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 How alternative medicine can help with Oddi dysfunction syndrome -2

Oddi Sphincaster, named after Ruggero Oddi, an Italian anatomist who described this structure in 1887, is a muscle valve that regulates the flow of bile and pancreatic juice into the duodenum (the beginning of the small intestine). The regulation of the sphincter of Oddi is carried out through the nervous system and blood by special messengers - digestive hormones.

If there is no food in the intestine, the Oddi valve sphincter remains closed. Bile is stored in the gallbladder, and pancreatic juice is stored in the pancreas. Spasms or blockage of this valve can lead to the formation of bile and pancreatic juice.
If a tiny amount of bile enters the pancreatic duct, serious problems can occur. Bile can activate digestive enzymes inside the pancreas, and these enzymes begin to digest their own pancreatic cells, causing pain, accumulation, inflammation, and even death of pancreatic tissue. This is called pancreatitis.

The blockage of the Sphinster Oddi with tumors, large gallbladder stones, or scars after inflammation certainly requires surgical intervention. The number of people with these problems is reliably small, but millions of Americans suffer from occasional temporary spasms of the Sfinster Oddi with pain, nausea, and bloating. In most cases, their tests are normal, and these people get labeled with acidic reflux disease, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), gastric flu, food poisoning, or other diseases.

Many of these people have Oddi Type III Dysfunction (SOD) Sphincter. According to statistical information, the prevalence of Sphinster Oddi Dysfunction in the general population is 1.5%. This could mean that 4.5 million people in the United States suffer from SOD.

Lack of proper treatment for Sfinster Oddi Dysfunction can subsequently cause serious complications, such as pancreatitis and inflammation of the gallbladder.
Sphinster Oddi Dysfunction can affect children, women over 40, overweight people and people after abdominal operations. For example, statistics show that almost 20% of people with pain after removing the gallbladder have Sphinster dysfunction Oddi.

Why does the sphincter of oddy become convulsive? The answer depends on many reasons, given the very complex regulation of this sphincter by the nervous system and special blood messengers - digestive hormones. Here are some examples of what can cause Sphinster Oddi's spasm:

• Stress, depression and anxiety
• Bad eating habits, such as “eating on the go,” eating while watching TV, wrong diets, diet, starvation, and the wrong combination of foods, such as mixing fatty foods with starches and sugars
• Drugs, some drugs, alcohol and nicotine
• Severe, intense and repetitive “liver cleaning”
• Hormonal imbalance, such as lower thyroid function or menopause
• “Aggressive” sour bile with sand, sludge, gall bladder stones, etc.
We can usually see combinations of these factors in predisposed individuals with overweight problems, a sedentary lifestyle and stress for long periods of time.

The standard American diet, which is full of processed and acidic foods (meat, sugar, alcohol, animal fats, white flour, etc.), causes the acidity of the whole organism. The standard American diet leads to acidic conditions in the gall and pancreatic juice. Bile becomes acidic, and the amount of bile acids in the bile also increases. Bile acids are very aggressive substances; they irritate the wall of the Sphinster Oddi, causing muscle contractions - spasms.

3-4 liters of mixed pancreatic juice and bile pass through Sphinster Oddi daily. Acidification of these fluids makes them very “aggressive”, corrosive and irritating to surrounding tissues, especially Sphinster Oddi. Considering that bile is a means to remove toxic chemicals such as bile pigments, heavy metals, drugs, drugs and poisons from the body, and the bile ducts and gallbladder often contain parasites, there is no doubt that Sphinster Oddi is an easy target for irritation . In addition, alcohol, junk food, unhealthy diet, and improper food combinations cause havoc to the normal functioning of the Sphincter of Oddi.

The most common and predominant symptom of Oddi's dysfunction sphincter is pain in the upper abdomen. This is often found as a sharp pain in the middle of the abdomen right under the rib cage. The pain can be severe in nature, causing people to go to the hospital and require pain relief. But in many cases, the pain can be mild and usually does not need painkillers. The symptoms of the Oddi Dysfunction Sphincter are divided into bile pain and pancreatic pain.

Symptoms of the Sphincter of Oddi dysfunction Gallstones include:
• Pain in the gallbladder was felt in the middle or right side of the upper abdomen
• Back pain on the lower tip of the scapula or right shoulder
• Pain is often accompanied by bloating, nausea and vomiting.
• Pain caused by fatty foods or alcohol
• Pain varies in intensity and lasts from 15 minutes to 4-5 hours

Symptoms of sphincter dysfunction Oddi Pancreatic abdominal pain:
• Pain located in the upper abdomen to the left or to the right
• Pain directed directly through the abdomen to the back
• Pain, often accompanied by bloating, nausea and vomiting
• Pain caused by improper protein / fat / starch / sugar food combinations or alcohol consumption

Non-drug holistic approaches may be helpful. Holistic remedies for the treatment of Oddi Dysfunction Type III Sphinster are widely used in many countries around the world.

The Oddi Dysfunction Type III Sphinster target program may include some actions:
• Healing Individual Diet
• Drinking healing mineral water prepared from real spring salt Karlovy Vary
• European cleansing of the whole body due to the restoration of friendly intestinal fluorine and intestinal hydrotherapy
• Candidate Control Program
• acupuncture
• Herbal medicine
• Food supplement
• Manual Chiropractors
• Visceral massage
• Relaxation, meditation, hypnosis, personalized hypnosis CDs

Treatment courses for alternative and holistic medicine can be used alone or as complementary approaches to traditional medicine.

Information about this article is provided for educational, informational purposes only. It is not intended to replace the diagnosis, treatment, or counseling of a qualified, licensed medical professional.




 How alternative medicine can help with Oddi dysfunction syndrome -2


 How alternative medicine can help with Oddi dysfunction syndrome -2

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