
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.
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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
- Allergy Elimination Diet
- 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
- Antioxidants
- Antioxidants and Exercise
- Anxiety and Panic
- Apitherapy
- Applied Kinesiology
- Arginine
- Arnica
- Aromatherapy
- Aromatherapy and Menstrual Cramps
- Arrhythmias
- Art Therapy
- Arthritis in Your Knees
- Artichoke Leaf
- Ashwagandha
- Asparagus Root
- Aston Patterning
- Astragalus
- Athlete’s Foot
- Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD)
- Ayurveda
- Bromelain and Arthritis
- Do I Really Need My Antidepressants?
- Fibromyalgia and Acupuncture
- Healing Affirmations
- Hot Flashes and Acupuncture
- It’s Allergy Season…
- 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
- Solving Adrenal Imbalance
- Stress Less: Acupuncture
- Supplements I Take: Acetyl-L-Carnitine
- Testing Your Adrenal Glands
- 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 Natural Bladder Product
- Bach Flower Therapy
- Bad Breath: Eight Ways to Sweeten
- Baking Soda
- Basic Foods for Cupb...
- Bedbugs! (and a PS on Ticks)
- Bee Products
- Beta-Carotene
- Beta-Sitosterol
- Bifidobacteria
- Big Pharma, Bad Medicine
- Bilberry
- Biofeedback
- 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
- Fibrocystic Breast Changes
- Flower Essence Thera...
- High Blood Pressure
- High Blood Pressure
- Hopping for Strong Bones
- 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
- 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 Improtant 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 You Lower Choles...
- 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
- Chasteberry
- Chelation Therapy
- Cherry Fruit Extract
- Chiropractic
- Chitosan
- Chondroitin
- Chromium
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
- Chronic Pain
- Circles of Light
- Coenzyme Q10
- 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
- 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 Night Shift and Breast Cancer
- Traditional Chinese Medicine
- Vitamin C
- Vitamin C and Flavinoids
- Why I Dislike Drug Companies
- Your Bones Need More Than Calcium
- Your Colonoscopy
- Zinc/Copper
- D
- 48,328 Diet Books
- Acne and Diet
- Cancer and Vitamin D
- D-ribose: New Supplement of Note
- Dance Therapy
- Dandelion
- De-Cluttering Your Life
- Death By Medicine
- Depression
- Detoxification Therapy
- Devil’s Claw
- DHEA
- Diabetes
- Diarrhea
- Diet Drugs
- Diets
- Digestive Enzymes
- Digestive Enzymes
- Diindolylmethance (DIM)
- DLPA (D, L Phenylalanine)
- DMAE (Dimethylaminoethanol)
- 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...
- 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...
- 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
- Allergy Elimination Diet
- 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
- Endometriosis
- Energy Psychology
- Ephedra (Ma huang)
- Epilepsy
- Escaping Routine
- Eucalyptus
- Europe’s Healthcare System
- Evening Primrose Oil
- Exercise and Weight Loss
- Fatigue
- 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
- Slippery Elm
- F
- Farmers Markets: The Way to Eat
- 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
- 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: 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?
- Folic Acid
- Forskolin
- FOS (Fructo-oligosaccharides)
- Functional Medicine
- Help! I’m Getting the Flu
- Less Stress: Flower Essence Therapy
- More on Lyrica, the Fibromyalgia Drug
- Name-That-Food Quiz
- Preventing and Treating the Flu
- Preventing Flu
- Q&A: Can Food Help Mood?
- Q&A: Flu Shot
- Q&A: Tamiflu
- Should I get the Swine Flu Vaccine?
- Still More Benefits of Fish Oil
- Still More on the Flu
- Stress Less: Flower ...
- Swine Flu
- 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
- Gota Kola
- Gout
- Grape Seed Extract
- Grapefruit Seed Extract
- Gratitude
- Gratitude
- Green Tea
- Green Tea and Ovarian Cancer
- Gugulipid
- Gum Disease
- Gymnema Sylvestre
- H
- “My hormones are out of whack!”
- A Natural Heartburn Treatment
- Bioidentical Hormones
- Can I Quit My Heartburn Drug?
- Congestive Heart Failure
- Drug-Free Hormone Balancing
- Hair Loss
- Hair Problems
- Hawthorn
- Healing Touch: A Bal...
- Health Care Reform and You (and Me)
- Health Care Reform: ...
- 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
- 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
- Homocysteine and Your Health
- Hopping for Strong Bones
- Horehound
- Horse Chestnut
- Hot Flashes and Acupuncture
- Huperzine A
- Hydrotherapy
- Hypnotherapy
- I’m Losing My Hair!
- Prescribing Happiness
- Q&A: Brain-Healthy Diet
- Q&A: Vitamin E and Heart Attacks
- RESPeRATE for High Blood Pressure
- Saving a Bundle on Healthcare, Part 2
- Saving A Bundle on Your Health Care
- Saving A Bundle on Y...
- Symptoms of Hormone Imbalance
- The Fine Art of Asking for Help
- This is Your Moment ...
- Vitamin D and Your Heart
- Your Brain: Yes, It ...
- I
- Another Idea Sixpack
- Idea Sixpack
- Impotence
- Infertility, Female
- Infertility, Male
- Insomnia
- 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
- J
- K
- L
- Acetaminophen (Tylenol) and Your Liver
- Bedbugs! (and a PS on Ticks)
- Conjugated Linoleic Acid
- 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
- Aromatherapy and Menstrual Cramps
- Better Memory Tricks, Part 1
- Calcium/Magnesium
- Death By Medicine
- Does Meditation Work?
- Easing Cramps
- 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
- 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
- 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
- Stress Less: Meditation
- The Most Important Supplement
- Toxic Metals and Disease
- Trace Minerals
- Your Brain: Could an...
- N
- A Solid Thumbs-Up on...
- 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
- 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
- Omega-3 Fatty Acids
- Omega-6 Fatty Acids
- Oprah: Poster Child ...
- Oregano
- Organic Milk
- Organics
- Osteopathy
- Osteoporosis
- Reducing Your Risk of Ovarian Cancer
- Second Opinions
- Thinking Out of the Box
- P
- Case Study: Melanie’s PMS Hell
- 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...
- PMS
- PMS Rx
- Poisoned by an Antibiotic
- Polarity Therapy
- Policosanol
- Potassium
- Prayer
- Pre-diabetes Prescription Drugs
- Pre-Menopause Anxiety
- Preventing Flu
- Preventive Tests You Need
- Prickly Pear
- 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
- Vitamin D and Pain Control
- Why Doctors Avoid Prescription Drugs
- Your Brain: Could Pr...
- Q
- Bromelain/Quercetin
- Coenzyme Q10
- 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
- A Quick and Easy Ref...
- All Your Vegetables Soup
- 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
- 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?
- 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
- 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
- Second Opinion
- Second Opinions
- Selenium
- 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
- Slippery Elm
- Sore Throat
- Soy Foods and Breast Cancer
- Soy Isoflavones
- Spirilina 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: T’ai Chi
- Stroke
- Sugar
- Summertime’s Natural Serotonin Boosters
- Sunburn
- Swine Flu
- 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
- Worry and Stress
- Your Brain: It Could Be Low Serotonin
- Your Sex Drive, the FDA, and Big Pharma
- Zzzzz: You’re ...
- 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
- Stress Less: T’ai Chi
- T’ai Chi: Getting Started
- Tai Chi
- Take the Triple Whammy Quiz
- Taurine
- Tea Tree Oil
- The Upside of Low Serotonin
- Therapeutic Touch
- Thiamin (B1)
- Thyroid Disease
- Townsend Letter
- Toxic Food Syndrome
- Toxic Food Syndrome, Part 2
- Toxic Metals and Disease
- Trace Minerals
- Traditional Chinese Medicine
- Trager Approach
- Travel Snacks
- Trimming the Tummy Fat
- 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
- 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
- Q&A: How Much Water?
- Resistance, Sigmund ...
- Something New for Weight Loss
- The Launch of Our Updated Website
- Walnut Leaf
- Warts
- Weight Loss
- Where You Live Matters
- White Willow Bark
- 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)
- Yoga
- Yoga: Getting Started
- Yogurt 101: Become a Label-Reader
- Yohimbe
- 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
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Applied Kinesiology
What Is It?
Applied kinesiology is a technique used to diagnose and treat health problems by identifying weakened muscles. It should not be confused with conventional kinesiology (from the Greek word kinesis, meaning movement), which is the scientific study of mechanics and anatomy in relation to human movement.
Universities award advanced degrees in conventional kinesiology, and graduates usually work in the physical therapy divisions of hospitals and rehabilitation centers. Applied kinesiology (AK), on the other hand, is a completely different field, practiced by chiropractors (as well as by some osteopaths and M.D.s) who have completed very specific postgraduate training. While certification in AK can only be achieved by a licensed health-care professional, there are some programs available to the lay person, who want to learn how to use AK as a self-care technique.
Applied kinesiology was developed in the 1960s by George Goodheart, a Detroit chiropractor. It is based on the concept that adverse changes in muscle function can occur as a consequence of a variety of internal triggers. These may include such obvious ones as injury, nerve entrapment, misalignment of the skeleton, or brain damage. According to AK theory, however, muscle weakness (or its opposite, excessive muscle spasm) can also be caused by diseased or dysfunctional internal organs, exposure to toxic substances, nutritional deficiencies, food sensitivities, or emotional issues.
Using an extensive diagnostic procedure called manual muscle testing, the AK practitioner can determine the internal source of muscle weakness and then plan a program designed to ultimately restore health. Because manual muscle testing is basically a diagnostic technique, the practitioner will usually also combine muscle testing with a thorough history, physical examination, and appropriate laboratory testing.
Once a diagnosis is reached, the treatment may include a variety of alternative, as well as conventional remedies–from chiropractic to basic dietary changes. During a course of treatment, the patient will undergo periodic muscle re-testing as a measurement tool to verify overall improvement.
Although conventional doctors acknowledge that muscle weakness may accompany certain illnesses (both physical and emotional) , they are skeptical of the formalized way in which AK practitioners link specific muscle weakness to specific medical problems. Within the standards of conventional physicians, there has been no rigorous scientific testing that has shown applied kinesiology to be an effective diagnostic tool.
How Does It Work?
Applied kinesiology does not offer an overt “cure” to illness. Instead, by suggesting a number of complementary therapies and disciplines, AK can help the patient to correct small health problems that might eventually lead to larger ones. Practitioners of AK believe that the diagnostic technique of manual muscle testing reveals sources of chronic symptoms that may have been overlooked during a more conventional medical evaluation.
Important to an understanding of applied kinesiology is the concept of “energy medicine” understood in traditional Chinese medicine, homeopathy, and chiropractic. All of these systems believe that imbalances in the body’s vital energy (or qi) are ultimately responsible for the development of symptoms and potentially of disease itself. If the body’s energy channels (or meridians) are blocked, the flow of qi can become disrupted, creating a disharmony that may show up in a muscle that is located along a particular meridian. Once a practitioner has used applied kinesiology to determine the source of an energy imbalance, then acupuncture, homeopathy, or chiropractic may be used to facilitate the healing process.
What You Can Expect
A certified practitioner of applied kinesiology must be a licensed health-care professional, so your first encounter with AK will most likely be in the offices of a chiropractor who has taken sufficient postgraduate courses to earn certification. Your session of applied kinesiology will probably last about an hour. The practitioner will ask you detailed questions about your health and lifestyle, and will observe your posture, gait, and such obvious physical problems as a limp. Conventional laboratory tests, such as blood tests, may be ordered if organ dysfunction or infection is suspected. Any muscle testing done by the practitioner will generally, but not necessarily, be focused around your particular complaint. Inherent in the muscle testing, however, is an assessment of the function of your vital organs as well as your response to a variety of foods.
Muscle testing is totally painless, although the actual technique varies considerably among practitioners. During the procedure, you may be asked to sit, lie down, or even stand, either fully clothed or in a gown. Then the practitioner may gently press down on your arm while you try to resist and pull your arm up. If you can resist, it is a good indication that the muscle is healthy and strong. If you cannot, it shows that an energy imbalance exists in a related part of your body. Since much of muscle testing is based on the meridian system of Chinese medicine, patients are occasionally surprised when the practitioner tests the muscles of an arm or leg and then states that the problem probably lies in an internal organ, such the liver.
An AK practitioner will often use this type of muscle testing (known as “Localization”) to look for food or chemical sensitivities or nutritional depletions. To test for these, you will probably be asked to hold a bit of the potentially offending substance under your tongue for 10 to 15 seconds while the practitioner tests the relevant muscle, typically by pressing down on your arm. If you are sensitive to wheat, for example, you will be unable to resist.
To test for the relevance of an emotional event in your past, the practitioner may test the strength of a muscle while asking you to remember how you felt during a specific decade of your life, or at the mention of a family member. This second technique is termed “Challenge” among applied kinesiologists.
Once your body has been tested for both “Localizations” and “Challenges,” the practitioner may suggest additional (and more conventional) testing to verify the findings. A course of therapy will most likely be outlined that might include chiropractic manipulation, craniosacral therapy, massage, acupuncture, homeopathy, Bach flower remedies, or nutritional supplements. The practitioner may also suggest more conventional lifestyle and diet changes, and programs of exercise and stress reduction.
In some cases very few follow-up visits, usually lasting about 30 minutes, are necessary. However, a chronic problem my require longer-term care.
Health Benefits
According to its practitioners, the principles of applied kinesiology can be used as part of a diagnostic approach to both the prevention and treatment of a wide range of health problems. AK can help to improve gait, posture, and range of motion. It can also help restore normal function to the nervous, endocrine, immune, and digestive systems, and determine previously unsuspected food or chemical sensitivities. The goal of applied kinesiology treatment is to intervene early enough to prevent or delay illness.
How To Choose a Practitioner
There is no regulated licensing for applied kinesiology, so it’s important to consult a health-care professional, such as an M.D., osteopath, or chiropractor. Ideally this person would have advanced certification in AK; alternatively, they might be able to refer you to a reliable practitioner.
Basic applied kinesiology training for licensed health-care professionals consists of roughly 100 hours of classroom course work, plus study and practice at home. Certification requires an additional 100 hours of classroom study, plus passing a proficiency exam or test of clinical competence. Advanced courses, for Diplomate status, are offered by the International College of Applied Kinesiology (ICAK) in Shawnee Mission, Kansas, and require 300 hours of instruction. To receive the degree of Certified Teacher, a practitioner must be an ICAK Diplomate, complete various teaching requirements, and also maintain regular recertification.
There are programs in applied kinesiology that have been created for unlicensed practitioners and lay people, however. These include the trademarked Touch for Health, Advanced Kinesiology, and Health Kinesiology. It is important to note that the International College of Applied Kinesiology has publicly expressed concern about the inappropriate practice of its techniques among lay people.
Cautions
Applied kinesiology should always be used in conjunction with other methods of diagnosis and treatment. Never depend on applied kinesiology to replace standard diagnosis or treatment.
Because anyone can call himself an applied kinesiologist without fear of repercussions, there has been a proliferation of amateur applied kinesiologists in recent years. If you believe that applied kinesiology may be of benefit to you, either contact the International College of Applied Kinesiology for a list of certified practitioners in your area, or ask to see the credentials of anyone who offers his services in this area.

