View Single Post
Old 04-04-2014, 11:01 AM
krow46 krow46 is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: VA
Posts: 50
10 yr Member
krow46 krow46 is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: VA
Posts: 50
10 yr Member
Default My info about coffee & rsd/crps

Quote:
Originally Posted by KimA View Post
Hi everyone. Well, I still have the migraine. Okay, I'm not sure if it the same migraine or if it has been a series of migraines. My head has hurt the entire time but the severity of the pain and aura symptoms has fluctuated throughout the two weeks.

I am going to see my GP tomorrow. Any ideas?
Hi again Kim,
I took the original post out but left the part about the coffee. It worked for me. I may be the last one in the herd though, not the fasted. God luck at the GP tomorrow.

Anyone suffering from RSD/CRPS; to consider coffee as a simple conveyor of caffeine is naive.


Coffee;

Coffee should be avoided altogether in patients suffering
1. Coffee has an acid-based oil that is an irritant to gastric mucosa. It stimulates the secretion of gastric acidity. Secondarily, the high gastric acidity results in secretion of adrenalin. The secretion of adrenalin stimulates insulin secretion with resultant secondary relative hypoglycemia. The end result is tension, a mild rise in blood pressure, and 2-3 hours later craving sweets because of the relative hypoglycemia. Obviously none of the above is helpful in RSD/CRPS. The rise in plasma epinephrine will undo whatever good medications are doing to counteract the hyperactive dopaminergic system in RSD/CRPS.

2. Coffee is more harmful than caffeinated soft drinks or tea.

3. Mild tea does not cause reactive hypoglycemia and a rise in blood pressure.

4. Tea, if prepared in mild form (not too strong), contains less caffeine. It has no acid-based oil as does coffee. It contains tannin. Tannin or tannic acid curbs thirst and results in less demand for further consumption of tea or coffee.

5. Coffee and tea both temporarily raise the body temperature. A few minutes after drinking coffee, the stimulation of the dopaminergic system causes colder extremities and a simultaneous rise in systemic temperature. Tea has a much milder effect in this regard. The cold extremities aggravate RSD/CRPS.

6. Iced tea seems to be the mildest and safest of caffeinated drinks.

7. A patient with high fever is harmed by coffee and helped by tea and lemon juice. As is the case with home-made chicken soup being helpful to the sick (in contrast with factory-made red meat type of soup) for unknown reasons, mild tea has a healing effect and coffee has an aggravating effect in patients suffering from stress and fever, including stress of complex chronic pain.



Herbal tea

Just because tea is less harmful than coffee does not imply that herbal tea is good or healthy for anyone. Herbal teas are a variety of different dried vegetable leaves. Some of the herbs contain toxic substances that are harmful to anyone- including RSD/CRPS patients. Because of the variety in strength and quality of chemicals in herbs, the use of herbal teas should be avoided. Some of them contain such high doses of tannins (e.g., sassafras tea) that can be carcinogenic. Catnip, juniper, nutmeg, and hydrangea may be hallucinogenic. Chamomile and marigold may be fatally allergenic. Senna leaves, aloe leaves, and duck roots can be strongly cathartic. Mistletoe leaves and horsetail grass may cause fatal toxicity. So why bother with such chemicals?

Last edited by krow46; 04-04-2014 at 06:49 PM. Reason: Mistakes
krow46 is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote
"Thanks for this!" says:
anon6715 (04-04-2014)