Strange Oil KNOCKS OUT Arthritis Pain
If you’re suffering from the pain, swelling, and stiffness of arthritis, you know how it impacts your everyday life.
It can keep you from doing the things you love, like playing a round of golf or working in your garden.
And the painkillers that the mainstream hands out like candy can destroy your gastrointestinal tract – and they’re often addictive.
But now there’s an easier way to get the pain relief you deserve.
Scientists have discovered a safe, natural oil that can knock out arthritis pain and stiffness as well as drugs like ibuprofen.
But it doesn’t come with ANY of the side effects.
Ginger has been used for thousands of years for everything from relieving nausea to improving heart health.
But one of its most impressive benefits has to do with its pain-relieving properties.
Studies show that ginger can reduce exercise-induced muscle pain and menstrual pain – effects that are likely due to its potent anti-inflammatory properties.
Now, another study has added a new benefit to ginger’s list — it can relieve the pain and stiffness of osteoarthritis.
In a study of 120 patients experiencing moderate to severe osteoarthritis pain, researchers gave the patients either ginger extract, NSAID drugs like ibuprofen, or a placebo.
Both ginger and ibuprofen worked better than placebo. And the ginger was found to be just as effective at ibuprofen at improving pain, joint swelling, and range of motion.
Another recent study of ginger oil in knee osteoarthritis had nearly identical results – with the ginger oil leading to a 40% reduction in pain and stiffness in the knee joints.
If you’re living with the pain, stiffness, swelling, and creaking of osteoarthritis, ginger could off you some much-needed relief (without the tradeoff that comes with mainstream’s drugs).
Ginger extracts are available from amazon.com and many supplement stores.
Or, for a topical solution, consider using ginger essential oil in order to send its anti-inflammatory effects directly to the site of the pain.
To a brighter day,
Dr. Richard Gerhauser, M.D.