Pages

Showing posts with label Salt Therapy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Salt Therapy. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 November 2013

A treatment worth its salt? - Salt Therapy

Published: Sunday November 10, 2013 MYT 12:00:00 AM                

by allie shah

 

Salt therapy is a homeopathic remedy meant to help respiratory problems.



It’s called salt therapy, and it has gained a foothold in Minnesota, US. Touted as an all-natural way to bring relief to those who suffer from allergies, flu or asthma, salt therapy treats patients by allowing them to inhale dry, microparticles of salt dispersed by a generator.
It’s called salt therapy, and it has gained a foothold in Minnesota, US. Touted as an all-natural way to bring relief to those who suffer from allergies, flu or asthma, salt therapy treats patients by allowing them to inhale dry, microparticles of salt dispersed by a generator.
 
THE first thing you notice when you enter the Salt Cave is the floor: It crunches.

Your bare feet slide gingerly across the pebble-like floor covered with 4,000 pounds of Himalayan salt crystals. The walls around you are lined with pink and orange-hued bricks of salt.

As you slide into one of the zero-gravity chairs, you hear the sound of crashing waves streaming from overhead speakers. As you relax and your breathing slows and deepens, you inhale air pumped with pharmaceutical-grade salt.

After a few minutes, you touch your tongue to your lips and taste salt.

This total sensory experience is called salt therapy, a homeopathic remedy meant to help respiratory problems. The age-old alternative therapeutic remedy, sometimes called halotherapy or speleotherapy, is said to alleviate symptoms of asthma, allergies, anxiety and other ailments.

There are no US clinical studies examining the effectiveness of salt therapy, but its adherents swear by it.

Lori Danielson is one of them. Danielson, who suffers from allergies, is a regular at the cave in south Minneapolis.

“I get energy and more oxygen into my body. I’ve noticed my nasal passages clear up,” she said. “The biggest benefit is I know I can breathe.”

Co-owner Scott Wertkin said his Salt Cave – which opened a year ago in a former chiropractor’s office – is one of only 30 or 40 businesses in the US offering this treatment. Other centres have opened in New York, Florida, California and Chicago in recent years.

Although new here, salt therapy’s use in modern history dates back to 19th-century Poland.

In 1843, a physician named Dr Feliks Boczkowski noticed that workers at a salt mine, unlike other miners, did not have respiratory or lung problems. He attributed their healthy lungs to the air climate inside the salt mine.

Salt is known to have anti-bacterial and anti-inflammatory properties. Soon, spas opened in the salt caves, and today, the therapy is popular in Eastern Europe, Russia and Canada.

Wertkin became interested in salt caves when he and his wife were researching remedies for their son, Jack, now 13, who has asthma. They visited a salt room in Florida and were amazed at the difference it made for their son. They decided to open their own business after learning that Chicago was the closest city with a comparable salt room.

They sought to emulate the look of a real salt mine by transforming the chiropractor’s exam room into an otherworldly space.

Wertkin constructed the cave out of 12,000 pounds of rock salt shipped from a mine in Pakistan on the edge of the Himalayas. (The most popular salts used in salt therapy are Himalayan and Dead Sea salts.)

Wertkin compares the salt room’s effect on customers’ nasal passages to “a dry Neti pot”. He said more than 3,000 people have visited the Salt Cave, located in a tiny strip mall next to a yoga studio.

Does it work?

Doctors remain skeptical about the health benefits of inhaling dry salt particles.

“There is no science behind it,” said Dr Scott Davies, a pulmonologist.

Ingesting salt does have therapeutic properties. A 2006 study in the New England Journal of Medicine found that saline therapy was an effective and safe supplemental treatment for patients with cystic fibrosis.

But Dr Charlene McEvoy, another pulmonologist and head of the Asthma Center at HealthPartners, said there is a difference between sitting in a salt-covered room and ingesting a solution of salt and water directly.

She also cautioned that patients with conditions such as asthma should not replace their medications with salt therapy. “If by doing the salt therapy they couldn’t afford their medications, absolutely not. I have data on their inhalers. I know they help. Mortality for asthma has dropped significantly using our current medical treatment,” she said.

Dr Davies acknowledged there’s a history of “people using (salt) as a homeopathic remedy”, and said he knew of no harm that could come from sitting in a room full of salt. Rather than a medical treatment, Dr Davies said, he would put salt therapy in the same category as a spa treatment.

Maybe that’s a good comparison.

The last time Valerie Petit, another salt-therapy enthusiast, made a trip to the Salt Cave, she fell asleep. Petit said she goes to the cave mainly to unwind in the beach-like environment. “I don’t have any health issues,” she said. “I’m just doing it because it feels good.”

And even Dr McEvoy said there could be value in asthma patients doing anything that allows them to relax and slow down their breathing.

A 45-minute session of salt therapy costs US$30 (RM96). The cave also is used for groups doing yoga, meditation or story times for children.

Terri Peterson, a pharmacist, leads a breathing class once a month inside the cave. She said her sinuses open up, an effect that can last for a few days.

Eric Christopher, a member of Peterson’s class, said he’s been to the cave more than eight times since first reading about salt therapy in an alternative health newspaper. He occasionally will take an antihistamine for his allergies, but he believes the breathing classes in the salt cave have helped.

“I woke up having had a restful, deep sleep,” he said after a recent visit to the cave.

Christopher isn’t deterred by the lack of research on salt therapy.

“I let my own experience be my guide in that,” he said. – Star Tribune (Minneapolis)/McClatchy-Tribune Information Services

http://www.thestar.com.my/Lifestyle/Health/Alternatives/2013/11/10/A-treatment-worth-its-salt.aspx

Sunday, 16 December 2012

Using Salt Therapy to Treat Anxiety and Cystic Fibrosis

  | 0 CommentsMore

 
 6 December 2012
 
Did you know…that simple salt can effectively treat respiratory ailments, anxiety, and even cystic fibrosis?

Hippocrates, the father of modern medicine, prescribed saltwater inhalation therapy for bronchial and lung disorders. But ironically, in the United States, the very medical institutions where his name is still so revered now reject this time-tested treatment for respiratory ailments.

This is unfortunate, because as Hippocrates and his colleagues discovered in ancient times, salt is a potent treatment, especially for respiratory health. And respiratory health with unobstructed breathing is arguably the foundation for overall health.

Advocates of salt therapy also say that this treatment addresses anxiety and stress symptoms, two of the most pressing problems of modern life. Considering all of this, it is no wonder the popularity of salt therapy—which can be administered in facilities or at home—has been quietly rising in the world of alternative wellness.

“Salt Dust” Comes Out of the Caves and Into the World of Wellness

In ancient Europe, monks had one simple prescription for ailments as varied as allergies…asthma…skin conditions…and depression—they would send their patients to the nearest salt cave. The monks noticed that patients who followed this treatment plan experienced significant improvements.
If there were no caves nearby, the monks would actually grind salt rocks against each other to create a cloud of “salt dust” for their patients to inhale. And the monks weren’t the only ones who thought “salt dust” had curative powers. European salt spas have been in business since the mid-1800s.

How Salt Therapy Works

Most modern salt therapy facilities, though they may still call themselves caves, are actually rooms coated in salt crystals and pumped full of air laden with medicinal sodium chloride.

Scott B. Wertkin, the owner and operator of The Salt Cave of Minneapolis, Minnesota, uses pharmaceutical-grade sodium chloride for inhalation, and Himalayan salt crystals to cover the walls and floor.

Some say the Himalayan salt’s only value is aesthetic, but Wertkin has a different opinion. “The salt I use here is incredibly old, hundreds of millions of years, and it has a strong energy.” Science hasn’t pinpointed the effects of the ionized energy he is referring to, but those who’ve visited salt caves report similar experiences.
salt therapy
To date, few studies have examined salt therapy, but the ones have certainly support users’ reports of its remarkable benefits. Here is a sampling of a few of the best studies to date:
  • A 2006 study in the New England Journal of Medicine showed improved lung function in people with cystic fibrosis who inhaled hypertonic saline.
  • The European Respiratory Journal published findings in the same year on the successful use of aerosolized salt for alleviating smoking-related symptoms such as coughing and mucus production.
  • Over a 10-year period, more than 4,000 patients in a Hungarian study were treated with salt therapy. The majority reported improvement and long-lasting benefits.

How to Breathe Easier with Salt Therapy

Currently, only about 20 salt caves are operating in the United States. They are more common in Europe and Canada in part because insurance companies in those nations cover the treatment.
If there’s no salt cave near you, never fear, there are at-home options. Two of the most available options are salt pipes and salt lamps. The pipes are used to inhale saline-infused air, while the lamps create a micro-version of the ionized atmosphere discussed earlier. If you use the two in tandem, you can simulate the full range of effects produced by natural (or designed) salt caves.

Further Related Reading:

http://undergroundhealthreporter.com/salt-therapy-benefits