Member since: 3/12/2008
In a small, but significant British study, conducted by a pre-eminent RA specialist, the following was found:
"'Anything that can help to reduce NSAID use is going to be safer for patients.'"
"That quote comes from Dr. Andrew Bamji, and he knows what he's talking about – he's the president of the British Society for Rheumatology. Dr. Bamji recently offered that quote to the BBC regarding a new UK study that shows how some rheumatoid arthritis patients might reduce their use of non-steroidal anti- inflammatory drugs by supplementing with a safe, natural agent that has been shown to supply many other healthy benefits as well. [NSAID use puts a severe strain on the digestive system. How severe does it get? According to the American Gastroenterological Association, long-term NSAIDs use is responsible for well over 100,000 hospitalizations each year due to upper gastrointestinal adverse events, and may contribute to an astonishing 16,500 deaths per year.]
But many patients with rheumatoid arthritis would find life unbearable without NSAIDs to relieve their pain. In rheumatoid arthritis (RA), chronic inflammation of the joints and soft tissue around the joints is prompted by an autoimmune reaction. The key word in that sentence is "inflammation" – exactly the problem that NSAID use addresses, but at a potentially high cost. Based on research that shows omega-3 fatty acids reduce inflammation, researchers at the University of Dundee and the University of Edinburgh recruited nearly 100 RA patients for a cod liver oil intervention study. STUDY PROFILE
Not for EVERYONE, but something to consider.
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