Showing posts with label treat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label treat. Show all posts

Friday, September 27, 2013

Home Remedies For Ankle Swelling | How To Treat Ankle Sprains Naturally


Swelling of the lower leg and ankle is a common problem. Determining the cause of ankle swelling is the first step to finding effective treatment. Once the cause of the ankle swelling is determined, effective treatment can be initiated. Painless swelling of the feet and ankles is a common problem, particularly in older people. It may affect both legs and may include the calves or even the thighs.

Swollen ankles, feet and legs often referred to medically as edema usually occurs when fluid is retained in the spaces between body cells. Some home remedy for ankle swelling may take the following processes. First of all the ankle should be lifted so that the leg is straight in front as this is very necessary and as such should be done.


Home remedies such as coconut and garlic oil help reduce pain and swelling when they soak directly into the skin. Mix 3 table spoon of coconut and garlic oil into a container and heat in the microwave for ten seconds, slightly warming the mixture. Generously massage the oil directly onto your ankle for ten minutes, allowing the oils to soak into your skin.


Lecithin seeds are yet another effective home remedy for the treatment of swelling of feet during pregnancy. Usually a tablespoon of about 3-4 is taken every day for about2-3 month. This is noted to have a magical effect and also manifests good results within 2-3 months.


Ice is another very important and effective treatment material for sprained ankles. If you get a sprained ankle and use ice in the injured area within the first hour of your injury, you levels of pain and swelling ids supposed to be very low. It helps your injury to recover soon too. Medical studies have found that if ice can be used properly in time, the possibility of your recovery increased by 50%.


If the affected area is read and swollen, you may apply a mild steroid cream like 1% hydrocortisone cream. This should be easily available from any pharmacy without the need of a prescription. Hydrocortisone helps in reducing inflammation rapidly. Alternatively, if you have a bottle of calamine lotion at home, this may help too.


Never just assume that any pain you have in your ankles and feet is being caused by arthritis. These pains can be caused by many different things, including lower back and hip problems. Before just shrugging your shoulders and thinking, “Its only arthritis”, make an appointment with your doctor for an exam. Only then will he be able to tell what’s causing your infirmity.


Nervous pain near the ankles often cause ankle sprains. It is called as referred pain. When the nerves that connect the leg to the brain stop sending signals due to blockage or nervous injury, the ankle ligaments then can cause pain. But, it happens very rarely.


Rest is very important especially in the first 24-48 hours after the injury in order to avoid stress on already inflamed tissue and to prevent more damage. On the other hand, prolonged immobilization of ankle sprains is a common treatment error, so it is also important to start a proper rehabilitation program and gradually put weight back on the ankle.











Wednesday, September 18, 2013

1976 Pulitzer winner for Air Music / THU 6-2-11 / Pioneering puppetteer Tony / Baccarat alternative / Banned medicine used to treat asthma

Constructor: Brendan Emmett Quigley


Relative difficulty: Medium-Challenging


THEME: BORDER / STATES (26D: With 28-Down, theme of this puzzle) — BORDER (or edges) of the puzzle made up entirely of names of STATES



Word of the Day: ISOLATO (38D: Person who’s out of step with society) —


noun, plural -toes.


a person who is spiritually isolated from or out of sympathy with his or her times or society. (dictionary.com) (*not* in my Webster’s 3rd New International)





Styx – Mr. Roboto

• • •

The grid is nice, but I didn’t care for the theme. I kept thinking how are these *BORDER* STATES? I saw that they were on the BORDER of the grid, but … what was their relation to each other. FLORIDA and ALABAMA BORDER each other, aha! But … ALASKA and MONTANA do not. Maybe they’re on the BORDER of the country. MONTANA and ALASKA, yes! WYOMING and NEVADA? Ugh. Finally realized, very anticlimactically, that the fact that they’re on the BORDER of the grid was all the BORDER action I was going to get, and that the pairs or intersecting STATES had precisely nothing to do with each other. Let down.


But as I say, the grid is lovely. Very typically BEQ, in a lot of ways, with tons of proper nouns, many of them quite contemporary. Also, I tend to think of his proper noun clues as being particularly long, like 9D: Doctor whom Nixon called “the most dangerous man in America” (LEARY) or 33D: TV character who said “Him a beauty. Like mountain with snow — silver-white” (TONTO) or 56A: Stephen of Joyce’s “Portrait of the Artist of the Young Man” (DEDALUS), which is only long because the title of the book is long, I realize, but still, you get my point. A couple of the names in this puzzle I did not know, most notably ISADORE Freleng (12D: ___ Freleng, creator of Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck). Isn’t there a FRITZ Freleng? Oh, crud, there is—only it’s FRIZ Freleng, and that’s actually how ISADORE Freleng is (much) better known. I don’t feel so cartoon-stupid after all, now.


Crosswordese knowledge came in very handy today, especially with names. Gimmes included Tony SARG (51D: Pioneering puppeteer Tony), ODILE (5D: “Swan Lake” swan), Ned ROREM (30A: 1976 Pulitzer winner for “Air Music”), and (the first answer I put in the grid) “I, TINA” (52A: 1986 rock autobiography). I was also greatly aided by the Nabokov clue, which was a gimme for me (13D: Actual name of Nabokov’s Lolita). The opening of that book features a terse yet lyrical passage in which Humbert catalogues the various incarnations of her name:


She was Lo, plain Lo, in the morning, standing four feet ten in one sock. She was Lola in slacks. She was Dolly at school. She was Dolores on the dotted line. But in my arms she was always Lolita.


Creepy, right? Such a good book. I bought copies of “Lolita” and “The Road” for my local public library this past weekend. Was very happy to see them on the library’s wish list, i.e. was very happy not to have to send yet another James Patterson novel out into the world.


Bullets:




  • 15A: Banned medicine used to treat asthma (EPHEDRA) — I know this only as a diet drug. Confusing clue. Was it banned in treatment of asthma too? Wouldn’t [Banned asthma medication] have worked?


  • 18A: Where “Lucrezia Borgia” premiered (LA SCALA) — this is how I figured out that ISADORE was not ISIDORE.


  • 20A: Baccarat alternative (FARO) — olde-timey card games. I know nothing about either.






  • 29A: “Drawing is putting a line round an ___”: Henri Matisse (“IDEA“) — nice quotation—IDEA is much better than my initial guess, AREA.


  • 44A: Org. that combats illegal file sharing (RIAA) — rough for me. Had to get every letter from crossings. I’m guessing this stands for Recording Industry Association of America … and I’m right.


  • 49A: Approximate year in which Eric the Red was born (CML) — thumbs down to “approximate year” clues.


  • 8D: Syllables following “Strike the harp and join the chorus” (“FA LA LA“) — “… LA LA, LA LA LA LA, DON WE NOW OUR GAYYYYY APPAREL etc.”


  • 41D Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, 1987-95 (SAM NUNN) — I remember him as “that Hawkish Democrat who is going to run for president some day.” I’m guessing that ship has sailed.


Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld


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