Natural Remedies

Seeking Natural Remedies for Ongoing and Undiagnosed Abdominal Pain

Posted by Pain (Seguin, Tx) on 11/02/2017

I have had pain on my right abdomen top and lower and also radiates to my back. This has been going on for years and doctors have yet to figure the problem. They keep telling me its not my gallbladder but every time I eat now it hurts all the time even when I don't eat. I am always bloated, full and even when I don't eat I still feel like a ate a whole meal. I'm unable to lose weight and this pain is really taking a toll. I'm unable to sleep on my right side due to the pain. I'm always constipated and loss of energy and overweight. they say my bloodwork is always good and my ultrasounds and sonograms and CT scans do not show anything abnormal. I do always feel also like my right leg is always hurting from the calf and sometimes swollen. I'm 5'2 and weigh 140pds. Can you help

Replied by Baldev
Mumbai Maharashtra India
11/03/2017
185 posts

Hi Pain,

I think the main culprit is your constipation, let us first tackle that and then we will look after your abdominal pain.

You should take magnesium oil one tea spoon morning and evening internally. If you can't get hold of that then take Epsom salt ie magnesium sulphate one tea spoon in the water before you go to sleep. Must include greens in your diet.

Good luck

Baldev

Replied by Bethany
Mi
11/03/2017

Have you tried gall bladder flushes? A clear gall bladder scan is not a guarantee that you don't have stones. Gall bladder sludge and stones can cause many of the symptoms you have.

Replied by Mmsg
Somewhere, Europe
11/03/2017

Pain, maybe a parasite?

Replied by Cindy
Illinois, Usa
11/05/2017
432 posts

I'll skip the big long super crazy story and just say that unidentifiable and multiplying symptoms may be due to a pinched nerve or something out of whack in your spinal alignment.

The only reason I say this is because I experienced a whole long crazy thing that started when they twisted my back transfering me from a gurney to a bed at the hospital and the doctor couldn't find anything wrong so he just declared that I had collapsed lung and that was the end of it. He didn't do anything about it, wouldn't talk about it or hear anything about it from that point on so that was utmost in my mind and the first symptom was I couldn't catch my breath. I couldn't take a deep breath and the symptoms just started piling on from there.

I was in the hospital for days before I was released and able to actually fix the problem. But had I been unconscious when they wrenched my back or not had all of the drama about it, it never would have occurred to me.

What you want is a little bit of traction. There are several ways to do it but the easiest is with a flat surface you can lay flat on (bed, plywood, couch, etc) with one end higher than the other. If you call the low end "0" (zero), you want the point at the other end of your height to be about 6 inches higher.

Lay with your head at the low end and sort of roll up as if you're going to do a sit up to release the friction between your clothes and the board so you can stretch and open up the spine.

Just sort of stretch with the idea of elongating your spine. Your back may or may not "pop". Mine did that first time but I had another incident several years later that was remedied by the same process but I didn't get a "pop" so you can't rely on that as a sign of it working.

It doesn't take "time" in the way we think of it. After a week of not being able to get my breath, I was breathing fine in less than a minute with the method I used and the lying on an incline method works even faster, plus it's less scary, more comfortable and just plain easier to do - especially if you're hurting or otherwise not up to the effort of setting up or dragging out some device or other.

The "time" factor involves relaxing. If you have symptoms, then you're going to be tense which bunches up all of your muscles including those that are holding your back out of whack which just tenses muscles more and gets the symptom snowball rolling. Add the stress of your doctor telling you there's nothing wrong and you can get some pretty profound tension worked up.

I have an inversion table and a variety of those curved spine "back pain" fixer things of all sizes from devices that are so big and heavy they need their own room to travel size that fits in your suitcase but ever since I tried the totally NOT scary method of simply laying on about a 5 degree incline, stretching a bit and just relaxing for a few minutes, I haven't used any of the products that are designed to basically do the exact same thing. And it costs nothing. I even sleep on an incline now (same angle but with the head at the high end) so all I have to do is lay the wrong way round on my bed and stretch for a couple minutes - which I do on a regular basis due to the hunching of working at the computer all day.

Bonus - though nobody believes it - no more carpal tunnel. Zero. After years of pain and discomfort - nothing. Not a single episode. No more neck pain, no more back pain unless I "sleep wrong" or hurt myself lifting or twisting or something in which case, a couple minutes laying and stretching on an incline fixes it all up.