Posts Tagged ‘Anti-inflammatory’
Home Remedies for Mosquito Bites
Spring will soon give way to summer and one of the great risk of spending more time outdoors is becoming dinner for hungry mosquitoes. These bites are ultra annoying because often accompanied by irritation and itching. Fortunately there are effective natural remedies at home to relieve the bites.

Lemon Juice: Lemons have anti-inflammatory properties and apply a little lemon juice with a cotton ball in one bite will help keep you from scratch and make the situation worse.
Epsom: This product is essential in a home, because it is multi-purpose. Soak a cotton towel with cold water with Epsom salts (two tablespoons per cup) and apply a mosquito bite. You can also add a teaspoon of Epsom salts to a cup of boiling water until dissolved. Place the solution in the freezer for about 20 minutes and apply it to the bite. Magnesium sulfate helps relieve any irritation or itching. In some countries they call fig and salt in English is epsom salts.
New Rhinitis Treatment
The news is “Paediatric Allegra,” the new option for treating rhinitis, is an antihistamine with raspberry flavor, which is characterized by not cause sedation, having a rapid onset of action and an anti-inflammatory effect. “It is effective, well tolerated and has a high level of security,” he said.

Their presentation is an oral suspension, easily dosed with a syringe metering according to patient age and severity of the disease. It is a prescription medicine, so parents should consult your pediatrician, he said.
Allegra Oral Suspension Paediatric, part of the portfolio of laboratory products for children known as Sanofi Aventis Pediatrics, said Dr. Rossana Juarez, medical director of Sanofi Aventis for Central America and the Caribbean.
Reduce Pain & Promote Healing
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If you suffer from back pain for over two weeks, consult a doctor for review and to ensure that the pain is not caused by a health exception. The vast majority of cases of back pain heal on their own with the help of some home care. Try the following household measures to reduce pain and promote healing:
Relax for twenty-four hours after the pain has started to avoid any other injury.
Sleep on a firm mattress with a table below. Lie on one side with a pillow between your legs to keep the hips with a rotary motion and increase the pressure on the back or lie on your back, with a rolled towel under the neck and pillow under your knees. Avoid lying on your stomach.
Get out of bed slowly and carefully, first sitting and then standing up. Apply ice or cold compresses for twenty minutes every two hours for the first twenty-four to forty-eight hours to reduce pain and muscle spasms.
After forty-eight hours apply heat to improve circulation and healing. The use of ice or heat is an individual choice that depends on what you prefer and what reduces the pain. Take pain medication and prescription anti-inflammatory such as aspirin or ibuprofen. It is best to take these medicines with milk, food or antacids to protect the stomach. However, children and teenagers should not take aspirin because aspirin use in this age has been associated with an uncommon condition, although serious, brain and liver of Reye’s syndrome. Pregnant women should consult their doctor before taking any medication. Without prescription. It is advisable that parents with children and people with medical problems read carefully the prospectus of the products and consult with the pharmacist if you have questions about their use. It must also avoid vigorous activity for six weeks after the pain is gone to get a complete cure and prevent the injury occurring again.