Best Anesthetic Cream to overcome the traditional pain treatments by Seandrnumb
in Health / Skin Care (submitted 2012-01-24)
Numbing creams made a historic discovery of the first numbing cream that is strong enough to do open surgery without pain. Over the years, the cream was perfected and took on the official name of Dr Numb; Dr. Numb is being used worldwide in different industries, such as: in professional sports, cosmetics, laser industry, waxing industry, immunization industry and tattoo industry. It is the strongest skin numbing cream in the market today. It has proven effective in minimizing the pain that comes with surgical procedures.
It is also a favorite companion of laser treatments, tattooing, and body waxing.Dr Numb numbing cream is very effective in numbing the skin for preparation in any type of procedure.It is proven to numb the skin for more than three hours. It is easy to apply and releases the numbing effect for at least three hours. It contains lidocaine, a substance that has been used for many years as anesthetics in medical and dental offices. Cream contains more of a pure form of lidocaine which acts as the numbing anesthetic cream for the skin. The purity is very important, because not all lidocaine is manufactured and refined as Dr Numb has been. Pain is caused by the stimulation of pain receptors at the ends of the nerves. The stimulation causes sodium to enter the nerve ending, which causes an electrical signal to build up in the nerve. When this electrical signal is big enough, it passes along the nerve to the brain, where the signal is interpreted as pain. It works by temporarily blocking this pathway of pain signals along nerves. Topical anesthetic cream does this by stopping the sodium entering the nerve ending at the site of the pain. This prevents an electrical signal building up and passing along the nerve fibers to the brain.
The reviews provide evidence that anesthetic creams and ointments may be useful for treating some acute and chronic pain. Topical anesthetic, for instance, shows some efficacy in neuropathic pain. Topical salicylate work in strains, sprains, and sport injuries; the same has been shown for topical non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. It is unlikely to be a first choice treatment for neuropathic pain--there is simply not enough analgesia and there is too much harm. However, it may be regarded as an adjuvant to standard treatment for neuropathic pain with conventional or unconventional analgesics, or it may serve as a last resource when everything else has failed. The question then is why topical anesthetic are popular among patients but do not have a good reputation among doctors. One reason may be the apparent unreliability of the existing evidence supporting their usefulness; indeed, there are not many relevant published trials, and most are of low quality, questionable validity, and limited size. As a consequence, many doctors are not convinced that the creams work. This makes systematic reviews that use a stringent methodological approach, such as those by Mason and coworkers, so valuable. As a consequence of this approach, the results may be less advantageous than in other, less rigorous studies (the numbers needed to treat are higher), but at least there is assurance that the evidence is viewed in the most appropriate light and that the results can be trusted.
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