2 research outputs found

    A view of Homoeopathy on Musculoskeletal Disorders in Sports Injuries

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    Musculoskeletal disorders and treatment focus on various aspects of Repetitive Motion Injuries, Repetitive Strain Injuries, Cumulative Trauma Disorders, Occupational Cervico-brachial Disorders, Overuse Syndrome, Regional Musculoskeletal Disorders, Soft Tissue Disorders, Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders, Musculoskeletal Disorders. It can be seen in the elderly, arthritis, drug interaction checker, fibromyalgia, living healthy, lupus osteoarthritis, pill identifier, rheumatoid arthritis, sports injuries, etc. Musculoskeletal disorders are among the most common problems in sport injuries resulting loss of mobility and physical independence. Homoeopathic treatment schedule considers disease as a dynamic unit and the derangement of the whole man, expressed through the particular organs of the body, i.e. the ‘whole man’ is primarily diseased and individual organs/parts are only secondarily affected. It distinguishes each entity suffering from various or same diseases as different from others, because individuals are inimitable by virtue of their particular and peculiar mental and physical states, and characteristics. Concisely, it lays emphasis on, the ‘person diagnosis’, instead of the ‘disease diagnosis’. Therefore,” every diseases has a cure” is the believe of homoeopathy. Under this flow of homeopathy principle, the aim of this article is to present some of the most frequent musculoskeletal disorders in sports Injuries and their homoeopathic treatment schedule .Sports is an essential part of each nation. There are many ways to classify sports injuries based on the time taken for the tissues to become injured, tissue type affected, severity of the injury, and type of the injury occurred in the individual. Therefore, different homeopathic treatments are required to tackle different category of injury especially the outcomes of sport activities. Keywords: Acute injuries, homoeopathy, overuse injuries, prevention, sports injuries, treatment

    Comparison of soil characteristics and carbon content of contrastingly different moist-mixed deciduous and evergreen mangrove forest in Odisha, India

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    The research associated the comparison of soil properties influencing organic carbon between forest of Chandaka Wildlife Sanctuary (CWS), Bhubaneswar and Bhitarkanika National Park (BNP), Rajnagar of Odisha. Soil samples were collected randomly from sampling plots (20 m × 50 m) and characterized by SEM and FT-IR, etc. The SEM micrographs analyze the aggregate-dominant fabric soil (Fine sand type) of CWS and matrix-dominated fabric soil (Clay loam type) of BNP. The FT-IR spectroscopy ensured the variant and prominent C-functional groups in both forest soils. The soil organic carbon of CWS (47.51 ± 2.16 Mg C/ha) and BNP (54.3 ± 3.0 Mg C/ha) directed through soil physico-chemical properties. The C/N ratio of CWS (51.3 ± 13.8) and BNP (21.6 ± 2.6) soil indicated the freshly added stable carbon compound availability at CWS. These results encourage study of soil organic carbon perspectives for sustainable forest conservation
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