Filed under: Benefits of a Colon Cleanse
Our overall health seems to be improving over the past twenty years. We are living longer, growing taller, and are obsessed with Yoga. However, the number of cases of several illnesses have been rising mysteriously. From the early 1980s through the late 1990s, autism increased tenfold; from the early 1970s through the mid-1990s, one type of leukemia was up 62 percent, male birth defects doubled, and childhood brain cancer was up 40 percent. Some experts suspect a link to the man-made chemicals that pervade our food, water, and air.
Continue September 30, 2009
You may be wondering how you can start improving your colon’s health condition, and one of the things you can do is by undergoing a colon cleanse. A colon cleanse is very safe if you do it properly, and the best thing about it is that you don’t need to spend a lot of money or undergo complicated procedures for your colon cleanse.
Continue September 20, 2009
Clearly, cleansing the colon has a number of significant benefits. One of the most widely touted benefits is the chance for speedy weight loss, but you shouldn’t just clean your colon for this purpose. Do it for a chance at better health and a body that functions smoothly and properly. Once you have undergone colonic cleansing, you will notice that you feel lighter and your body feels more alive and energetic. A clean colon also gives rise to other positive effects; you will experience fewer headaches, you will stop feeling aches and pains in your body, and you may even experience an incredible lift in your mood, too.
Continue September 19, 2009
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is one of the most common ailments of the bowel (intestines) and affects an estimated 15% of persons in the US. The term, irritable bowel, is not a particularly good one since it implies that the bowel is responding irritably to normal stimuli, and this may or may not be the case. The several names for IBS, including spastic colon, spastic colitis, and mucous colitis, attest to the difficulty of getting a descriptive handle on the ailment. Moreover, each of the other names is itself as problematic as the term IBS.
Continue September 15, 2009
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a chronic disorder characterized by recurrent abdominal pain and intermittent diarrhea, which often alternates with constipation. IBS most commonly affects people between the ages of 20 and 30 and is twice as common in women as in men. IBS is known by a variety of other terms: spastic colon, spastic colitis, mucous colitis, nervous diarrhea, nervous colon and nervous or functional bowel.
Continue September 14, 2009
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