Hernia
$47.00
Description
Are you or someone you love suffering from Hernia and associated symptoms? At Universal Sound Therapy we deal with all sorts of issues including Hernia with our sound therapies.
How?
Our therapy is based on frequencies, tuning your body to vibrate at the correct frequency is as important to your body healing itself or reducing symptoms you are facing. Our healing sessions provide your body with the frequencies that would be found in a normal, healthy body. Your system absorbs these frequencies and makes the needed changes to “tune itself” and start to heal. Our bodies want to be healthy and when we provide them with the proper tools they will do everything needed to do just that.
Universal Sound Therapy is in the business to help your body heal and we are so confident that it will work for you that we offer you a 90-day money back guarantee. And if our hernia sound therapy CD doesn’t help, just return it for a full refund. Try to get that from your doctor or pharmacy.
Our Hernia sound therapy CD’s help by:
- Decrease and minimizes occurrence of hernia
- Has the correct frequencies to help your body retune itself
- Aligns and opens your Chakra system
- Opens and cleans up your meridians
- Helps your body heal itself
Short Description of Hernia
Hernias are basically tears in your muscle or tissue that lets parts of your insides bulge out. It could be your intestines or some other internal organ. Depending on its location and size, you can see a hernia. Certain activities can aggravate the condition such as bending over or lifting heavy objects.
Symptoms of Hernia
The most common symptom is a lump or bulge in the affected region. The bump may disappear when lying down. Some types of hernia like a hiatal hernia can present with more specific symptoms like heartburn, difficulty swallowing and even chest pain. In most scenarios, there are no symptoms.
About Hernia
A hernia happens when an organ pushes through a weakness in the muscle or tissue that keep it in place. For instance, intestines may push through a weak area of the abdominal wall. A lot of hernias happen in the abdomen between the chest and hips, but they can also occur in the groin and thigh areas. A lot of hernias are not life threatening at the outset (umbilical) but if they do not go away on their own, surgery may become a necessity in order to prevent complications like strangulation hernias.
Etiology of Hernia
Hernias are often caused by a combination of muscle strain and weakness. Depending on the origin, the hernia may develop over a long period of time.
Some common causes if muscle strain or weakness that can lead to the development include:
- a congenital condition, which occurs during development in the womb and is present from birth
- aging
- damage from an injury or surgery
- strenuous exercise or lifting heavy weights
- chronic coughing or chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD)
- pregnancy, especially having multiple pregnancies
- constipation, which causes you to strain when having a bowel movement
- being overweight or having obesity
- ascites
Risk Factors for the Development of Hernias
- being born prematurely or having a low birth weight
- being older
- chronic cough (likely due to the repetitive increase in abdominal pressure)
- cystic fibrosis
- pregnancy
- chronic constipation
- being overweight or having obesity
- smoking, which leads to the weakening of connective tissue
- a personal or family history of hernias
Diagnosis of Hernias
In order for hernias to be diagnosed, the doctor will perform a thorough physical examination. He may feel for a bulge in the abdominal or groin area that gets bigger when you cough, stand or strain. He may also ask questions including when the bulge was noticed? Other symptoms present or if something in particular may have led to its development. Your lifestyle may also be reviewed including your occupation if you lift weights professionally or on a recreational basis.
Types of Hernias
Inguinal Hernia
Inguinal hernias are the most common type and occurs when the intestines push through a weakened area or tear in the abdominal wall, often via the inguinal canal. The inguinal canal is found in the groin for men, it is the area where the spermatic cord passes from the abdomen to the scrotum. The cord connects to the testicles. In women, the inguinal canal features a ligament ( called the round ligament) that help hold the uterus in its proper place. The inguinal hernias are more common in men due to the testicles descending through the inguinal canal shortly after birth. This is supposed to close almost completely behind them. Sometimes, the canal is unable to close correctly, leaving a weakened section.
Hiatal Hernia
The hiatal hernia happens when there is a section of your stomach that protrudes up through the diaphragm and into the chest cavity. The diaphragmatic muscle helps you breathe by contracting and drawing air into the lungs. It functions also to separate the organs of the abdomen from that of the chest. This kind of hernia is more common in patients over 50 years old. If it happens to a child, it is usually congenital in nature. This almost always causes a gastroesophageal reflux, wherein the stomach contents leak backward into the esophagus, resulting in a burning sensation.
Umbilical Hernia
The umbilical type affects children and babies. An umbilical hernia happens when the intestines bulge through the abdominal wall near the area of the belly button. The bulge may be seen in or near the belly button of the child, especially when they cry. This type of hernia is the only type that may go away on its own as the abdominal wall gets stronger when the child grows. This usually occurs by the time the child is one to two years old. If the condition has not gone away by five years of age, surgery is done to correct it.
Adults can also have the condition due to repeated strain on the abdomen because of obesity, fluid in the abdomen (ascites), or pregnancy.
Ventral Hernia
This type of hernia happens when the tissue bulges via an opening in the muscles of your stomach. You may notice the ventral hernia gets smaller when you are lying down. While a ventral hernia can be there since birth, it is more commonly gotten at some period in your life. Common reasons include: obesity, pregnancy and strenuous activity. It may also occur at the site of a surgical incision. Known as an incisional hernia, it results from surgical scarring or weakness of the abdominal muscles at the site of incision.
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