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Wheatgrass Healing Tips
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Pulled Muscles Apply some wheatgrass to a pulled calf muscle immediately after the injury. The result can be remarkable. In most cases, you can expect to be walking or even running the next day and with greatly reduced pain. NosebleedsWheatgrass is a powerful hemostatic agent i.e. it stops nosebleeds, open wounds and deeper-seated bleeding in muscles and other tissues. For a blood nose, apply a small amount of wheatgrass cream inside the bleeding nostril with a cotton bud then hold the front of the nose with finger and thumb for a few minutes. For bleeding wounds apply some cream directly to the wound surface or on the overlying skin if the bleeding is in the deeper tissues. Reduces bruising very effectively. Trigger Finger
If you're contemplating surgery for a trigger finger, try applying wheatgrass first as you may be able to avoid the operation. In some way, wheatgrass releases the nodule on the tendon that stops the finger straightening. Surgery is the usual treatment, but a number of my patients have completely recovered using the wheatgrass remedy. Aphthous (Stress) UlcersAphthous ulcers are commonly ascribed to stress. Stress can suppress the body's immunity resulting in painful, often multiple small ulcers in the mouth. Although they usually disappear in about 10 days, wheatgrass juice held in the mouth for a minute or two, three or four times a day, can significantly reduce their duration and relieve pain. Osteitis PubisOsteitis pubis can be a very painful and disabling condition, particularly in sportspeople. It is characterised by pain and tenderness on the pubic bone that is made worse by leg movements. It can go on for years and can be disabling enough to end sporting careers. The symptoms can often be relieved by the application of a preparation containing a wheatgrass extract. Sometimes a remarkable reduction in pain can occur after only one or two applications regardless of the time the symptoms have persisted. |