Diet Cure: Dietary Treatment for Neuritis

Treatment of neuritis by painkilling drugs may give temporary relief but it does not remove the trouble effectively. The pain is relieved for the time being at the cost of the health of other parts of the body, especially the heart and kidneys, and the neuritis remains. The best treatment for neuritis is to ensure that the patient gets optimum nutrition, well assimilated with all the vitamins and other nutrients.

The diet should be made up of three basic food groups, namely seeds, nuts and grains, vegetables and fruits, with special emphasis on whole grains, particularly whole whet, brown rice, raw and sprouted seeds, raw milk, especially in the sore form and home-made cheese.

In this regimen, the breakfast may consist of fresh fruits, handful of raw nuts or a couple of tablespoons of sunflower and pumpkin seeds. Steamed vegetables, whole wheat chappatis and a glass of butter milk may be taken for lunch. The dinner may comprise a large bowl of fresh, green, vegetable salad, fresh home-made cottage cheese, fresh butter and a glass of butter-milk.

In severe cases, the patient should be put on a short juice fast for four or five days before being given the optimum diet. Carrots, beets, citrus fruits, apples and pineapples may be used for juices.

All vitamins of the B group have proved highly beneficial in the prevention and treatment of nueritis. The disease has been helped when vitamins B1, B2, B6, B12 and pantothenic acid have been given together and extreme pain, weakness and numbness in some cases have been relieved within an hour.

The patient should avoid white bread, white sugar, refined cereals, meat, fish, tinned foods, tea, coffee and condiments which form the root of the trouble by continuously flooding the tissues with acid impurities.

The patient should be given two or three hot Emsom salt baths weekly, remaining in the bath for 25 to 30 minutes. The affected part should also be bathed several times daily in hot water containing Epsom salt – a table-spoon of salt to a cupful of hot water. The patient should undertake walking and other moderate exercises.

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