten Sensitivity
- Goldenseal
- Good News…And The Bad
- Gota Kola
- Gout
- Grape Seed Extract
- Grapefruit Seed Extract
- Gratitude
- Gratitude
- Green Tea
- Green Tea and Ovarian Cancer
- Gugulipid
- Gum Disease
- H
- “My hormones are out of whack!”
- A Natural Heartburn Treatment
- Bioidentical Hormones
- Can I Quit My Heartburn Drug?
- Congestive Heart Failure
- Creativity and Health
- Drug-Free Hormone Balancing
- Evil Health Insurance Tactics
- Franz Kafka and Health Insurance
- Hair Loss
- Hair Problems
- Hawthorn
- Healing Touch: A Bal...
- Health Care Reform and You (and Me)
- Health Care Reform: ...
- Health Consequences of Harassment
- Health Insurance: Food for Thought
- Healthcare PTSD
- Healthy Living is the Best Revenge
- Heart Disease Prevention
- Heartburn
- Hellerwork
- Hemorrhoids
- Hepatitis
- Herbal Decongestant
- Herbal Digestive Formula
- Hey Doc, When Are Yo...
- High Blood Pressure
- High Blood Pressure
- High Cholesterol
- Holiday Cheer
- Holiday Food…and More Food
- Holiday Stress Rx: Part 2
- Holiday Stress Rx: Part 3
- Holiday Stress Rx: Ten Tips
- Homeopathy
- Homeopathy and Kids
- Homocysteine and Your Health
- Hopping for Strong Bones
- Horehound
- Hormones and Breast Cancer
- Horse Chestnut
- Hospitals, Health Sp...
- Hot Flashes and Acupuncture
- How Would You Rate Your Handshake?
- Huperzine A
- Hydrotherapy
- Hypnotherapy
- I’m Losing My Hair!
- Important News About Hormone Therapy
- Money and Happiness
- My One Hundred Million Dollar Pen
- Prescribing Happiness
- Q&A: Brain-Healthy Diet
- Q&A: Vitamin E and Heart Attacks
- RESPeRATE for High Blood Pressure
- Return of the Hundred Million Dollar Pen
- Saving a Bundle on Healthcare, Part 2
- Saving A Bundle on Your Health Care
- Saving A Bundle on Y...
- I
- Another Idea Sixpack
- Franz Kafka and Health Insurance
- Idea Sixpack
- Important News About Hormone Therapy
- Impotence
- Infertility, Female
- Infertility, Male
- Insomnia
- Insurance Insurance
- Iodine
- Iodine and You
- Ipriflavone
- Iridology
- Iron
- Irritable Bowel Syndrome
- Ivy Leaf
- More on Infertility
- Q&A: Interactio...
- Q&A: Muscle Str...
- Q&A: Sleep and Your Immune System
- Soy Isoflavones
- Thoughts on Infertility, Part 1
- Worst-Fear Insurance
- J
- K
- L
- Acetaminophen (Tylenol) and Your Liver
- Bedbugs! (and a PS on Ticks)
- Conjugated Linoleic Acid
- La Vie Francaise
- Lady Gaga, Madonna, Andy Warhol, and Me
- Laugh Your Troubles Away
- Lavender
- Leaky Gut: Diagnosis and Repair
- Lecithin and Choline
- Less Stress: Flower Essence Therapy
- Less Stress: Guided Imagery
- Licorice
- Light Therapy
- Lipotrophic Combination
- Living Longer, Living Healthier
- Lupus
- Lycopene
- Lyme Disease Attacks Local Physician (!)
- Lysine
- More on Lyrica, the Fibromyalgia Drug
- Q&A: Low Blood Sugar
- Understanding Leaky Gut Syndrome
- Why You Don’t Need Lipitor
- M
- A Modest Medical Proposal
- Another Mystery Rash
- Aromatherapy and Menstrual Cramps
- Better Memory Tricks, Part 1
- Calcium/Magnesium
- Death By Medicine
- Does Meditation Work?
- Easing Cramps
- For Better Brain + Memory, Remember This
- I Think My Mind Is Going
- Importance of Magnesium
- Longer Life for the Man in Your Life
- Maca
- Macrobiotics
- Macular Degeneration
- Magnesium
- Magnet Therapy
- Male Menopause–Is It Real?
- Mammogram Controversy
- Marshmellow
- Massage Therapy
- Mayo Clinic Sells Its Soul
- Measuring Hormone Levels
- Medical Sexism and Fibromyalgia
- Medicine’s Latest Step Backwards
- Meditation
- Meet Elaine
- Melatonin
- Melatonin and Perimenopause
- Melatonin for Mild Cognitive Impairment
- Melissa
- Memory Loss/Impairment
- Menopause
- Menopause and Bioidentical Hormones
- Menopause Herbal Combination
- Menopause Transition Rx
- Metabolic Syndrome
- Methionine
- Migraine
- Milk Thistle
- Mistletoe
- Modify Risk Factors
- More Better Memory Tricks
- MSM
- Muira Puama
- Mullein
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Muscle Aches and Pains
- Mushrooms
- Music Therapy
- My One Hundred Million Dollar Pen
- Myers’ Cocktail
- Myotherapy
- Myrtle
- Organic Milk
- Pre-Menopause Anxiety
- Q&A: Can Food Help Mood?
- Q&A: Men and the Triple Whammy
- Q&A: Muscle Str...
- Q&A: Red Meat
- N
- A Newly Discovered C...
- A Solid Thumbs-Up on...
- Can I Be Tested for ...
- Can You Trust the NYT?
- Learning to Say No
- NAC (N-acetylcysteine)
- NADH (Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide)
- Naringin
- Native American Medicine
- Natural Progesterone Cream
- Naturopathy
- Nettle
- Niacin
- Nicole’s Story and...
- Nutritional Bad News
- Nutritional Counseli...
- Nutritional Medicine News
- Nutritional Research: Busy Month
- Our Missing Nutrients
- Q&A: New Year’s Resolution
- Q&A: Nutritional Medicine
- R&R for 2008
- O
- Colloidal Oatmeal
- Green Tea and Ovarian Cancer
- Health Risks of the Oil Gusher
- Oak Bark
- Oat Straw
- Obesity by Infection
- Obsessing Over Regrets
- Omega-3 Fatty Acids
- Omega-6 Fatty Acids
- Oprah: Poster Child ...
- Oregano
- Organic Milk
- Organics
- Osteopathy
- Osteoporosis
- Overweight? Blame Your Car
- Reducing Your Risk of Ovarian Cancer
- Second Opinions
- Thinking Out of the Box
- P
- Case Study: Melanie’s PMS Hell
- A Paradigm Shift
- An Easier Way to Ove...
- Anxiety and Panic
- Before Filling Your ...
- Chronic Pain
- Cure PMS The Natural...
- Energy Psychology
- Four Easy Steps to S...
- Melatonin and Perimenopause
- Muscle Aches and Pains
- Natural Healing from Trauma
- Natural Progesterone Cream
- On Their Knees: Doct...
- PABA (para-aminobenzoic acid)
- Pantothenic Acid (B5)
- Parsley
- Pau d’arco
- Pelargonium sidoides (African geranium)
- Peppermint
- Perimenopause
- Phosphatidylserine (PS)
- Phyllanthus/Ayurvedi...
- Physicians as Morons
- Physician’s Guide to Fibromyalgia
- Picking At a Scab
- PMS
- PMS Rx
- Poisoned by an Antibiotic
- Polarity Therapy
- Policosanol
- Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS)
- Potassium
- Prayer
- Pre-diabetes Prescription Drugs
- Pre-Menopause Anxiety
- Preventing Flu
- Preventive Tests You Need
- Prickly Pear
- Prostate Cancer Scre...
- Prostate Problems
- Psoriasis
- Psyllium
- Pumpkin (cucurbita) Seed
- Push Up, Trim Down
- Pycnogenol: Are You a Frequent Flyer?
- Pygeum Africanum
- Pyruvate
- Q&A: Herbs Control PMS Palpitations
- The Dark Side of Prescription Drugs
- Treating Polycystic ...
- Vitamin D and Pain Control
- Why Doctors Avoid Prescription Drugs
- Your Brain: Could Pr...
- Q
- Bromelain/Quercetin
- Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10)
- Fibromyalgia Quiz
- Name-That-Food Quiz
- Q&A: A Question About SICKO
- Q&A: Can Food Help Mood?
- Q&A: Citicholine and the Aging Brain
- Q&A: Complex Carbohydrates
- Q&A: Exercise and a Healthy Brain
- Q&A: Flu Shot
- Q&A: How Much Water?
- Q&A: Increasing Your Energy
- Q&A: Interactio...
- Q&A: Men and the Triple Whammy
- Q&A: SAMe or St. John’s Wort?
- Q&A: Tamiflu
- Q&A: Tanning Be...
- Qigong
- Quercetin
- Take the Triple Whammy Quiz
- R
- 2008: Time for Mini-Resolutions
- 2012: Time for Mini-Resolutions
- A Quick and Easy Ref...
- All Your Vegetables Soup
- Another Mystery Rash
- Are You Reluctant to Get Well?
- D-ribose: New Supplement of Note
- Modifying Risk Factors
- Q&A: New Year’s Resolution
- Q&A: Red Meat
- R&R for 2008
- Raspberry Leaf (rubus idaeus)
- Raynaud’s Disease
- Recipes: Asparagus G...
- Recipes: Heather’s Hot and Hearty Chili
- Recipes: Josephina...
- Recipes: Lemony Lent...
- Recipes: Spicy Cabbage Soup
- Red Rice Yeast
- Reflexology
- Reiki
- Resistance, Sigmund ...
- RESPeRATE for High Blood Pressure
- Resveratrol
- Rhodiola rosea
- Riboflavin (vitamin B2)
- Rolfing® Structural Integration
- Rosacea
- Rosemary
- Stress Less: Reflexology
- S
- How Stress Shortens ...
- Walking Away From Ch...
- A SAD (Seasonal Affe...
- Better Sleep
- Brain-Boosting Suppl...
- Breathe Out Stress
- Breathing Out Stress
- Cuts and Scrapes
- December Stress
- Don’t Forget Your Selenium
- Fast Food Favorites: Salmon in a Pouch
- Fast Food Favorites: Spinach
- Flu Shot: Do I Need One?
- Food Sensitivity Elimination Diet
- Getting Off the Seas...
- Help for Your Fading Sex Drive
- Holiday Stress Rx: Part 2
- Holiday Stress Rx: Part 3
- Holiday Stress Rx: Ten Tips
- Idea Sixpack
- Keeping Your Smarts as You Age
- Keeping Your Smarts, Part 2
- Kidney Stones
- Learning to Say No
- Medical Sexism and Fibromyalgia
- More Travel Snacks
- My Annual Smoking Rant
- Nature’s Apoth...
- Our Governor the Sociopath
- Q&A: A Question About SICKO
- Q&A: SAMe or St. John’s Wort?
- Q&A: Sleep and Your Immune System
- Q&A: Stiff Neck
- Q&A: Supplements and the Triple Whammy
- Q&A: Tanning Be...
- Saccharomyces boulardii
- SAMe (S-adenosylmethionine)
- SAMe for Depression and Arthritis
- Saw Palmetto
- Sea Salt Nonsense
- Second Opinion
- Second Opinions
- Selenium
- Sex! Wine! Italians!
- Shark Liver Oil
- Shiatsu
- Shingles
- Should I get the Swine Flu Vaccine?
- Siberian Ginseng
- SICKO Part Five: Fixing the System
- SICKO Part Four
- SICKO Part One
- SiCKO Part Three: Mo...
- SICKO Part Two
- Sinus Infections
- Sinusitis
- Six Commonly Missed ...
- Six Commonly Missed ...
- Slippery Elm
- Sneezy, Dopey, Sleepy, Grumpy (Doc)
- Sore Throat
- Soy Foods and Breast Cancer
- Soy Isoflavones
- Spirulina and Kelp
- Sprains and Strains
- St. John’s Wort
- St. John’s Wor...
- Stay Skeptical
- Staying Smart
- Still Smoke?
- Stress
- Stress and Brain Fog...
- Stress Less: Acupuncture
- Stress Less: Meditation
- Stress Less: Meditation
- Stress Less: T’ai Chi
- Stroke
- Sugar
- Summertime’s Natural Serotonin Boosters
- Sunburn
- Swine Flu
- Symptoms: Disease or Functional?
- The Most Important Supplement
- The Sadness of Happy Meals
- The Upside of Low Serotonin
- Tips for Better Sleep
- Travel Snacks
- Using Soy to Prevent Breast Cancer
- Wintertime Blues: 10...
- Women, Baseball Bats, Men, and Serotonin
- T
- Acetaminophen (Tylenol) and Your Liver
- Eight Ways to Eat the Triple Whammy Way
- If You Take Thyroid Hormones
- Low Thyroid and Taki...
- Milk Thistle
- More Travel Snacks
- Natural Healing from Trauma
- Oprah: Poster Child ...
- Q&A: Men and the Triple Whammy
- Q&A: Supplements and the Triple Whammy
- Sore Throat
- Stop the Thyroid Madness
- Stress Less: T’ai Chi
- Surprises for Me on TV
- T’ai Chi: Getting Started
- Tai Chi
- Take the Triple Whammy Quiz
- Taurine
- Tea Tree Oil
- Temperature Test for Hypothyroidism
- The Upside of Low Serotonin
- Therapeutic Touch
- Thiamin (B1)
- Thinking Out of the Box
- Thyroid Disease
- Townsend Letter
- Toxic Food Syndrome
- Toxic Food Syndrome, Part 2
- Toxic Metals and Disease
- Trace Minerals
- U
- V
- All Your Vegetables Soup
- Another Reason You Need Vitamins
- Cancer and Vitamin D
- Flu Shot: Do I Need One?
- Is Vitamin C Worthwhile?
- Let the Sun Shine: P...
- Liquid C
- Nature’s Apoth...
- Pantothenic Acid (B5)
- Q&A: Tanning Be...
- Q&A: Vitamin D
- Q&A: Vitamin E and Heart Attacks
- Should I get the Swine Flu Vaccine?
- Valerian
- Varicose Veins
- Vinpocetine
- Vitamin A
- Vitamin B Complex
- Vitamin B12
- Vitamin B6
- Vitamin C
- Vitamin C and Flavinoids
- Vitamin D
- Vitamin D – Again
- Vitamin D and Fibromyalgia
- Vitamin D and Pain Control
- Vitamin D and Your Heart
- Vitamin D, Part 2
- Vitamin E
- Vitamin Graveyard
- W
- Sturm and Drang at Whole Foods
- A Newly Discovered C...
- Are You Drinking Enough Water?
- Benefits of a Whole Food Diet
- Case History Part 2:...
- Case History: Resistance to Getting Well
- Exercise and Weight Loss
- Is There A Wonder Drug in Our Midst?
- Q&A: How Much Water?
- Resistance, Sigmund ...
- Something New for Weight Loss
- The Launch of Our Updated Website
- The Weather and Your Symptoms
- The WholeHealth Healing Cave
- Walnut Leaf
- Warts
- Weight Loss
- Where You Live Matters
- White Willow Bark
- Why We Get Fat: It’s Official
- Wild Yam
- Wintertime Blues: 10...
- Women + Certain Carbs = Early Death
- Women and ADD: Part 1
- Women and Weight: Do...
- Women’s Herbal Combination
- Women, ADD, and the Drugs That Help
- Women, Baseball Bats, Men, and Serotonin
- Worry and Stress
- Writing Therapy
- X
- Y
- “You Are Corn”
- Red Rice Yeast
- Stress Less: Yoga
- Wild Yam
- Yeast Infections (Vaginal)
- Yet Another Mystery Rash
- Yoga
- Yoga: Getting Started
- Yogurt 101: Become a Label-Reader
- Yohimbe
- Younger Than 45? You...
- Your Brain: Could Pr...
- Your Brain: Is Low Thyroid a Factor?
- Your Brain: It Could Be Low Serotonin
- Your Brain: Maybe It...
- Your Brain: Maybe Your Depressed
- Your Brain: Yes, It ...
- Z
Join Our Health Tip Newsletter
Get advice and recommendations, delicious and time-saving recipes from The Triple Whammy Food Plan, medical news, supplement reviews, and more!
Crohn’s Disease
We don’t understand a lot about Crohn’s disease, but we do know that more and more young people are being diagnosed with it. Crohn’s is a chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. It strikes mainly adolescents and young adults, and manifests itself as abdominal pain, fever, diarrhea, and weight loss. The small intestine is primarily affected, and the patient develops real problems in absorbing important nutrients. Physicians use the anti-inflammatory drugs sulfasalazine and steroids to reduce the inflammation. As the disease seems to be related to alterations in the immune system, they sometimes add medications to suppress immunity as well. Unfortunately, the disease often progresses despite drug therapy, and surgery is frequently needed for infections and intestinal obstruction.
At WholeHealth Chicago, we believe that a major commitment to lifestyle changes, including strict attention to diet, stress reduction, and taking appropriate supplements, can make a significant difference in the lives of people with Crohn’s disease.
Crohn’s disease, also known as regional ileitis or enteritis, is a chronic inflammatory condition of the intestines. Although the disease usually develops at the end of the small intestine (called the ileum) or in the colon, it can affect any part of the digestive tract, from the mouth to the anus. The condition begins slowly, causing such symptoms as crampy abdominal pain, fever, diarrhea, weight loss, and a chronic feeling of sickness. For unknown reasons, Crohn’s disease tends to flare up and then subside, sometimes for months, before another episode occurs.
Over time, the disease can cause abscesses and ulcers to form, which may then deeply erode the intestinal wall. In especially severe cases, further complications–such as fistulas and anal fissures–can develop. Fistulas are abnormal passages between body organs that allow pus and fluids to drain; in Crohn’s, fistulas form between loops of intestine, or between the intestine and the skin or the intestine and the bladder.
Rarely, Crohn’s-related inflammation and a thickening of the small intestine is so severe that an intestinal obstruction occurs. Such an obstruction, which causes extreme abdominal pain with vomiting, is an emergency that requires immediate medical attention.
About 500,000 Americans–mostly adolescents and young adults–are affected with Crohn’s disease. Some people have only one or two attacks in their lifetime, while others suffer from repeated flare-ups.
Currently, there is no specific cure for Crohn’s disease, but the condition can be managed with medications and, in some cases, surgery. Lifestyle changes–with a special emphasis on diet–and the use of certain supplements can dramatically improve the course of the disease and the quality of life of people who have been diagnosed with it.
Key Symptoms
- Episodes of abdominal pain and cramping, especially on the lower right side of the abdomen
- Diarrhea
- Rectal bleeding
- Fatigue, nausea, and fever
- Appetite loss, weight loss, and general malaise
- Anal abscesses and fissures
- Systemic complications, such as arthritis and skin lesions
What Causes Crohn’s Disease?
The exact cause of Crohn’s disease is a mystery. Heredity may play a role since the condition sometimes runs in families and is more prevalent in certain ethnic groups. Men and women are equally affected. Diet is another possible contributor. In countries where people consume a lot of fiber, Crohn’s disease is not nearly as common as it is in Western countries, where diets tend to be high in fat and sugar and low in fiber.
Other theories on what causes Crohn’s disease include:
- Infection. Perhaps the most popular theory is that infection with a virus or bacterium generates ongoing inflammation in the intestines.
Autoimmune involvement. Intestinal inflammation appears to get triggered from within, when the body’s own immune system turns on itself and attacks the intestines. Many Crohn’s sufferers are, in fact, found to have immune system abnormalities. - Food allergies. Numerous nutritionally oriented doctors think that food sensitivities (particularly to dairy and gluten) can contribute to the intestinal irritation that ultimately sets Crohn’s disease in motion.
- Stress. It’s not uncommon for the initial bout of Crohn’s disease to come on the heels of an episode of significant stress, such as the death of a family member. Some doctors, however, point out that there’s no proof at all that the disease is caused by emotional distress, and that claiming that it is puts an unfair burden on the patient.
Conventional Treatments
Doctors generally treat Crohn’s disease with a combination of medications (over-the-counter and prescription) and lifestyle recommendations.
Crohn’s disease is one of the two major conditions that cause a chronic inflammation in the intestines. The other major inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is ulcerative colitis, which primarily affects the lining of the large intestine (colon). Both conditions damage the intestines in their own way and produce their own set of symptoms. The two diseases can be very challenging to distinguish from one another, based on symptoms alone. Fortunately, the medical management of each disease is similar.
In contrast, there is a third extremely common intestinal ailment called irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), which causes cramping and diarrhea but not bleeding or inflammation. Although quite uncomfortable, IBS does not pose a danger to a person’s overall health, nor does it lead to either ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease.
Nutritional issues
Because the small intestine is involved with the absorption of food and nutrients, careful attention to the diet is important for anyone with Crohn’s disease because vitamin and mineral deficiencies can develop.
Preliminary findings reported in the February 2001 European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology indicate that a diet designed to minimize soil contaminants and such chemicals as titanium dioxide and aluminosilicates may even lead to the remission of the disease in some patients. More research is needed, however.
Although they recognize that nutrition can be problematic, most conventional physicians do not believe that dietary changes will affect the overall course of Crohn’s. They do caution patients to reduce their fiber intake in order to prevent an intestinal blockage if there is X-ray evidence of a significant narrowing of the small intestines.
Surgery is generally reserved for complications of the disease rather than for treating it directly. A bowel obstruction, the formation of a severe fistula, or the perforation of the intestinal wall would merit surgery, for example. Surgical treatments are not very helpful in altering the progression of Crohn’s disease, however.
Medications
Researchers have made significant advances in finding medications that can help relieve pain and control inflammation in people with Crohn’s disease.
For mild attacks, over-the-counter antidiarrheal medications or pain-relievers may be recommended.
For chronic illness or flare-ups, drugs containing a substance called mesalamine (sulfasalazine and various 5-ASA agents) are often prescribed to help control inflammation.
Corticosteroids are also used to manage inflammation, but studies have shown no benefit in continuing to take them once a remission has occurred. This is because the cost of long-term steroid use, in terms of side effects, can be high. In addition, long-term use of either steroids or sulfasalazine has not been shown to reduce the recurrence rate of Crohn’s disease.
Drugs to suppress the immune system, such as azathioprine and mercaptopurine, are prescribed for both acute flare-ups and to prevent recurrences. As an added benefit, these medications can reduce the overall activity of the disease, causing fistulas to close and abscesses to heal, and reducing the need for corticosteroids.
Currently, gastroenterologists generally start patients on sulfasalazine for acute episodes, and move on to steroids if this drug fails. Immunosuppressive drugs are added if the first two are not working; they may then be used as maintenance (allowing the steroids to be reduced or even discontinued) in order to prevent a relapse.
Tests and Procedures
A thorough physical examination and a series of tests are needed to properly diagnose Crohn’s disease.
Colonoscopy with possible biopsy is the single most useful test to diagnose any inflammatory bowel disease. To get a clear view of the large intestine (think colon in colonoscopy), your doctor may well order this test. A flexible lighted tube called an endoscope is inserted into the anus and passed through the full length of the colon. The tube is attached to a camera that enables the examiner to visually inspect the area for inflammation or bleeding. In some cases, the doctor may take a sample of tissue (a biopsy) from the intestinal lining to inspect under a microscope in the laboratory.
X-ray imaging of the bowel can provide essential information for the diagnosis of Crohn’s disease. An X ray of the stomach and small intestine is especially important because the small intestine cannot be reached by a colonoscopic examination. You are given some liquid barium to swallow, and when the barium reaches the small intestine, the radiologist will look for unique changes characteristic of Crohn’s. Sometimes, the doctor may also order computerized imaging (CT scan) of the abdomen, to check for thickened loops of intestine and abscesses.
Standard blood tests will not help in the diagnosis of Crohn’s but are useful in determining the effect of the disease on your overall health. For example, a low red cell count (anemia) could indicate bleeding from the intestines or a vitamin deficiency. A high white blood cell count could suggest inflammation somewhere in your system. Electrolyte abnormalities are common when significant diarrhea is present, while low levels of albumin usually indicate poor nutrition.
Blood tests for food sensitivity. Most nutritionally oriented physicians will suggest blood tests for IgE and IgG antibodies to commonly eaten foods. They believe that when high levels of antibodies are present, your body is perceiving certain foods as the “enemy.” Because Crohn’s disease could be a reaction to this hypersensitivity, they will recommend total elimination of any offending foods. This is controversial, however, because most gastroenterologists do not believe that specific food sensitivities are of any significant concern, either in the cause or in the treatment of Crohn’s disease.
Blood tests for nutritional status. Because the absorption of vital nutrients can be impaired in Crohn’s disease, nutritionally oriented physicians may recommend measuring the levels of vitamins, minerals, and essential fatty acids in your blood. Based on your results, they plan an individualized program of nutritional supplementation.
Comprehensive stool digestive analysis (with added tests for parasites) is often recommended by nutritionally oriented physicians. This test helps determine how well you are digesting and absorbing the foods that you eat. Based on the results, you may be advised to make dietary changes or to begin taking digestive enzymes to enhance absorption.
Treatment and Prevention
While there’s no cure for Crohn’s disease, there is a lot that you can do to control it. Working with your doctor, you may well find a way to manage the intestinal inflammation, lessen abdominal pain and diarrhea, minimize rectal bleeding, and avoid the nutritional deficiencies caused by such problems. In many cases, people with Crohn’s experience months or even years of remission–with no pain or other symptoms.
As a complement to your traditional medical care, there are a number of important things you can do to keep yourself healthy and to minimize the frequency and severity of your flare-ups (See the Self-care Remedies, below). Eliminating foods and beverages that trigger attacks is a good first step. Quitting smoking and reducing the amount of stress in your life can also help.
How Supplements Can Help
The intestinal damage caused by Crohn’s disease can seriously interfere with the body’s ability to absorb important nutrients. Therefore, it is essential to maintain a healthy diet, and nutritional supplements often can play a key part.
Just a reminder: If you have a serious medical condition or are taking medication, always check with your doctor before beginning a program of supplements.
To begin, a daily high-potency multivitamin and antioxidant complex help to rectify the many nutritional deficiencies associated with the disease. It’s useful to have blood tests measuring specific levels of individual vitamins and separate supplements may be necessary. Nutritional deficiencies can develop in the following:
Low levels of vitamin A are common with Crohn’s. This is important because vitamin A affects the function of intestinal cells, including mucus secretion and cell regeneration. Excessive amounts of this nutrient can be toxic, so it should be used with caution.
Deficiencies in vitamins C and E can occur as well. Both have healing properties; vitamin E, a leukotriene inhibitor, can be helpful as an anti-inflammatory agent as well.
Deficiencies in the B vitamins are also common, although the amounts in your multivitamin are probably sufficient. However, folic acid can be inhibited by the commonly prescribed drug, sulfasalazine. Levels of vitamin B12 can also be low because Crohn’s disease often damages that portion of the small intestine where this nutrient is absorbed.
Failure of the intestines to absorb vitamin D occurs frequently, and worsens when steroid drugs are used as part of an anti-inflammatory therapy. Softening of the bones (osteomalacia, often caused by the malabsorption of vitamin D) is a complication of Crohn’s.
The following nutrients can be beneficial in managing Crohn’s disease.
The most significant mineral deficiencies seen in Crohn’s are of zinc and magnesium. If zinc is taken for long periods of time, copper is added as well, since one can impair the absorption of the other.
Deficiencies of the essential fatty acids also occur frequently. Both flaxseed oil and fish oil contain fatty acids that can protect and repair the GI tract. Fish oil has an anti-inflammatory property that Italian researchers discovered can reduce the frequency of flare-ups.
The flavonoid/antioxidant quercetin is well known for its ability to inhibit the release of chemicals associated with inflammation, such as histamine and the leukotrienes. Virtually free of side effects, it is effective for conditions associated with inflammation, such as asthma, psoriasis, and Crohn’s.
One of the most significant nutrients involved in repairing the intestinal lining is the amino acid glutamine, which improves the energy metabolism of these cells and stimulates their regeneration.
Another natural anti-inflammatory is the Indian herb boswellia. The herb is better known for its effect in the treatment of osteoarthritis, where its function is similar to the newly released COX-2 inhibitor drugs. A recent study found that this herb can benefit inflammatory bowel disease as well.
Although never fully studied in placebo-controlled trials, an herbal digestive formula for inflammatory bowel disease (usually sold as Robert’s Formula or Bastyr’s Modification to Robert’s Formula), has long been favored by naturopaths during flare-ups of Crohn’s. Among the herbs in this combination are slippery elm, marshmallow, wild indigo, echinacea, goldenseal, poke root, and geranium.
Certain herbal teas, particularly those made from chamomile and slippery elm, can be very soothing to an inflamed gastrointestinal tract. These herbs also help facilitate digestion.
Self-Care Remedies
- Watch what you eat. Maintain a healthful diet, but be careful about adding too much fiber if you have problems with narrowing of the small intestine. Eliminate dairy if you know you are lactose intolerant. Be sure to steam, broil, or bake food rather than frying it. Fried, greasy meals can irritate the GI tract. There is good evidence that cutting back to an allergy-free diet (eliminating all dairy, egg, corn, and wheat) can markedly improve the way that Crohn’s patients feel overall.
- Drink plenty of fluids. These could include water, juice, broth, and herbal teas. It’s important to stay hydrated.
- Cut down on milk products. Carrageenan, a compound used to stabilize milk proteins, has been shown to induce ulcerative colitis (a related condition) in animals. In addition, there may be a link between Crohn’s disease and a bacterium found in cow’s milk (Mycobacterium paratuberculosis).
- Avoid flare-up triggers. Eliminate foods that you may be sensitive to. For many Crohn’s patients, triggers include alcohol, caffeine, and refined sugar.
- Exercise regularly. The endorphins released during exercise will go a long way toward improving your mood, enhancing a positive sense of well-being, and increasing your energy.
- Alternative Therapies Although “curing” this disease is not an option, a number of practitioner-based alternative therapies can help relieve the painful symptoms of Crohn’s, and may be useful to continue on a maintenance basis.
Mind-body therapies. If you find that stress triggers flare-ups, it may be worth learning relaxation techniques that can help prevent relapses. Try yoga or meditation, which both involve deep breathing; practice 10 minutes morning and evening each day, if possible. - Traditional Chinese medicine. Finding a qualified practitioner of TCM who uses both herbs and acupuncture may prove beneficial. These therapies can be very effective in reducing stress. Patients themselves report that TCM seems to reduce the severity of their symptoms and prevent flare-ups, but there have been no controlled research studies specifically using TCM in the treatment of Crohn’s.
- Homeopathy. Classical homeopaths believe that on a one-to-one basis, they can prescribe remedies that will contribute to the reduction of Crohn’s symptoms and the prevention of flare-ups. Again, there have been no specific studies using homeopathy for Crohn’s.
When to Call a Doctor
- If you experience sudden abdominal pain and cramping (especially on the lower right side) along with diarrhea
- If you see blood in your stool
- If you run a fever and become nauseous or fatigued
- If you lose your appetite and start to drop weight
Supplement Recommendations
From David Edelberg, M.D. at WholeHealth Chicago: Since Crohn’s disease decreases the body’s ability to absorb nutrients, a daily multivitamin is mandatory for anyone with this condition. In fact, nutritional deficiencies are so common with Crohn’s that you probably need a high-potency vitamin and mineral combination, not just a simple one-a-day tablet. At WholeHealth Chicago we also recommend adding a daily antioxidant combination with extra C as well.
In some people undiscovered food sensitivities can play a significant role in the intensity of their Crohn’s symptoms. A strategy you may want to consider is trying a to help you identify specific food triggers that may be aggravating your flare-ups. These often include milk, eggs, corn, and wheat.
All the supplements listed here can be taken together and also in combination with any medications your doctor prescribes for your Crohn’s.
How to use the supplements
Taking a daily high-potency multiple vitamin will cover most of the deficiencies commonly noted with Crohn’s disease. Especially important in your daily multivitamin formula should be adequate amounts of vitamin A, vitamin D, vitamin E, and folic acid, so read your labels carefully. However, you most likely will need to add extra vitamin B12 (in an under-the-tongue form) because the part of the small intestine that absorbs B12 is often affected by this disease.
A high-potency antioxidant formula is always a good idea to protect your body from damage caused by altered oxygen molecules called free radicals. Although Crohn’s disease is not one of the conditions caused by free-radical damage, the nutritional deficiencies associated with Crohn’s may reduce your own antioxidant protection systems, necessitating added supplements, often extra vitamin C.
Both magnesium and zinc deficiencies occur with such regularity in those with Crohn’s that daily supplementation is recommended. (Because zinc inhibits copper absorption, you’ll need to take extra copper as well.) As a source of the so-called “good fats,” flaxseed oil and fish oil, which also has useful anti-inflammatory properties, should be used daily. (To prevent a fish-y aftertaste and to enhance absorption, try to take the enteric-coated fish oil capsules).
Daily supplementation with both quercetin and boswellia, both natural agents to reduce inflammation, may be helpful as a maintenance strategy. The amino acid glutamine can help repair the cells lining the gastrointestinal tract.
And during a flare-up, consider taking an herbal digestive formula, either Robert’s Formula or Bastyr Formula; follow the instructions on the bottle, which will suggest using the formula several times a day until a remission occurs.
Instead of colas, coffee, and alcohol, enjoy intestinal-soothing healing teas, such as those made with chamomile and slippery elm.
Important:
We at WholeHealth Chicago strongly recommend that everyone take a high-potency multivitamin/mineral and well-balanced antioxidant complex every day. It may be necessary to adjust the dosages outlined below to account for your own daily vitamin regimen. All of our supplement recommendations also assume you are eating a healthful diet.
Be aware that certain cautions are associated with taking individual supplements, especially if you have other medical conditions and/or you’re taking medications. Key cautions are given in the listing below, but you need to see the WholeHealth Chicago Reference Library for a comprehensive discussion of each supplement’s cautions and drug/nutrient interactions.
For product recommendations and orders click here for the Natural Apothecary or call 773-296-6700 ext. 2001.

