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The Complete Home Guide todiHseerabsse, Nsatural Healing, and Nutrition  
230  
Take cold sitz baths, which can help severely prolapsed piles, as can  
sitting on bags of frozen peas at intervals.  
An anal suppository (see chapter 3) will help heal and support the  
area. Useful herbs would be barberry bark powder, black walnut hull  
powder, a pinch of cayenne, and witch hazel essential oil.  
hepatitis  
Hepatitis is a form of liver disease that has several different causal agents,  
its types currently labeled A, B, and C. Less common ones also exist. It  
takes the form of liver inf ammation, usually caused by a viral infection,  
which leaves the liver enlarged and unable to function properly.  
Treatment before travel to countries where hepatitis is endemic is  
preferable to vaccination;  
I have known of many cases in which the patient felt that the vaccination  
was responsible for later symptoms and, occasionally, for the full-blown  
disease. Conventional medical practitioners will openly admit that  
vaccination does not necessarily stop one from contracting hepatitis.  
Symptoms include headaches, facial f ushing, inf amed gums, tenderness  
from inf ammation in the liver area, diarrhea, a yellow coating on the side  
of the tongue, a profound sense of fatigue and loss of well-being, and  
possibly migraine headaches. Hepatitis A is transmitted through food,  
blood, water, bodily f uids, and other sources of infection, and is usually  
acute and infectious. Hepatitis B is more likely to be transmitted by  
bodily f uids including blood. It has an incubation period of three months,  
and is usually chronic. Hepatitis C is also infectious, present in blood and  
in broken, weeping skin. Current treatment of hepatitis C involves  
prolonged doses of interferon, which can make the patient feel  
permanently ill with f ulike symptoms while simply delaying  
the regeneration of the liver. Hepatitis is known to increase the likelihood  
of other liver disease in later life.  
Hepatitis is called chronic when it lasts longer than six months. Chills,  
fever, and malaise accompany acute hepatitis. Although liver function  
tests can be useful, generally no specif c treatment is recommended  
except rest for hepatitis A and B. Isolation may possibly be recommended,  
depending on the type.  
Hepatitis needs different treatment depending on the type. But all  
types will respond to the following treatments:  
f Bile needs to be decongested in this situation, and the “f re” and  
heat” of the problem purged and cooled. Many herbs common to  
the kitchen and garden will help: dandelion root, turmeric root, mint  
leaf, oregano leaf, and burdock root. Avoid cooked and raw hot spices  


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