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Chances are good that if you've experienced the pain and agony of acute sinusitis more than
once. Perhaps you're riding the antibiotic merry-go-round — sinus flare-up is followed by a
course of antibiotics, a few weeks of feeling almost well, and then another sinus infection and
on and on it goes. Or you may be a chronic sinusitis sufferer, all too familiar with daily sneezing,
postnasal drip, stuffiness, and fatigue yet, blaming these symptoms on year-round allergy or
colds.
If it's any consolation, you have plenty of company. Approximately 40 million Americans
continually sniffle and sneeze from sinusitis, according to the most recent data from the
National Center for Health Statistics. It is one of the leading chronic illness in the United States
and has been since the mid-1980s.
As prevalent as sinusitis Is, however, modern medicine has relatively little to offer sufferers, and
definitely no cure. Many eventually are told by a conventional otolaryngologist (ear, nose and
throat doctor) that they'll "just have to live with it." That's often when they contact Dr. Robert
Ivker, a Denver-based osteopath, or find his book "Sinus Survival" (Tarcher/Putnam, 2000). "I
am a doctor of last resort," he acknowledges. "Most of the patients who come to me have had
longstanding sinusitis and often multiple sinus surgeries."
Dr. Ivker is best known for a holistic method of treating sinusitis, allergies, and colds that he
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developed to soothe his own ailing mucus membranes and then used with equal success on
patients in his practice. This approach became his Sinus Survival program, a comprehensive
mental, spiritual, physical, and environmental course of action to heal both the cavities in the
skull and a person's life.
Other action steps that Dr. Ivker recommends as a starting point are: using an air cleaner;
following a healthy diet — avoiding sugar, dairy products, caffeine, and alcohol; and taking a
high-quality multivitamin.
Each action plays a key part in restoring the health of the respiratory tract's mucus membrane,
particularly the health of the cilia — "hairs" on the membrane that constantly sweep mucus and
debris out of air pathways.
Types of Treatment
How to Test the Cilia for Normal Functioning
"The treatment of choice for sinus disease is to have the body return the cilia to their normal
function, beating 16 times per second," says Dr. Murray Grossan, a Los Angeles-based internist
and author of "The Sinus Cure," to be issued by Bantam Books early in 2001. "When the cilia
are normal, people do not have sinusitis; they don't even have [sinus related] allergies."
Dr. Grossan is also the developer of a special nasal irrigation attachment for the Water Pik, a
device that he says can help heal many cases of sinusitis. To prove it, he tests his patients' cilia
function before and after irrigation by placing a grain of saccharin in their nose, then times how
long it takes the particle to travel from the front of the nose to the back, where it's swallowed.
(Do not try this at home.)
"If they taste [the saccharin] in five minutes, cilia function is probably normal," Dr. Grossan
explains. "If it takes 30 minutes, then the probability is that even using all the different gadgets I
have, the patient will not be cured." What that means, says Dr. Grossan, is that the patient will
need to irrigate his or her sinuses on a regular basis for the rest of his life to make up for the
absence of the cilia's sweeping action.
Other remedies thought to jump-start these little hairs or "brushes" are hot tea (not coffee) first
thing in the morning and chicken soup — Dr. Grossan's "breakfast in bed cure." "By drinking hot
tea before you get out of bed, the body gets warmed up, the cilia speed up, and you avoid
sneezing and coughing."
A recently discovered threat to cilia health is the toxicity of most preservatives in saline sprays.
Ironically, over-the-counter saline sprays have long been advised for sinus sufferers as a
portable way to hydrate inflamed, dried-out respiratory passages and encourage cilia
movement. But in 1995, researchers discovered that saline spray additives, particularly one
called benzalkonium, could actually destroy the mucus lining, taking the cilia with it. Now there
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are several preservative-free saline sprays on the market, including Rhinocourt Aqua and Dr.
Grossan's own product, Breathe-Ease.
Dr. Ivker agrees that addressing candidiasis is the missing link for many of his sinus-
compromised patients and has made its treatment part of his program as well. The notion of a
connection between candida and sinusitis gained a great deal of credence in 1999 after a Mayo
Clinic study was published that showed subjects with sinusitis obtained significant relief from
their illness via long courses of antifungal drugs.
Repeated courses of antibiotics are thought to promote yeast overgrowth by killing friendly
bacteria in the body along with invading pathogens. The candida itself isn't considered harmful,
but the toxins it's suspected of emitting as it runs rampant are thought to cause a host of
problems, including fatigue, recurrent vaginitis, depression and chronic infections such as
sinusitis.
To make matters worse, "almost without exception, every person with a yeast-related problem
is bothered by food sensitivities," Dr. Crook says. Of course, most people don't know their body
is bothered by particular foods, so they continue to eat them freely, putting even more strain on
what is often an already overburdened immune system. It becomes a vicious cycle, similar to
that of antibiotics for the treatment of sinusitis. If you think this is a problem for you, you may
want to consider getting tested for food sensitivities, usually through a dietitian or a nutritionally
oriented physician.
Clearly, sinusitis treatment demands constant vigilance and usually a complete overhaul in
lifestyle, but the payoffs can be major. Dr. Ivker, 53, continues to practice most aspects of his
program every day and says he's never felt healthier or been in better shape in his life. "It just
gets better and better." He hasn't had a sinus infection in more than 12 years. "Yes, it's a long
road to recovery, but I think it's worth it," he says.
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In her book "Awakening Intuition"(Harmony, 1999), Schulz discusses how psychological issues
affect the seven chakras, the fourth being related to the capacity to feel and express all
emotions fully and form balanced, reciprocal relationships. (Chakras, or emotional energy
centers, are more typically an Eastern way of viewing the body and its interconnectedness with
the mind.)
The scientific validation for mind-body medicine has come about only in the last quarter century,
so the idea that physical health can be influenced by thoughts, emotions, and beliefs is just
starting to catch on in the Western part of the world. But many practitioners of
psychoneuroimmunology (the medical term for mind-body medicine) relate case studies just
short of amazing, particularly in the treatment of chronic illnesses like sinusitis, arthritis and
back pain — prevalent conditions for which Western medicine has no cure.
Dr. Ivker believes that guided imagery, affirmations and meditation are some of the most
powerful tools in his holistic Sinus Survival program. "The social and spiritual and emotional
aspects have a more powerful impact on either weakening or strengthening your immune
system [than strictly physical modalities]."
Getting air into the lower lobes of the lungs is the key, Douillard explains, because "the lower
lobes are calming and repair; they have nerves in them that are the exact opposite of the upper
lobes, which have stress receptors."
Unfortunately, most of us breathe shallowly though our mouths. "The rib cage has a natural
squeezing effect to help get air out," notes Douillard. "Add emotions to that, and for most of us
our rib cage has become a cage, squeezing on our heart and our lungs, forcing us to breathe
like rabbits — little, shallow, upper-chest breaths, 28,000 times a day."
To measure whether you have sufficient respiratory capacity, try this exercise from Douillard:
Go for a walk, breathe deeply in through your nose, count how many steps you take for one full
inhalation and exhalation. "You need at least 21 steps per breath through your nose to have
some sense of respiratory efficiency." Or, if you go for a moderate run, and you should not have
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So consider that to fully recover from any respiratory disease, you'll need to address all facets
of the cause. Otherwise, you could end up treating symptoms, which will bring some relief but
never get you to the pinnacle of vitality — where Dr. Ivker, a former sinusitis sufferer, says he is
today, due to tackling his problem from all directions.
Related Articles
How Allergies Work
Sinusitis In-depth
Chronic Sinus Congestion
Alternative Medicines for Sinusitis
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