Re: Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo natural treatment ?
Hi ramaflore,
I can offer you a few links that may contain helpful information for you.
Water
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[FAQ] Healing Cleanse: Regenerating Bones, Muscles and Nerves
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Re: B & B Tincture Testimony!
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Garlic Oil & Dr. Christopher's B&B tincture. Every night before he goes to sleep, just put 4 drops of garlic oil in each each, followed by 4 drops of B&B tincture - put cotton balls in his ears to sleep...and at the end of 6 days, rinse his ears (using a ear-bulb syringe) with a mixture of 1/2 organic apple cider vinegar & warm water.
The garlic oil (of course) kills infection (the alcohol in the tinctures helps 'push it deep'); the B&B tincture is simply miraculous. It restores all kinds of inner ear damage, vertigo, hearing loss, swimmers ear, and various ear infections (and it's exceptional for all kinds of things 'neuro' related, like epilepsy, learning disorders, some spasms/seizures...and basically anything of neurological origin). And for some reason or another, it stops hiccups, too!"
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Re: Nausea etc [Unyquity]
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--The B&B tincture/garlic oil is generally going to be the solution for inner ear issues (infections, dizziness, etc). That's 4-6 drops of garlic oil followed by 4-6 drops of garlic oil nightly for 6 nights, rinse (with bulb syringe 1/2 water 1/2 acv on 7th night; repeat as needed). Gingko biloba is also fantastic for dizziness/vertigo.
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Dr. Christopher B&B ~!~ INFO BOMB ~!~ [Unyquity]
//www.curezone.org/forums/fm.asp?i=1605260#i
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A bit of information I found about this condition:
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/vertigo/DS00534/DSECTION=causes
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV)
About half the time, doctors can't find a specific cause for BPPV.
When a cause can be determined, BPPV is often associated with a minor to severe blow to your head. Less common causes of BPPV include disorders that damage your inner ear or, rarely, damage that occurs during ear surgery or during prolonged positioning on your back.
The ear's role
Inside your ear is a tiny organ called the vestibular labyrinth. It includes three loop-shaped structures (semicircular canals) that contain fluid and fine, hair-like sensors that monitor the rotation of your head. Other structures (otolith organs) in your ear monitor movements of your head — up and down, right and left, back and forth — and your head's position related to gravity. These otolith organs — the utricle and saccule — contain crystals that make you sensitive to movement and gravity.
For a variety of reasons, these crystals can become dislodged. When they become dislodged, they can move into one of the semicircular canals — especially while you're lying down. This causes the semicircular canal to become sensitive to head position changes it would normally not respond to. As a result, you feel dizzy.