What Is Complementary Therapy?
Complementary therapy is a method of adding a substance or substances to a patient's diet. There are a variety of foods used by patients in diet therapy, the most studied of which are fish oil and evening primrose oil. In addition, New Zealand green margin shellfish, selenium, vitamins, Chinese herbal medicine, seaweed, ginseng, garlic, honey, etc. are also commonly used in patients.
Food supplement therapy
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- Complementary therapy is a method of adding a substance or substances to a patient's diet. There are a variety of foods used by patients in diet therapy, the most studied of which are fish oil and evening primrose oil. In addition, New Zealand green margin shellfish, selenium, vitamins, Chinese herbal medicine, seaweed, ginseng, garlic, honey, etc. are also commonly used in patients.
- Animal experiments have shown that a fish oil-containing diet can reduce the inflammation of experimental arthritis. Clinical use has shown that patients with rheumatoid arthritis who take evening primrose oil and selenium have significantly improved their condition, and its mechanism of action remains to be further studied.