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April 8, 2018
Sinus
Hi ,
New feature - for a quick read, just read the red key points in the article.
The last two weeks have been a killer for all my patients with allergies. First it was the pine trees and then the oak trees that started dumping blankets of yellow dust on everyone’s cars. At first it
is hard to tell if the stuffy nose and scratchy throat are just a virus trying to take hold, but once the itchy eyes and the tearing starts, then you know it is allergy season getting to you.
For some people the allergic response stops with symptoms in the nose and throat, but for many others everything feels icky, much like a flu. Why does this happen? What are allergies anyway, and how often are sinus problems due to allergies?

The simplest difference between allergies and sinus trouble due to some form of infection is generally considered to be the length of time you have the symptoms. If things are miserable for more than 10 days, the usual assumption is that you are dealing with an allergic reaction to something. There is a special situation in chronic sinus cases as discovered by the Mayo clinic – 96% of chronic cases have a fungal infection in
the sinuses and the patient can be having an allergic reaction to the sinus fungal infection. So really in chronic situations you almost always have both an infection and an allergic reaction.

One of the most important things to remember about sinus infections is that antibiotics do almost no good at all. The reason is simple – antibiotics only affect places that are directly adjacent to the tiny capillary blood vessels, like within 1 or 2 cells away. Even though your sinuses are inside your head, they are a big open space without blood vessels running through the center of
it. That space where all that mucus hides out is thousands of cell widths away from the blood vessels that carry the antibiotic around. So skip the antibiotics unless the infection travels into the facial tissue causing bleeding.

To get rid of a normal sinus infection you have to wash out the infection and treat the surface area of the sinus with something that will kill the bacteria. Many essential oils are good for killing bacteria, like thyme, rosemary, and oregano, but you must be very careful as these are very powerful and can easily burn your sinus tissue. We used to sell a thyme solution to use in your sinus rinse bottle called “A Good
Thyme” and we still carry the ready made spray called Boggy Buster. Recently I upgraded the thyme product with a more complete product of my own design that includes not only three different essential oils, but aloe vera for inflammation and real salt + baking soda for making the saline solution with which you use to rinse the inner sinuses.
Another interesting idea I thought up recently was to add a capsule full of the probiotic s. boulardi to the sinus rinse because s. boulardi is a champion at fighting fungal infections. This is what I use when a patient is on antibiotics for any reason. Antibiotics promote fungal infections in the gut, and s.boulardi can fight them off and prevent bad fungi like candida from taking over.

That's all well and good for infections, but what about pollen allergies? Since pollen allergies are a direct contact type of response, staying away from the pollens by keeping indoors with an air cleaner keep the pollen count down is a big help. It also helps to rinse the pollens out of the sinuses with normal saline solution – preferable made with real salt and not the
chemically poisoned typical table salt. Classically this is done with a Neti Pot – something that looks like a tiny teapot. Personally I find that a NeilMed sinus rinser is much easier to use. Just squeeze the bottle and let the rinse flow up one nostril and out the
other. Tilt the head forward to rinse the upper sinuses. Get one here.
Most everyone knows that allergies are caused by our immune system overreacting to things in our environment, but that doesn’t say why. Well there are lots of reasons – mostly the same reasons that also create leaky gut, like toxic exposures, stress, bad diet, and so on. On the tiny level special immune cells called dendritic cells
line the sinus and the gut as well initiate the allergic response. All day and night long these cells have arms that reach out into the sinus and gut space and grab whatever is around from the outside world. The dendritic cells essentially “feel” the things by matching up sequences of amino acids in the proteins to remembered patterns that it has decided to tell us that we are under attack from some killer bug. Its job is
to be the early warning system for the immune system to tell it to be ready for a fight. The problem is lots of things feel the same as bad bacteria – like all the stuff we react allergically to. The body’s immune system thinks it is under bacterial attack when it is exposed to innocent pollens.

Things like a vitamin D deficiency greatly increase the number of reactive dendritic cells. A vitamin A deficiency makes the dendritic cells overly sensitive and reactive. Inflammation from any cause feeds into the reaction loop causing more of a reaction. Many different stressors trigger increases in the chain of events that ultimately result in the last immune cell in the reaction, the
mast cell, to release histamine.
Histamine is a major cause of the inflammation response in the body. This is a good and important thing in the right place at the right time. With allergies histamine is being released all over the place and causing us our misery. Anything we can do to decrease histamine release is a wonderful decrease in our miserable symptoms. This is why we take antihistamine drugs, but like most
drugs they have lots of negative side effects. The one most concerning to me is their effect on brain function and the development of dementia. However there are many histamine fighting herbs without those side effects, like stinging nettle, butterbur, and black seed oil as well as nutraceuticals like quercetin, and bromelain. Other nutrients help stabilize the mast cells to decrease
histamine release like vitamin C, turmeric, ginger, holy basil, and selenium. These can all be useful in fighting off the seasonal allergy attack by starting on them before the season gets into full swing.

The stress hormone corticotropin also destabilizes mast cells, so getting enough sleep and reducing both physical and emotional stress decreases the allergy response. But for the super chronic sinus sufferer, we have to dig really deep into what is the root cause of over-activation of our mast cells – things like heavy metal toxicity, chronic hidden infections, and the ever popular leaky
gut.
So like most everything in the body, our simple sniffles in response to oak pollen is really a deep, complex subject. Healing our sniffles is really about getting healthy on all levels – not a bad idea anyway.
Take care,
David
Ellen update:

Ellen has been experimenting with a new painting style that produces a texture that is similar to enamel on metal by painting on transparency film with a marker pen and covering it with a gel paint. She invents these techniques in her search for "the look" that really expresses who she is.
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Broccoli extract reduces Autism
Sulforaphane - an extract from broccoli has been found to reduce the behavioral symptoms of autistic children. 65% showed significant improvement taking the broccoli sprout powder. The improvement wore off about 4 weeks after the supplement intake was finished.
Broccoli
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"The life of a man consists not in seeing visions and in dreaming dreams, but in active charity and in willing service."
~ Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
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Calorie restriction
After years of research showing that calorie restriction lengthens life in everything from worms and flies to chimps, they have finally tested humans in a 2 year study. The participants ate 15% fewer calories than they needed to maintain their weight. As expected their metabolism slowed and markers for oxidative stress which drives diseases of aging dropped. This suggests that if continued these people would have
less disease and live longer with healthier brains.
Calories
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"We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge us by what we have already done."
~ Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
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Intense meditation shows long term effects
In the longest study yet - 7 years, the powerful attention sustaining impact of meditation showed those who continued to meditate continued to demonstrate significant mental and stress coping improvements even after 7 years.
Meditation
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"He that respects himself is safe from others. He wears a coat of mail that none can pierce."
~ Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
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Our address is 9725 Fair Oaks Blvd. suite A
Our hours are M - F 9 to 1 and M, Tu, & Th 3 to 6
Finding the new location is very easy. Coming from highway 50 up Sunrise Blvd, you turn left and go up a block. We are on the right hand side - the building just past the Subway Sandwich shop. If you are coming down Sunrise from the Mall area then just turn right on Fair Oaks Blvd and up a block on the right.
If you are coming from the Roseville area you could come down Sunrise Blvd, but that is a long trek. It is probably shorter time wise to come down Auburn Blvd - San Juan Ave like you have been for the Sunset office, but instead of turning left at Sunset, keep going straight 3 more lights to Fair Oaks Blvd and turn left. Go down 2 lights to New York Ave, go through the intersection, and immediately turn into the turn lane once the center
divider ends. We are on the left.
You are free to reprint this article in your newsletter as long as you include the following statement in the same size type and color:
"This article appears courtesy of Fair Oaks Health News, offering natural and healthy solutions for body, mind and soul. For a complimentary subscription,
visit http://www.fairoakshealth.com"
Referral doctor for when we are out of town:
Jennifer Webb DC
6216 Main St. suite C1
Orangevale
988-3441
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About Dr. DeLapp
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Dr. DeLapp has been a philosopher, non-force Chiropractor, medical intuitive, and health innovator for over 35 years. He began experimenting with medical intuition in 1972 while studying physics at UC Davis. In addition to physics he designed and completed an individual major in the philosophy and psychology of education. Shortly after he choose to pursue a career in the only
truly health oriented profession available at that time, Chiropractic. He graduated with honors in 1981 with his doctorate and opened a private practice.
Since that time he has continued his research into the effects of consciousness and learning on health.
He developed the Biomagnetic Retraining system for correcting movement abnormalities.
Since 1991 he has focused on developing a powerful system for uncovering and assisting the mind-body connection in health and personal growth. The in-depth coaching, guided by the subconscious direction from the body, is called Heartflow and the simpler mind-body retraining for health and unfoldment he has named Gracework. Both are available at Fair Oaks Health.
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