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On 24-Aug-05, at 4:33 AM, ayurveda wrote:

 

> mentioned as all of us we know , but there are certain parallelism of

> group of symptoms & signs which are closely resembling to this

> condition.But well it was basically known to be used in conditions

> connected to Mind , after it was been established by Modern Medicine

> for lowering the B.P. we Ayurvedic Physicians started using it in our

> practice, but of course in a row form.After few years latter it was

> then found that the synthetic isomer of Reserpine was found out to be

> more dangerous than the crude one !

 

but wait a sec - hypertension has few if any symptoms until it has

caused damage to the internal organs - if its the ONLY sign in an

otherwise apparently healthy patient, how can it be inferred or

diagnosed using the ashtasthana pariksha or from an analysis of case

history from an Ayurvedic perspective?

 

remember, we are talking about ESSENTIAL hypertension, which is

different from hypertension caused by other factors that are more overt

and can be easily recognized, e.g. hyperthyroidism - in the latter case

we would see factors such as fever, sweating, heat intolerance, burning

sensations, diarrhea etc.etc, all indicating an essentially paittika

disorder - but can somebody take an apparently healthy and active 52

year old with a little weight around the middle and from pulse

diagnosis etc diagnose them as "manas vata"?? - I think not

 

the reality of course is that Ayurvedic practitioners will have

patients that present with an elevated BP who want something done about

it, so some of us might say "OK here take some sarpagandha," BUT THIS

IS NOT AYURVEDA!!!

 

this is despite the fact that the medical strategies to lower BP

WITHOUT addressing the underlying cause (which IMHO includes using any

kind of antihypertensive including sarpagandha as well as mistletoe,

linden, garlic, guggulu, passionflower etc.) achieves limited benefit,

and in the case of the drugs specifically can cause a number of

potential side-effects; see: Port S, Garfinkel A, Boyle N. 2000. There

is a non-linear relationship between mortality and blood pressure. Eur Heart J

2000 Oct;21(20):1635-8

 

i once critiqued a paper written by a herbalist and published in a

"prestigious" journal of herbalism in which she presented several case histories

to demonstrate the efficacy of herbs to lower BP in essential hypertension - the

fact of the matter is that she achieved minimal success by lowering BP by 5-10

mmHg at best or not at all (which is insignificant), and further, had done

nothing to address the underlying factors of the disease (indeed, her knowledge

of the causative factors for CVD were minimal and typical, i.e. low fat, high

carb etc.) - yet,

she was under the impression she had done a great service and that her case

histories were an example of her great success - but, with regards to the point

I am trying to make, she had done nothing really to benefit the patient or halt

disease progression, and is simply using herbs as a bandaid to mask what in

reality is a somewhat arbitrary clinical sign

 

we CAN do better!!! and, for a disease like CVD it may require getting up to

date with the science, and integrating these different streams of knowledge for

the maximal benefit of the patient

 

> B.P. was known to ayurveda, but it was termed as a special

> "pulse" state.

 

the pulse is not an accurate method to determine the BP

it is a common misconception that what the practitioner feels during

pulse diagnosis is the volume of blood - in reality, what is felt is

the peristaltic muscle contraction in the artery that is initiated with

the heart beat - increased force of pulse upon palpation = increased

force of arterial smooth muscle contraction, which MAY be in response

to an increase pressure, but also from some other reason which may be

unrelated - anyway, pulse diagnosis is anumana (inference), and should not be

confused with a reproducible physical sign like elevated BP

Caldecott

todd

www.toddcaldecott.com

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I am a homeopath and I have essential hypertension. I have had every test under

the sun and no one knows why. I work out in a gym at least 5 days out of 7 and

am very fit. I also have a good diet . Allopathic medication which I felt forced

into taking because of a danger of a stroke did very little except take down the

diastolic and systolic by 10 points and was very up and down. I also felt guilty

taking it being a homeopath. It gave me side effects in that it sapped my energy

in sustained high impact aerobic and I was getting lactic acid pains in my

muscles. I then found Ivy's Mukta vati and within 12 days cut my allopathic

medication in half and a week or so later was able to cut it out completely.

This was last February My BP is now normal and in the evenings when I am

working on the computer well below normal so I have cut the evening 2 tablets

down to 1. I feel no guilt about taking Ayurvedic medicine and I have no side

effects. The anxiety about my BP has gone which will also help to get it down. I

am still working with my homeopath to sort out my 4 year menopausal hot flushes

and sleep problems and hope when I am through menopause completely the BP may

stabilise. I realise that Ayurvedic works holistically but in my case taking

MuktaVati for the symptoms has been brilliant.

 

I came on this list to find out how I could purchase Ivy's Mukta Vatri from

India as it costs so much money to buy it from the UK. (BTW I had tried

Mistletoe tincture, garlic, Rauwolfia and the like and nothing has come near to

the effect of the Mukta Vati)

 

Rochelle

Registered Homeopath

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Dear Todd

When you visit India next time, please contact this author a week in

advance. In this mystique India, there exist people who can diagnose

B.P. without having any equipment used by modern science, may be out

of experience of using such an equipment for some time along with

nadi diagnosis. This author will take you to such people and change

your opinions then.

 

The sensations obtained during pulse diagnosis can be transformed to

B.P. readings, to an absolute accuracy plus or minus 5% and relative

accuracy 3%.

 

Meditation, breathing techniques and expereinces etc trains the CNS.

 

A Vaidya near Trimbakeshwar, (Nasik, Maharashtra) who examins about

800 patients a day on average, just places a ceramic tile on the head

of the patient and carries out diagnosis! Another Vaidya looks at

astrological charts and predicts dignosis! This second vaidya is

willing to take disciples.

 

Dr Bhate

 

ayurveda, Todd Caldecott <todd@t...>

wrote:

> the pulse is not an accurate method to determine the BP

> it is a common misconception that what the practitioner feels

during

> pulse diagnosis is the volume of blood - in reality, what is felt

is

> the peristaltic muscle contraction in the artery that is initiated

with

> the heart beat - increased force of pulse upon palpation =

increased

> force of arterial smooth muscle contraction, which MAY be in

response

> to an increase pressure, but also from some other reason which may

be

> unrelated - anyway, pulse diagnosis is anumana (inference), and

should not be confused with a reproducible physical sign like

elevated BP

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>

> Dear Todd

> When you visit India next time, please contact this author a week in

> advance. In this mystique India, there exist people who can diagnose

> B.P. without having any equipment used by modern science, may be out

> of experience of using such an equipment for some time along with

> nadi diagnosis. This author will take you to such people and change

> your opinions then.

>

 

hi Shirish

 

i will be in India this December, but only in Kerala

Vaidyaratnam Mooss is hosting a global summit on Ayurveda in Trichur -

will you be there?

 

anyway, if these practitioners don't have a sphyg then how can they

confirm that the BP is elevated?

i can usually predict elevated BP too, simply by looking at somebody's

age and body shape - its not that difficult really, but not 100%

accurate

basically, almost anyone beyond their late 40's with a little bit of a

belly probably has elevated BP

more overt signs of CVD is almost a guarantee

skilled practitioners often make these links, even subconciously

 

> The sensations obtained during pulse diagnosis can be transformed to

> B.P. readings, to an absolute accuracy plus or minus 5% and relative

> accuracy 3%.

 

i'd like to know where you get these figures from - is there some

research in this regard?

 

> A Vaidya near Trimbakeshwar, (Nasik, Maharashtra) who examins about

> 800 patients a day on average, just places a ceramic tile on the head

 

800 patients a day!! ok, considering a 12 hr work day with no break

and absolute efficiency in herding these people about the clinic this

fellow sees each patient for less than a minute! i am sorry to seem so

bullish, but this is very hard to swallow - however, I do not discount

the possibility of people with special siddhis that allows them to do

such things, but I fail to see how this informs the to art and science

of pulse assessment for any "normal" practitioner of Ayurveda

 

when i think of taking the pulse, i always think the words of the

tibetan pulse master, gYu-tho-pa:

 

"My son, whenever you examine a patient

Do not be careless or speak nonsense.

Careless treatment based on one's own ideas is harmful to the sick.

It will cause you shame and bad rumours.

Specially when you are taking the pulse,

You should avoid noise from human beings and other obstacles,

You should not be absent minded and should concentrate.

Be not in a hurry and try and understand

The Teachers' speech and the texts of Medicine

And your own experience."

Caldecott

todd

www.toddcaldecott.com

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  • 4 months later...

Do you have any natural remedy for hypertension? For the last three

years I am taking Proponol 40mg two times a day and now BPis under

control. I would like to know if you have any ayurvedic drug that

1.Control BP

2.Compensate whatever side-effects so far done by the allopathy

medicine I am taking

3.keep vigour and vitality, essential for my profession, thatis marketing.

For instance, if you take "Sarpagandhi" though effective, it will make

your spirits down.

Please advise

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  • 2 years later...

I am desperately looking for the contact information of the healer/vaidya who has an ashram between nasik and trimbakeshvar and uses ceramic tile to diagnose patients. I live in U.S and will be leaving for India in 4 weeks to meet this vaidya. if I get some contact details like the ashram's phone # or correct address I can start my trip being assured that I will meet the vaidya. My email address is ahpandit@gmail.com

 

-Arifa

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