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WHAT THE
PRESS SAY
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A Cure for Hay Fever?
The Daily Mail, August 13th 2002 Author: Marc Chadbourn |
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HAY FEVER sufferers may soon be able to greet the summer with open arms and
clear noses. New research makes great claims for a treatment based on the
ground-up bark of an African gum tree, which also seems able to relieve the
symptoms of asthma.
The treatment, which comes in capsule form, is a traditional African medicine
derived from a gum tree found only in Ghana, West Africa. The bark is soaked in
clean water and then dried naturally, meaning the finished product contains no
chemicals or additives. It is now marketed in the UK under the name Yamoa.
Hay fever is characterised by an itchy nose, throat and palate, congestion and
a runny nose. Other symptoms include lethargy and sinus-type headaches. It is
caused by an allergic reaction in which the body produces chemicals, including
histamine, in response to pollens from plants attaching themselves to membranes
in the nose and throat. It affects up to 15 per cent of people in the UK.
Asthma refers to the shortness of breath caused by the narrowing of the
bronchial tree – the main airways in the lungs. It is often triggered by
an environmental cause, such as an allergy to air pollution, dust mites or
certain vapours. The number of asthma cases is rising fast in the UK. In 1973,
4 per cent of the population was diagnosed as asthmatic; in 1996, the figure
was 21 per cent. It is now estimated that around 3.4 million people are
affected, including 750,000 pupils.
Early statistics from a study by Dr Nyjon Eccles and nutritional therapist
Althea Myrtle at Harley Street’s Chiron Clinic show that 48 per cent of
Yamoa users claim they have been completely cured of hay fever, and a third
believe they’ve seen a marked improvement. Nearly one-third of test
subjects who suffered from asthma said they’d been completely cured,
while 41 per cent reported a marked improvement. The effects of taking Yamoa
could be seen in as little as two months in most patients. Dr. Eccles, who has
a PhD in medicine from University College Medical School, London, says he came
across Yamoa a year ago. ‘Some of my patients had found it on the
internet and were taking it, so I decided to run a proper trial,’ he
says. ‘At the moment, I’m taking formal measurements of lung
capacity so that we can quantify the results scientifically, rather than
relying on patients’ anecdotal evidence, but so far the results are very
encouraging. ‘Yamoa seems to alter the immune system so the patient is no
longer sensitive to pollen triggers. It also seems that patients need to take
it for only a two-month period, never again. A large proportion of sufferers
have been cured and haven’t needed to take antihistamines or use their
asthma inhalers since.’ The only side effect is a slight, tickly cough.
Karen Barleycorn is a 28-year-old mother-of-one from London. Her hay fever
symptoms have been cleared by taking Yamoa. ‘My hay fever started when I
was seven and helping out on a market stall in East London,’ she says.
‘Being out in the open, it used to hit me badly. My eyes would swell up
and I’d have an itchy throat. At night I couldn’t sleep. Once, when
I went for a day out in the country, I had to come home because I had a very
scary asthma attack.‘I’ve never been hospitalised, but it is
frightening, as anyone who’s experienced it will know.’ She adds:
‘My symptoms subsided a little when I took an indoor job with Boots, but
I was still using my inhaler four or five times a day all through the summer.
‘I was introduced to Yamoa by a friend three years ago and I started
taking it twice a day. Within a few months I could see a massive improvement.
‘I don’t use an inhaler any more, and I don’t have any
symptoms. I know it says on the box that you only need to take Yamoa for a
month, but I’m still taking it three years later because I don’t
want to risk going back to how I was. ‘I’ve just come back from a
break in Cumbria. In the past, I wouldn’t have been able to go out
without my eyes streaming and having difficulty breathing, but this time I
didn’t have any symptoms at all. ‘The hay fever really made my life
miserable. I couldn’t enjoy some of the things my friends took for
granted, like a walk in the park. ‘I’m sure they got sick of me
sneezing and having swollen red eyes the whole time. Even nights were bad.
I’d wake up at least twice night, having to use my inhaler. ‘Hay
fever was a part of my life for so long that I can’t believe it’s
gone, and I still find it amazing.’
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More articles
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'Deep
breath at Nine Elms' CWU Voice, June 1998, Author: Kate Holmes
'A New Herb' The Wellbeing Journal May/June
2003 Vol. 12, No. 3 |
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