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Living With Acute Joint Pain


When you live with chronic joint pain, you feel it every time you move, every time you breathe.

While many joint related injuries are gone nearly as quickly as they occur, many joint injuries can last a lifetime and may cause the patient high-levels of pain.

Whoever, the last few years there have been advances in sports medicine that may help patients who are currently suffering from a myriad of joint related injuries or pain. Corrective surgery, medicinal regimens, and special braces have made living with chronic joint pain not just bearable, but relatively pain-free.

Here you will be able to research specific areas of joint pain and their treatment options, as well as pain causes, products that may assist in relieving pain, and certain exercises and stretches that may alleviate the current conditions that are leading to the pain.


 
 
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Root Relieves Back Pain

The British Journal of Sports Medicine has releases findings that an ointment made from the comfrey root has medicinal properties that aid in the relief of back pain.

The study included more than 120 participants who had chronic back pain yet were all able to feel marked improvement in regards to the amount of pain they felt.

MORE INFO: Back Pain

Migraine Link to Breast Cancer

According to the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Washington, women who experience chronic migraine headaches are at a significantly lower risk of breast cancer.

Because of the hormone related triggers, there is a direct correlation between migraines and breast cancer, said Dr. Christopher Li.

Women that have a history of migraines are at a 30-percent less risk of cancer.

MORE INFO: Headaches


Environment Affects Sleep

In a study conducted at the Sousze Sleep Center in Hamburg, Germany, it was found that the root cause of more than 40-percent of all sleep related disorders or problems had an environmental cause.

"This was a progressive, three year study in which we asked a hundred patients to keep accurate logs and record their sleep experiences, including what would disturb them," said Dr. Sousze.

MORE INFO: Sleep Disorders