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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Tinnitus / July 2007

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The circulatory theory once again called for.

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fyfpoon@gmail.com - 03 Jul 2007 07:06 GMT
I ran into the following website of a Chinese hospital in Beijing of
China.  This hospital specializes in treating ear problems.

http://www.elzl.cn/

Unfortunately, many viewers here don't understand Chinese.  I am going
to translate a section for all of you.

This sector is heading (--) and talks about the relationship between
our ears and the other body organs.  In general, it talks about the
relationship between the ears and (1)kidney, (2)heart, (3)liver,
(4)bladder, (5)-----, (6)lung and (7)brain.  While the malfunctioning
of any of these body organs can lead to ear problems, this section in
particular emphazes the relationship between ear and kidney.
According to this article, many people, particularly the middle aged,
can suffer from kidney-related tinnitus as a result of body fatique
and tension.

Since the causes of tinnitus are so complex, how can we find out which
one or ones have led to our tinnitus?  In my opinion, it is very
difficult. And this is why tinnitus is so difficult to treat because
the causes are hard to be located and the causes may be
interrelated.

Against this background, a treatment should be made to strengthen the
various parts of our body in the hope that each part of our body will
do its duty to fix the cause or causes of tinnitus; medical diagnosis
has oftentimes failed to locate these causes.  I think a treatment
that meets this criterion is INFUSION TREATMENT.

An infusion treatment using blood vessel dilating medicine, which is
meant to improve the overall blood circulation of our body organs with
the hope that the latter will do their duty to help fix up the
problem, will likely achieve this purpose in my humble opinion.  This
is perhaps why it is almost a standard practice for treating tinnitus
in practically all the Chinese hospitals I have visited.

Infusion treatment is very popular in Europe and Asia, according to
what I have read.  But the doctors operating under the umbrella of the
Anglo-American medical establishment seem to have a differing view
against this practice for whatever reasons.

FP
Murray Grossan - 07 Jul 2007 03:05 GMT
On 7/2/07 11:06 PM, in article
1183442795.778829.66520@d30g2000prg.googlegroups.com, "fyfpoon@gmail.com"

> Unfortunately, many viewers here don't understand Chinese.  I am going
> to translate a section for all of you.

That's a terrible accusation to make.
fyfpoon@gmail.com - 09 Jul 2007 00:32 GMT
> On 7/2/07 11:06 PM, in article
> 1183442795.778829.66...@d30g2000prg.googlegroups.com, "fyfp...@gmail.com"
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>
> That's a terrible accusation to make.

Do you mean many viewers here do understand Chinese language?
Murray Grossan - 07 Jul 2007 03:09 GMT
On 7/2/07 11:06 PM, in article
1183442795.778829.66520@d30g2000prg.googlegroups.com, "fyfpoon@gmail.com"

> Anglo-American medical establishment seem to have a differing view
> against this practice for whatever reasons.

Reaosn? There is no evidence that it works. Is that reason enough?
fyfpoon@gmail.com - 09 Jul 2007 00:31 GMT
> On 7/2/07 11:06 PM, in article
> 1183442795.778829.66...@d30g2000prg.googlegroups.com, "fyfp...@gmail.com"
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>
> Reaosn? There is no evidence that it works. Is that reason enough?

Evidence?  What evidence?  Are the doctors in Europe and as far as I
can see in China are carrying out a medical practice which is not
supported by evidence?  Are they all wrong and only the medical
practitioners under the Anglo-American establishment are right on
this?

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