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DECIDUOUS - A plant that drops its leaves in the fall or, in some
cases, during drought.
DECOMPENSATION - The failure of the heart to maintain full and
adequate circulation.
DELIRIUM TREMENS (DTs) - A distinct neurologic disorder suffered
by late-in-the-game alcoholics, characterized by sensory confusion (is
it red or sour, hot or loud, smelly or wet, am I thinking or screaming);
part of the problem is the result of diminished myelination of nerves
and decreased brain antioxidant insulation (cholesterol), with nerve impulses
"shorting out" across temporary synapses. It sounds ugly.
DEMULCENT - An agent that soothes internal membranes, traditionally
separated from external soothing agents, emollients.
DERMATOMES - As spinal chord nerves branch out into the body, some
segments fan out across the skin; these are the nerves that monitor the
surface and are the source of senses of touch, pain, hot, cold and distension.
All this information is funneled back in and up to the brain, which learned
early on to correlate WHAT information comes from WHERE. Think of the
brain as the CPU, with the spinal chord nerves uploading raw binary data;
the brain has to make a running program out of this. It must form a three-dimensional
hologram or homunculus from the linear input, and retranslate it outwards
as binary data. The surface of the forearm, as an example, has sensory
input gathered from several different and very separate spinal chord nerves.
The brain will origami-fold these separate data streams into FOREARM.
If you were to inject Novacain into the base of the left first sacral
nerve (LS1), you would find that a whole section of skin became numb.
So well defined a section that you could outline in charcoal the demarcation
between sensation and numbness. This section would be a long oval of of
numbness around the left buttock, under to the groin, perhaps part of
the thigh...and the left heel. That spinal nerve is solely responsible
for carrying sensation from that zone of skin...that dermatome; your brain
mixes all the dermatomes together to get a working hologram of your total
skin surface. That particular nerve also brings and sends information
about the uterus, abdominal wall and pelvic floor. If you are a woman
suffering pelvic heaviness and suppressed menses, a hot footbath might
be enough S1 (heel dermatome) stimulation to cross-talk over to the S1
pelvic functions...and heat up the stuck uterus. Much of acupuncture,
Jinshinjitsu, and zone and reflex therapy (not to mention Rolfing) uses
various aspects of this dermatome crossover phenomena (by whatever name)
and zone counterirritation was widely used in American standard medicine
up until...penicillin. It was still being described in clinical manuals
as late as 1956, although with the mention that it was only used infrequently
and with a "mechanism not understood" disclaimer.
DIABETES - Properly diabetes mellitus, it is a disease characterized by
high blood sugar levels and sugar in the urine. Diabetes is really several
disorders, generally broken down into juvenile onset and adult onset.
The first, currently called insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM
or Type I), is somewhat hereditary, and results from inadequate synthesis
of native insulin or sometimes from auto-immunity or a virus, and occurs
most frequently in tissue-types HLA, DR3, and DR4. These folks tend to
be lean. The other main group is known as non-insulin-dependent diabetes
mellitus (NIDDM or Type II). It is caused by a combination of heredity,
constitution, and lifestyle, where high blood sugar and high blood fats
often occur at the same time, and where hyperglycemic episodes have continued
for so many years that fuel-engorged cells start to refuse glucose, and
the person is termed insulin resistant. These folks are usually overweight,
tend to have fatty plaques in their arteries, and usually have chunky
parents.
DIAPHORESIS - Sweating.
DIAPHORETIC - A substance that increases perspiration, either by
(1) dilating the peripheral blood vessels, (2) directly stimulating by
drug action the nerves that affect the sweat glands, or by (3) introducing
a volatile oil into the bloodstream that performs both tasks.
DIARRHEA - A watery evacuation of the bowels, without blood.
DIASTOLIC - The lower number of a blood pressure reading signifying
the myocardial and arterial relaxation between pump strokes. Too close
to the higher number (systolic) usually signifies inadequate relaxation
of the heart and arteries between heartbeats.
DIE-OFF - The phenomenon of killing so many infectious organisms so
quickly that the amount of dead biomass itself causes liver overload,
allergic reactions, or a mild foreign-body response. It can occur with
antibiotic therapy, treatment of candidiasis, and even with use of some
herbal antivirals. Outside of prescription antifungals, it is seldom acknowledged
as a medical problem. If you use a liver stimulant, diaphoretic, and diuretic,
you will increase the efficiency of transport, catabolism, and excretion,
and lessen the effects of die-off.
DISTENTION - An excess expansion of a tissue or organ, either from
inflammation, injury or, as in the Bean Syndrome, gas.
DIURETIC - A substance that increases the flow of urine, either by
increasing permeability of the kidneys' nephrons, decreasing the reabsorption
of filtered serum back into the blood exiting the nephron, increasing
blood supply into the nephrons, or increasing the blood into each kidney
by renal artery vasodilation.
DIVERTICULOSIS - Having congenital pouches of the type found in
many organs, particularly the colon, that are benign, but, being little
cul-de-sacs, are likely to become inflamed from time to time. Diverticulitis
is the term for inflamed diverticula.
DUODENUM - This is the beginning of the small intestines, and it
empties the stomach. It is 9 or 10 inches long, holds about the same amount
of food as the digestive antrum or bottom of the stomach, and, through
a papilla or sphincter, squirts a mixture of bile and pancreatic juices
onto the previous stomach contents. These juices neutralize the acidic
chyme; the pancreatic alkali and bile acids form soap to emulsify and
aid fat digestion; and the duodenum walls secrete additional fluids and
enzymes to admix with the pancreatic enzymes to initiate the final upper
digestive investment. The duodenal wall secretes blood hormones to excite
gallbladder and pancreas secretions, and, if overwhelmed, can inhibit
the stomach from sending anything else down for a while, until they can
catch all their collective breath.
DURAL HEADACHES - Perhaps the most common type; those resulting from
autotoxicity or an excess of blood metabolites, such as from liver dysfunction
or hangovers.
DYSCRASIA - Presently a term referring to inadequate synthesis of
blood proteins by the liver, especially clotting factors. Formerly the
term described an improper balance between blood and lymph in an organ
or a whole person. Archaically, it referred to an imbalance between the
four humors: blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and the postulated black bile.
DYSENTERY - Severe diarrhea, usually from a colon infection, and
containing blood and dead mucus membrane cells.
DYSMENORRHEA - Painful menstruation.
DYSPEPSIA - Poor digestion, usually with heartburn and/or regurgitation
of stomach acids.
DYSPLASIA - Abnormal tissue growth...classically midway between hyperplasia
(overgrowth) and neoplasia.
DYSPNEA - Air hunger with pained breathing. It occurs normally
from physical exertion, and abnormally either from impaired respiration,
emotional distress, or a breakdown in nerve responses.
DYSURIA - Painful urination.
EBV - Epstein-Barr Virus, a relative of the herpes virus, is the
cause of infectious mononucleosis, an African malignancy called Burkitt's
lymphoma, and at least part of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. A very common
virus, most of the time it only causes a head cold.
ECLECTICS - The name commonly applied to the American School Physicians,
a distinct group of Medical Doctors who trained in their own schools,
and were licensed as M.D.s. They specialized in low-tech, nonhospital
rural health care...the famous country doc with a black bag. Besides standard
medical procedures, they used a more holistic approach to disease, sometimes
terming themselves Vitalists. They grew out of the settlement and usurpment
of the Ohio and Missouri Valleys, with a sparse population and no organized
hospitals, relied on methods that were not invasive (unless emergencies
dictated), used therapies that relied on strengthening natural resistance
(no hospitals, just someone's sod hut) and made particular care to explain
and prepare the family or neighbors for THEIR part in caring for the patient...long
after the physician left. Scudder, John King, Felter, Ellingwood and Clyce
Wilson were some of the more famous Eclectics, and John Uri Lloyd was
the most famous pharmacist/ pharmacologist within the profession. The
Eclectic movement lasted from 1840 to 1937...when the only remaining medical
school, unwilling to change to a Flexnor Curriculum (as had the rest)
closed its doors in Cincinnati. They lost the licensing wars and are no
more. Their tradition was exported by practitioners in Germany and Mexico,
and the German Eclectics, transformed by that peculiar culture into wild-eyed
Nature Curists such as Ehret and Lust, started the nucleus for the Naturopathic
movement in Yellow Springs, Ohio (next-door to Goddard College) in 1947,
helping to found the initial form of the National College of Naturopathic
Medicine...10 years after, and 50 miles away from the last Eclectic Medical
School. Without benefit of Tanna Leaves or Charleton Heston and an armful
of pickled mummy-organs, Eclectecism was reborn into the body of Naturopathy.
ECTOMORPH - A thumbnail description of the somatotype who is dominated
by the ectoderm, specifically the skin, nervous system, and endocrine
glands. Less arcane, a tall and thin person, with long limbs, narrow chest,
and a somewhat oversensitive nervous system.
ECZEMA - A chronic dermatitis, more common in those with thin skin
or allergies of an atopic or IgE-mediated type, and often clearly and
distinctly aggravated by emotional stress.
EDEMA - A localized or systemic condition in which the body tissues
contain an excessive amount of fluid. Systemic edema can be as mild as
premenstrual water retention (I mean mild by comparison) or involve loss
of blood proteins or kidney and heart failures. Local edema is the result
of extensive or extended inflammation, with blood protein leakage and
the loss of interstitial colloid.
EHT - Essential Hypertension...the early, mesomorphic stages of
high blood pressure, caused mostly by thick blood and accompanying sodium
retention.
ELECTROLYTES - In my context, acids, bases, and salts that contribute
to the maintenance of electrical charges, membrane integrity, and acid-alkaline
balance in the blood and lymph.
EMPHYSEMA - A pulmonary condition with loss of elasticity in the
alveoli and the interalveolar septa...the meat-foam and their interleaving
sheaths that you fill up when you breathe. If a septum gets too stretched
over time, several of the little sacs will coalesce together, decreasing
the surface area for oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange. If enough of
these sacs lose their separateness, like small soap bubbles joining to
make a few larger ones, breathing gets harder because each breath accomplishes
less interchange of gases, resulting in emphysema. Caused by years of
bad asthma, tobacco smoking, chemical damage, and other chronic lung disorders,
it can be halted but not reversed. The first breath you take defines forever
the number of the alveolar bubbles...they cannot be regenerated if they
coalesce together.
ENDEMIC - Confined to a limited geographic or ecologic niche.
ENDOGENOUS - From within the body, either a native function or
the product of the extended colony...normal flora in the colon are considered
endogenous.
ENDOMETRIOSIS - The presence of endometrial tissue outside of the
uterus. The endometrium is the mucus membrane inner lining of the uterus,
with glandular cells and structural cells, both responding to estrogen
by increasing in size (the proliferative phase); if there is endometrial
tissue outside of the uterus, the tissue expands and shrinks in response
to the estrus cycle, but the normal shedding of the menstrual phase can
be difficult. The most common type of endometriosis is found in the fallopian
tubes; the abnormal fallopian endometrial tissue can shed and drain into
the uterus, but it hurts! It's funny, but little tiny ducts, like the
ureters, bile ducts, and fallopian tubes really cramp. The colon and uterus
are big muscular tubes and, when cramped up, cause rather strong pain.
When one of those little bitty things gets tenesmus, your face gets white
(or light tan), you start to sweat, shiver, and revert to a fetal position.
Endometriosis that occurs around the ovaries or inside the belly and therefore
can NEVER drain is a purely physical and medical condition, but fallopian
presence of endometrium usually reaches its peak in the early thirties.
It can be helped by ensuring a strong estrogen and progesterone balance,
thereby decreasing the tendency to form clots in the tubes, and to experience
severe cramps every month.
ENTERIC - pertaining to the small intestines.
ENTERITIS - Inflammation of the small intestines.
ENTIRE - A leaf with a straight, untoothed margin.
EOSINOPHILIA - A group of conditions having the characteristic
elevation of eosinophils. These somewhat mysterious granulocytic leukocytes
(white blood cells filled with cottage cheese) are definitely involved
in parasite resistance, seem to initiate strong inflammation under some
conditions, can facilitate clotting by inhibiting heparin, yet also are
a part of the process of healing and inflammation control as an infection
winds down. Eosinophilia is on one hand an inherited condition associated
with atopic dermatitis (common, relatively benign, and irritating as hell),
but, when acquired from chemical contact, drug reaction or spontaneously
surfaced auto-immune response, it can destroy muscles, nerve, lungs, even
kill. It caused the notorious string of chemical reactions that was triggered
by tainted Japanese tryptophan.
EPIPHYTE - An air plant, growing on or with other plants but not
in any way parasitic.
EPISTAXIS - Nosebleeds.
EPSTEIN-BARR VIRUS - A large, ubiquitous, and normally benign, herpes-like
virus with both DNA and capsid. It is sometimes implicated in mononucleosis
and at least two types of lymphomas. Recently it has been become connected
with the symptom picture called chronic fatigue syndrome (as has been
CMV) and can produce many ill-defined (but subjectively distressful) symptoms,
including fatigue, fevers of an unknown origin (FUO...love those acronyms!),
and emotional lability. Immunosuppression, from whatever cause, allows
the syndrome to occur. Many people in and out of medicine have come to
regard it as both another form of Multiple Chemical Sensitivities (MCS,
naturally) and a sequel to excessive medical use of immunosupressant anti-inflammatories.
ESOPHAGUS - The dense, muscular tube, 9 to 10 inches long, that
extends from the back of the throat (pharynx) to the stomach.
EXOGENOUS - Arising from the outside; the opposite of endogenous.
EXPECTORANT - A substance that stimulates the outflow of mucus
from the lungs and bronchial mucosa.
EXTRASYSTOLES - A premature contraction of the heart. It can be
caused by nervousness, indigestion, a tired and enlarged heart - anything
up to overt organic heart disease.
EXUDATES - The feral and congested fluids built up in a bruise
or infection. Unlike a transudate, which is merely edema from lymphatic
congestion, exudates contain dead cells, erythrocytes, white blood cells
and often pus.
FAUCES - The throat.
FEBRILE - Feverish.
FIBROIDS - Also called a leiomyoma or fibromyoma (or myofibroma,
for that matter), it is an encapsulated tumor made up of disorganized
and irregular connective tissue. A uterine fibroid is benign, there may
be one or many, they grow slowly, have unknown causes, and may or may
not cause painful menses or mid-cycle bleeding. Much depends on where
they are in the uterus and whether or not they extend far enough into
the cavity to impair and thin out the endometrium. If they do, they cause
distress.
FLATUS - Intestinal or stomach gas. If it rises upwards, it is
an eructation (burp or belch); if it descends, causing borborygmus (love
that word), you are flatulent (fartish).
FLAVONOIDS - From flavus, Latin for yellow. A 2-benzene ring, 15-carbon
molecule, it is formed by many plants (in many forms) for a variety of
oxidative-redox enzyme reactions. Brightly pigmented compounds that make
many fruits and berries yellow, red, and purple, and that are considered
in European medicine to strengthen and aid capillary and blood vessel
integrity, they are sometimes (redundantly) called bioflavonoids.
FLUIDEXTRACT - An extract of an herb that is made according to
official (and unofficial) pharmaceutical practice, with a strength of
1:1. That means each ounce of the fluidextract has the solutes found in
an ounce of the dried herb. Advantageous for some herbs (such as Arctium
or Taraxacum), where the active constituents retain the same proportions
as in the plant, even though reduced to a very small volume of menstruum,
it is deadly for others (such as Hydrastis or Lobelia), whose constituents
may have wildly varying solubility, and whose fluidextract will contain
only the most soluble constituents and lack others completely. The gradual
disappearance of herbal preparations in Standard Medicine in the 1930s
can partly be attributed to the almost complete reliance on fluidextracts.
Some manufacturers (notably Lilly and SK&F) sold Tinctures (1:5 strength
and meant to, at the least, contain EVERYTHING in the plant) that were
made from diluted fluidextracts. Some fluidextracts were even made from
dilutions of what were termed Solid Extracts....heat-evaporated tars,
easy to store, easy to make in huge labor-minimal batches, where 100 pounds
of Blue Cohosh could be reduced to 25 pounds of solid extract. This convenience
pitch, with many constituents oxidized by heat, others never even extracted,
could be diluted four times to sell as a fluidextract, TWENTY time to
market as a tincture. These practices by American pharmaceutical manufacturers,
with eyes perhaps on the larger drug trade (the use of crude drugs being
a diminished part of their commerce, yet needing MANY different preparations...and
being labor-intensive and profit-minimal...and sort of old-fashioned)
ended up supplying terminally impaired products. Their value being reduced,
physicians relied more and more on mainstream pharmaceuticals...and the
medical use of whole plant preparations died.
FOMENTATION - A hot, wet poultice used on painful, inflamed areas.
The usual form is a towel dipped in tea and applied hot or warm to the
swollen tissue, being changed when it cools.
FUNCTIONAL - An imbalance of response, without permanent tissue
damage, and generally reversible.
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