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Dr. Cole's Protocols For Nausea & Vertigo
Life should be spent doing the things you enjoy. Many of Dr. Cole's patients had experienced nausea due to chemo or from other underlying causes. Her aim was to be able to support these people and get their lives back on track without the nausea making it impossible to live every day to its fullest.
Products that help relieve Nausea:
I have had vertigo for about a week now and feel woozy. I used the Anti-Nausea Balm; at least I do not feel like I’m going to vomit anymore! ~ Gigi, Annapolis, MD
Cancer is bad enough then watching someone after chemo is heartbreaking. My daughter bought some Anti-Nausea Balm for us to try. My wife is actually feeling better thanks to the balm! ~ David T., Madison, WI
I hated going anywhere; I would get so sick. I found Dr. Cole’s Anti-Nausea Balm online and use it anytime I plan on going anywhere. It has changed my life! I look forward to traveling now! ~ Stacey M. Ottawa, Ontario
Unfortunately I had a bad case of morning sickness when I first got pregnant. Eating bits of ginger helped for a while. But, this product was a better solution for me—it worked well and didn't upset my digestive system. ~ Mary Lou B., Atlanta, GA
I didn’t know nervous stomach was even a thing until my diagnosis! I have been using Dr. Cole’s Stress Relief Cream and now use the Anti-Nausea Balm. It works instantaneously! ~ Stanley P., Sheridan, WY
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How Transdermal Remedies Work
What is Transdermal? Transdermal is a big word that simply describes the process that happens when a substance enters the bloodstream through the skin. “Trans-“ means across or beyond, and “-dermal” means “relating to the skin,” especially the dermis. Put it all together, and you have “beyond the skin.”
The dermis is the middle of three layers of skin that protect our body. It is a thick layer of tissue below the thin outer skin layer—the epidermis. The dermis contains capillaries, nerve endings, sweat glands, hair follicles and more. A lot happens in the dermis!
For many thousands of years, medicine men and women, shamans, and healers of all varieties—including regular people like us—have applied substances onto the skin to achieve therapeutic effects. Those beneficial effects range from being calmed, soothed, and relaxed, to being fully cured of an ailment.
In today’s world, transdermal drug delivery is now an accepted alternative to oral delivery of drugs and to hypodermic injections. But, it wasn’t always that way. The FDA first accepted this approach in 1979, less than 50 years ago. For the first two years, the only approved transdermal drug was scopolamine, used to combat nausea and vomiting caused by motion sickness.
Those of you who suffer from motion sickness are probably very familiar with the patches you can affix to your body a half an hour or so before flying or going deep-sea fishing. They’ve saved many wretched moments for people over the years.
Interestingly, scopolamine—also known as Devil’s Breath—is a poisonous organic compound, obtained mainly from plants of the genus Scopolia. Like many drugs, scopolamine began its existence as a plant.
Dr. Cole first began learning about these very old healing herbs when she found herself having to deal with very sick people who could not take in oral medications of any kind because of their delicate digestive systems. She soon discovered after much experience that the use of transdermal applications of these powerful herbs could be just as effective, if not more so, than oral medications. They bypass the digestive system, and get right into the muscles and lymph system, and then quickly into the circulatory system.