419 results
Search Results
202. WATER RESOURCES FOR MEDICAL TOURISM DEVELOPMENT IN LATVIA.
- Author
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Libkovska, Una, Muiznieks, Armands, Bikse, Veronika, and Lusena-Ezera, Inese
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MEDICAL tourism ,THALASSOTHERAPY ,WATER supply ,ENVIRONMENTAL management ,MINERAL waters - Abstract
The possibilities to develop health resorts and balneological or spa and thalassotherapy centres in the Baltic Sea region countries have not yet been fully analysed. The water resources in Latvia have been used historically and still in nowadays could be used for different types of treatments more effective. The core questions for a medical tourism development are products, demand and service quality. It is marked in the Baltic Sea country (Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia) development strategy that environmental management has a direct positive impact on the development of health tourism, to which identification and use of medical resources is very important. In the framework of the International Cooperation Project of the Baltic States coastal municipalities conducted research on available medical resources and their possible use when developing resorts and spas. In this article, the authors analyse the effect of historical importance of usage water resources (sea, inland water and ground (mineral water) for the future development of medical products with perspective of export. In order to analyses the water management in the region and the medical resources, the SWOT analysis of medical service providers what are using balneological treatments was made, a group of other research instruments had chosen. The research analyses of secondary data on historical sources applied, questionnaire (n>100) for evaluation of medical service treatment quality in Latvian health resorts was applied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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203. Balneotherapy in chronic inflammatory rheumatic diseases—a narrative review.
- Author
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Cozzi, Franco, Ciprian, Luca, Carrara, Maria, Galozzi, Paola, Zanatta, Elisabetta, Scanu, Anna, Sfriso, Paolo, and Punzi, Leonardo
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RHEUMATISM ,BALNEOLOGY ,THERAPEUTICS ,ANKYLOSING spondylitis ,PSORIATIC arthritis - Abstract
Since ancient time, thermal baths and mudpacks have been used as treatments for rheumatic diseases and other musculoskeletal complaints. Despite basic researches suggest an anti-inflammatory effect of spa therapy, there is no consensus about the benefits of balneotherapy in patients with chronic inflammatory rheumatic diseases. The aim of this review is to summarize the currently available information on clinical effects of balneotherapy in these diseases. We did a literature search for articles considering the randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published until today. Although many selected studies do not have an elevated methodological quality, data from these RCTs support a beneficial effect of spa therapy. Balneotherapy highly improves the clinical course of the disease in patients with predominant axial involvement, such as with ankylosing and enteropathic spondylitis; the effects are less favorable in patients with predominant peripheral articular inflammation, such as rheumatoid arthritis. Good results have been observed in patients with psoriatic arthritis, but only few RCTs have been conducted on this disease. Spa therapy appears safe, and adverse events have been reported only in a few patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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204. Impact of micro- and macroelement content on potential use of freshwater sediments (gyttja) derived from lakes of eastern Latvia.
- Author
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Vincevica-Gaile, Zane and Stankevica, Karina
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MARINE sediments ,RIVER sediments ,BALNEOLOGY ,ORGANIC fertilizers ,BENTHIC ecology ,SEDIMENTATION & deposition - Abstract
Organic-rich freshwater sediments formed from the remains of water plants, plankton and benthic organisms, which are transformed by microorganisms, and mixed with mineral components supplied from the lake basin, are known as gyttja (sapropel or dy). Gyttja is a valuable natural resource that can be used in various fields such as agriculture, forestry, construction, chemical industry, balneology and the latter ones are especially interested in chemical composition and safety of natural materials. The aim of the study was to investigate micro- and macro-element content of gyttja derived from lakes of eastern Latvia (north-east of Europe). Depending on composition, sediment samples were identified as peaty, various algae, green algae, diatom, carbonate and organic-silicate types of gyttja. Dried samples were wet-digested by heating in HNO
3 /H2 O2 solution until complete mineralization. Sample solutions were analysed by atomic absorption spectrometry (AAS) to detect concentration of Ca, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, Na and Zn, but inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) was applied for As, Ba, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Li, Ni, Pb, Rb, Se, Sr and V concentration measurements. Total content of elements was variable; higher macroelement concentration was detected for gyttja of carbonate type, but higher microelement concentration—for organic-silicate gyttja. As concentration of several elements was much lower than permitted by the European Union legislation, gyttja is not only safe, but also highly valuable resource applicable in organic agriculture. There is a potential to use gyttja as a peloid in health care, but element bioavailability should be estimated likewise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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205. Hydrogeochemical and biomedical insights into germanium potential of curative waters: a case study of health resorts in the Sudetes Mountains (Poland).
- Author
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Dobrzyński, Dariusz, Boguszewska-Czubara, Anna, and Sugimori, Kenji
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WATER chemistry ,GERMANIUM ,HEALTH resorts ,GEOCHEMISTRY ,BALNEOLOGY - Abstract
Germanium is considered to be a non-essential element; however, little is still known about its significance for living organisms. It exerts prophylactic and therapeutic effects in the treatment of serious diseases such as cancer, HIV infection, and others. Germanium does not exhibit acute toxicity, but, as it tends to accumulate in various organs and tissues, undesirable and even dangerous side effects have been reported after prolonged and/or high dosage application. In general, inorganic compounds of germanium are more toxic than its organic compounds. Further studies should be performed to elucidate the exact molecular mechanism of germanium action, to determine the safe and effective dose of germanium via curative/mineral waters, and to understand the applications and benefits of using germanium-enriched waters in balneotherapy. The geochemistry of curative (cold CO
2 -rich, thermal) waters from spas in the Sudetes (Poland) was clarified in terms of components and mineral phases which might govern germanium. Germanium and silicon in thermal (above 20 °C) waters presumably result from the solubility of silicates in crystalline (granites, gneisses) aquifer rocks and might be controlled by neo-formed quartz. The cold CO2 -rich waters revealed a significant diversity of aqueous chemistry and relationships of germanium with iron, silicon, or arsenic. Locally, both in sedimentary (sandstones) and metamorphic (gneisses) aquifer rocks, primary (silicates) and/or secondary (oxides) iron-containing minerals likely release germanium into solution. In the CO2 -rich waters of the western part of the Kłodzko Region, germanium distinctly correlates with arsenic. It is hypothesized that both elements are co-sourced from crystalline basement and/or migration of substances of post-magmatic origin along deep-seated dislocations related to the seismically active Poříčí-Hronov fault zone. This area was proposed as the most prospective one for finding waters rich in germanium in the Sudetes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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206. One-Year Follow-Up of Spa Treatment in Older Patients with Osteoarthritis: A Prospective, Single Group Study.
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Zwolińska, Jolanta, Weres, Aneta, and Wyszyńska, Justyna
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OSTEOARTHRITIS treatment ,BALNEOLOGY ,HYDROTHERAPY ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MASSAGE therapy ,QUALITY of life ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,PAIN management ,VISUAL analog scale ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,TREATMENT duration ,OLD age - Abstract
Introduction. Few studies evaluated the effects of spa therapy on pain perception and quality of life in older people with osteoarthritis. Therefore, the aim of the study was to evaluate the short- and long-term effects of spa therapy on quality of life and pain in patients aged 60 years and older with osteoarthritis. Materials and Methods. 70 patients with generalized osteoarthritis were enrolled in the study. Spa treatment lasted 3 weeks (15 days of treatment) and was applied during a session lasting 120 to 150 minutes a day. All the patients benefited from kinesiotherapy, physical agent modalities, massage, peloid therapy, hydrotherapy with mineral waters, and crenotherapy. Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) for pain, the Laitinen scale, and WHOQOL-BREF questionnaire were used to assess the condition of the patients. The examinations were performed three times: at the beginning of the spa treatment, after three months, and one year after the first examinations. Results. Statistically significant improvements were observed in pain (VAS) between consecutive assessments (p <.001). Laitinen scale also reported beneficial, statistically significant changes in the level of pain (p <.001). The WHOQOL-BREF questionnaire reported a statistically significant improvement in the domain of social relations in 2-3 and 1-3 periods (p = .025 and p = .011, resp.). A significant improvement was recorded in the domain of environment between 2-3 and 1-3 periods (p <.001). Conclusion. Spa treatment reduced the level of pain in majority of the patients in short- and long-term follow-up and contributed to improving the quality of life in the domain of social relations and environment. To confirm the results of this study, there is a need for a randomized controlled trial comparing spa treatment with usual care in the older population with osteoarthritis. Trial Registration Number. This trial was retrospectively registered on 3 January 2018 with
NCT03388801 . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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207. University of Delaware Fieldwork in the Eastern Desert of Egypt, 1993
- Author
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Sidebotham, Steven E.
- Published
- 1994
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208. Locality and circulation in the Habsburg Empire: disputing the Carlsbad medical salt, 1763–1784
- Author
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Jakob Vogel, Centre d'histoire de Sciences Po (Sciences Po) (CHSP), Sciences Po (Sciences Po), and Centre d'histoire de Sciences Po (CHSP)
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Alchemy ,History ,Ancient history ,050905 science studies ,History, 18th Century ,Health Resorts ,060104 history ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Spring (hydrology) ,Humans ,0601 history and archaeology ,Circulation (currency) ,Habsburg Empire ,Relation (history of concept) ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Balneology ,Cathartics ,Sulfates ,05 social sciences ,Locality ,Historical Article ,Biography ,06 humanities and the arts ,Dissent and Disputes ,Czechoslovakia ,Austria ,0509 other social sciences ,Mineral Waters ,[SHS.HIST]Humanities and Social Sciences/History - Abstract
By looking at the fierce debates in the city of Carlsbad in Bohemia around the fabrication of medical salt by a local doctor, David Becher, from 1763 to 1784, the paper examines the interactions between different spheres or levels of circulation of knowledge in the Habsburg Empire. The dispute crystallized around the definition of the product, about its medical qualities and its relation with the water of the local mineral spring. The city's inhabitants contested the vision of the medical experts, fearing that the extraction of the medical salt from the spring water and its sale outside the town would have a negative effect on the number of visitors to the spa. Their vision implied a more or less ‘popularized’ form of alchemical thinking as it identified the mineral water with the extracted ‘salt’, conceived as the ‘essence’ of the water, produced by evaporation. The Carlsbad salt dispute highlights the complex interactions among the different networks in which knowledge circulated through the Habsburg Empire in the eighteenth century. The different actors relied on specific networks with different logics of discourse and different modes of circulation. In each case the relation between the local, the regional and the imperial had to be negotiated. The paper thus sketches out the different geographies of knowledge in the Habsburg Empire but also its localization in and around Carlsbad.
- Published
- 2010
209. A proposal for a worldwide definition of health resort medicine, balneology, medical hydrology and climatology
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Zeki Karagülle, Tamás Bender, Pedro Cantista, and Christoph Gutenbrunner
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Atmospheric Science ,Internationality ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,MEDLINE ,Health Resorts ,Scientific evidence ,Balneology ,Meteorology ,International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health ,Water Supply ,Health care ,Humans ,Recreation ,health care economics and organizations ,Hydrology ,Ecology ,business.industry ,humanities ,Health promotion ,Systematic review ,Climatology ,business ,Psychology ,human activities ,Specialization - Abstract
Health Resort Medicine, Balneology, Medical Hydrology and Climatology are not fully recognised as independent medical specialties at a global international level. Analysing the reasons, we can identify both external (from outside the field) and internal (from inside the field) factors. External arguments include, e.g. the lack of scientific evidence, the fact that Balneotherapy and Climatotherapy is not used in all countries, and the fact that Health Resort Medicine, Balneology, Medical Hydrology and Climatology focus only on single methods and do not have a comprehensive concept. Implicit barriers are the lack of international accepted terms in the field, the restriction of being allowed to practice the activities only in specific settings, and the trend to use Balneotherapy mainly for wellness concepts. Especially the implicit barriers should be subject to intense discussions among scientists and specialists. This paper suggests one option to tackle the problem of implicit barriers by making a proposal for a structure and description of the medical field, and to provide some commonly acceptable descriptions of content and terminology. The medical area can be defined as “medicine in health resorts” (or “health resort medicine”). Health resort medicine includes “all medical activities originated and derived in health resorts based on scientific evidence aiming at health promotion, prevention, therapy and rehabilitation”. Core elements of health resort interventions in health resorts are balneotherapy, hydrotherapy, and climatotherapy. Health resort medicine can be used for health promotion, prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation. The use of natural mineral waters, gases and peloids in many countries is called balneotherapy, but other (equivalent) terms exist. Substances used for balneotherapy are medical mineral waters, medical peloids, and natural gases (bathing, drinking, inhalation, etc.). The use of plain water (tap water) for therapy is called hydrotherapy, and the use of climatic factors for therapy is called climatotherapy. Reflecting the effects of health resort medicine, it is important to take other environmental factors into account. These can be classified within the framework of the ICF (International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health). Examples include receiving health care by specialised doctors, being well educated (ICF-domain: e355), having an environment supporting social contacts (family, peer groups) (cf. ICF-domains: d740, d760), facilities for recreation, cultural activities, leisure and sports (cf. ICF-domain: d920), access to a health-promoting atmosphere and an environment close to nature (cf. ICF-domain: e210). The scientific field dealing with health resort medicine is called health resort sciences. It includes the medical sciences, psychology, social sciences, technical sciences, chemistry, physics, geography, jurisprudence, etc. Finally, this paper proposes a systematic international discussion of descriptions in the field of Health Resort Medicine, Balneology, Medical Hydrology and Climatology, and discusses short descriptive terms with the goal of achieving internationally accepted distinct terms. This task should be done via a structured consensus process and is of major importance for the publication of scientific results as well as for systematic reviews and meta-analyses.
- Published
- 2009
210. Research Reports
- Author
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Crawford, Alistair, Keppie, Lawrence, Goates-Stephens, Robert, Izzet, Vedia, Pobjoy, Mark, Berry, Joanne, Greenwood, Martin, Hope, Valerie, Woods, Clare, Zajac, Natascha, Huskinson, Janet, Arthur, Paul, Claridge, Amanda, DeLaine, Janet, Wilkinson, David, Lloyd, John, Christie, Neil, Lock, Gary, and Stoddart, Simon
- Published
- 1997
211. Conrad of Querfurt and Petrarch on the Location of the Vergilian Underworld
- Author
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Clark, Raymond J.
- Published
- 1996
212. Spa therapy together with supervised self-mobilisation improves pain, function and quality of life in patients with chronic shoulder pain: a single-blind randomised controlled trial
- Author
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Chary-Valckenaere, Isabelle, Loeuille, Damien, Jay, Nicolas, Kohler, François, Tamisier, Jean-Noë, Roques, Christian-François, Boulange, Michel, and Gay, Gérard
- Published
- 2018
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213. [The Split sulphur spa]
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Nives, Stambuk-Giljanović and Drago, Stambuk
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Balneology ,Croatia ,Mineral Waters ,Sulfur - Abstract
This paper presents the chemical composition of the main sulphur springs in Croatia and compares it with the sulphur content in the water from the Split spa. It also presents the results of monitoring the content of chlorides and hydrogen sulphide as well as the sulphur water temperature during 1987, 1988 and 1996 with the objective of studying the hydrological characteristics of this water and its origin. Since the sulphur water content during the dry periods significantly differs from the sulphur water content during rainy winter periods, this paper also compares the results obtained for the mentioned two periods. According to the monitoring results it can be concluded that sulphur water consists of seawater, and hydrocarbonate surface water with a fairly constant water content during dry periods, while the hydrocarbonate water content increases during rainy periods.
- Published
- 2006
214. Clinical improvement of patients with osteoarthritis using thermal mineral water at Szigetvár Spa-results of a randomised double-blind controlled study.
- Author
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Hanzel, Adrienn, Horvát, Krisztina, Molics, Bálint, Berényi, Károly, Németh, Balázs, Szendi, Katalin, and Varga, Csaba
- Subjects
OSTEOARTHRITIS treatment ,BALNEOLOGY ,GEOTHERMAL resources ,HEALTH resorts ,THERAPEUTIC use of mineral waters - Abstract
Since 1966, Szigetvár in Hungary is well recognised as a thermal spa. Many patients suffering from rheumatic diseases are treated with its thermal mineral water. Our objective was to investigate the effects of a 3-week-long outpatient balneotherapy-based rehabilitation program on patients suffering from osteoarthritis of the hips and the knees. During the treatment period, patients received a 30-min underwater jet massage in a bath tub, five times a week. One patient group received jet massage in a bath tub containing mineral water; the other group received the same treatment in tap water. Primary outcomes were measured by range of movement of the involved joints and Western Ontario and McMaster University Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC). Visual analogue scale (VAS) was applied to measure current severity of pain. Furthermore, quality of life was assessed using the Short Form 36 questionnaire (SF-36). Range of movement (ROM) score, Western Ontario and McMaster University Osteoarthritis Index and visual analogue scale were determined before the first treatment, after the last treatment and 3 months after the last treatment. SF-36 questionnaire was filled in before the first and after the last treatment. Fifty patients (17 male, 33 female mean age 66.7 ± 4.79 years) were enrolled. After randomisation, patients were divided into two groups: tap water n = 24 and mineral water n = 26. Treatment with the thermal mineral water of Szigetvár significantly improved ROM, WOMAC scores, and SF-36-scored quality of life of the patients. Our double-blind study provided evidence for the beneficial health effects of another Hungarian thermal mineral water masking the colour, odour and pH of the tap water and mineral water. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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215. PARAMETRY FIZYKOCHEMICZNE I BAKTERIOLOGIA ODKRYTYCH WÓD MINERALNYCH I SIARCZKOWYCH W OKOLICACH SANOKA I LESKA, ORAZ MOŻLIWOŚCI LECZNICZEGO WYKORZYSTANIA TYCH WÓD.
- Author
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Chorostyński, Artur, Łach, Andrzej, and Pasztyła, Grzegorz
- Abstract
Copyright of Acta Scientiarum Polonorum. Formatio Circumiectus is the property of Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Rolniczego im. Hugona Kollataja w Krakowie and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
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216. Efficacy of paraffin wax bath for carpal tunnel syndrome: a randomized comparative study.
- Author
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Ordahan, Banu and Karahan, Ali
- Subjects
BALNEOLOGY ,PARAFFIN wax ,CARPAL tunnel syndrome treatment ,ELECTROMYOGRAPHY ,ELECTRODIAGNOSIS ,ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is the most frequently diagnosed neuropathy of upper extremity entrapment neuropathies. We aimed to investigate the effectiveness of paraffin therapy in patients with CTS. Seventy patients diagnosed with mild or moderate CTS were randomly divided into two groups as splint treatment (during the night and day time as much as possible for 3 weeks) alone and splint (during the night and day time as much as possible for 3 weeks) + paraffin treatment (five consecutive days a week for 3 weeks). Clinical and electrophysiological assessments were performed before and 3 weeks after treatment. The patients were assessed by using visual analog scale (VAS) for pain, electroneuromyography (ENMG), and Boston Carpal Tunnel Syndrome Questionnaire (BCTSQ). The significant improvement was found in VAS scores in both groups when compared with pretreatment values ( p < 0.05). There was no significant improvement in functional capacity score ( p > 0.05), whereas a significant improvement was noted in the BCTQ symptom severity scale score in the splint group ( p < 0.05). Significant improvements were demonstrated in both scorers in the combined treatment group. Similarly, significant improvements were found in the combined treatment group in terms of motor and sensory distal latency, sensory amplitude, and median sensory nerve velocity ( p < 0.05). There was no significant change in electrophysiologic parameters in the splint group ( p > 0.05), and the difference in these parameters between the groups was statistically significant ( p < 0.05). In conclusion, using splinting alone in patients with CTS is an effective treatment for reducing symptoms in the early stages. Paraffin treatment with splint increases the recovery in functional and electrophysiological parameters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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217. The efficacy of peloid therapy in management of hand osteoarthritis: a pilot study.
- Author
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Kasapoğlu Aksoy, Meliha, Altan, Lale, Eröksüz, Rıza, and Metin Ökmen, Burcu
- Subjects
BALNEOLOGY ,PHYSICAL therapy ,HAND diseases ,OSTEOARTHRITIS treatment ,MUD ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Hand osteoarthritis (OA) is associated with pain, reduced grip strength, loss of range of motion (ROM), and joint stiffness, leading to impaired hand function and difficulty in performance of daily living activities. Mud bath therapy has been reported to play a primary role in the prevention and management of OA. Thus, we planned to conduct a study aimed at investigating the effects of peloid therapy on pain, functional state, grip strength, and the quality of life and performing a comparative analysis of the outcomes of peloid therapy. In this randomized, controlled, single-blind, pilot study, patients ( n = 33) underwent peloid therapy over 2 weeks, 5 sessions a week, for a total of 10 sessions and home exercise program in group 1. Patients in group 2 (control, n = 30) received only the same home exercise program as in group 1. Patients were evaluated just before, and 2 and 6 weeks after the start of the study with Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), Australian/Canadian Hand Osteoarthritis Index (AUSCAN), Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ), hand grip strength (HGS), and pinch strength (PS). Statistically significant improvements were observed in all parameters assessed at week 2 and week 6 in the group 1 ( p < 0.05). Statistically significant differences were observed in HGS scores in the group 2 at week 2 and in AUSCAN scores at week 6 ( p < 0.05). Intergroup comparisons of the scores revealed significant differences between the peloid therapy group and control group in VAS, HAQ, AUSCAN, HGS, and PS scores at week 2 and week 6 ( p < 0.05). This study demonstrates that peloid therapy might be an effective and confident treatment modality in the management of symptomatic osteoarthritis of the hand and may provide effective pain control and improvements in the hand functions, quality of life, and grip strength. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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218. Can balneotherapy modify microRNA expression levels in osteoarthritis? A comparative study in patients with knee osteoarthritis.
- Author
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Giannitti, C., Palma, A., Pascarelli, N., Cheleschi, S., Giordano, N., Galeazzi, M., and Fioravanti, Antonella
- Subjects
BALNEOLOGY ,GENE expression ,MICRORNA ,OSTEOARTHRITIS treatment ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of hydrostatic pressure ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of heat - Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the whole-blood levels of miR-155, miR-223, miR-181a, miR-146a, and miR-let-7e in patients with bilateral knee osteoarthritis (OA) after a cycle of mud-bath therapy (MBT). Thirty-two patients with knee OA defined by the ACR criteria were included. Twenty-one patients (MBT group) were daily treated with a combination of local mud-packs at 42 °C and baths in mineral water, at 37 °C for 15 min, for 12 applications over a period of 2 weeks, in addition to standard therapy; 11 patients (control group) continued their conventional treatment alone. Global pain score evaluated by visual analog scale (VAS), WOMAC subscores, and microRNA expression were evaluated at baseline and after 2 weeks. Peripheral whole blood was collected into PAXgene™ Blood RNA tubes, stored at − 80 °C, and total RNA was extracted. The expression of miR-155, miR-223, miR-181a, miR-146a, and miR-let-7e was determined by qRT-PCR. After MBT, we observed a statistically significant improvement of clinical parameters and a significant decrease of miR-155, miR-181a, miR-146a ( p < 0.001), and miR-223 ( p < 0.01) expression levels. No clinical and biochemical modifications were detected in the control group. No significant variations of miR-let-7e were shown in both groups after 2 weeks. In conclusion, MBT can modify the expression of miR-155, miR-181a, miR-146a, and miR-223, which are upregulated in OA. It could be due to the heat stress and the hydrostatic pressure, since some miRNAs were found to be temperature- and mechano-responsive. Further studies are needed to better explain the mechanism of action of MBT and the role of miRNAs in OA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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219. The role of mineral elements and other chemical compounds used in balneology: data from double-blind randomized clinical trials.
- Author
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Morer, Carla, Roques, Christian-François, Françon, Alain, Forestier, Romain, and Maraver, Francisco
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LITERATURE reviews ,CLINICAL trials ,BALNEOLOGY ,THERAPEUTIC use of mineral waters ,MUD ,MUSCULOSKELETAL system diseases ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
The aims of this study were to conduct a systematic literature review on balneotherapy about the specific therapeutic role of mineral elements and other chemical compounds of mineral waters and derivate peloids/muds and to discuss the study methods used to evaluate it (in musculoskeletal conditions). We searched Medline by PubMed using the following key words: 'spa therapy' 'balneotherapy' 'mud' 'peloid' 'mud pack Therapy' in combination with 'randomized controlled trial' 'double blind trial.' We also reviewed the reference list of articles retrieved by the Medline search. We selected the double-blind randomized clinical trials that assessed the effects of mineral water or mud treatments compared to tap water, attenuated peloid/mud therapy or similar treatments without the specific minerals or chemical compounds of the treatment group ('non-mineral'). We evaluated the internal validity and the quality of the statistical analysis of these trials. The final selection comprised 27 double-blind randomized clinical trials, 20 related to rheumatology. A total of 1118 patients with rheumatological and other musculoskeletal diseases were evaluated in these studies: 552 of knee osteoarthritis, 47 of hand osteoarthritis, 147 chronic low back pain, 308 of reumathoid arthritis, and 64 of osteoporosis; 293 of these participants were assigned to the experimental groups of knee osteoarthritis, 24 in hand osteoarthritis, 82 of low back pain, 152 with reumathoid arthritis, and 32 with osteoporosis. They were treated with mineral water baths and/or mud/peloid (with or without other forms of treatment, like physical therapy, exercise...). The rest were allocated to the control groups; they received mainly tap water and/or 'non-mineral' mud/peloid treatments. Mineral water or mud treatments had better and longer improvements in pain, function, quality of life, clinical parameters, and others in some rheumatologic diseases (knee and hand osteoarthritis, chronic low back pain, rheumatoid arthritis, and osteoporosis) compared to baseline and non-mineral similar treatments. Internal validity and other limitations of the study's methodology impede causal relation of spa therapy on these improvements. Randomized clinical trials are very heterogeneous. Double-blind randomized clinical trials seem to be the key for studying the role of mineral elements and other chemical compounds, observing enough consistency to demonstrate better and longer improvements for mineral waters or derivate compared to tap water; but due to heterogeneity and gaps on study protocol and methodology, existing research is not sufficiently strong to draw firm conclusions. Well-designed studies in larger patients' population are needed to establish the role of minerals and other chemical compounds in spa therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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220. Effects of single moor baths on physiological stress response and psychological state: a pilot study.
- Author
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Stier-Jarmer, M, Frisch, D, Oberhauser, C, Immich, G, Kirschneck, M, and Schuh, A
- Subjects
BALNEOLOGY ,PHYSICAL therapy ,MUD baths ,HYDROTHERAPY ,WILCOXON signed-rank test - Abstract
Moor mud applications in the form of packs and baths are widely used therapeutically as part of balneotherapy. They are commonly given as therapy for musculoskeletal disorders, with their thermo-physical effects being furthest studied. Moor baths are one of the key therapeutic elements in our recently developed and evaluated 3-week prevention program for subjects with high stress level and increased risk of developing a burnout syndrome. An embedded pilot study add-on to this core project was carried out to assess the relaxing effect of a single moor bath. During the prevention program, 78 participants received a total of seven moor applications, each consisting of a moor bath (42 °C, 20 min, given between 02:30 and 05:20 p.m.) followed by resting period (20 min). Before and after the first moor application in week 1, and the penultimate moor application in week 3, salivary cortisol was collected, blood pressure and heart rate were measured, and mood state (Multidimensional Mood State Questionnaire) was assessed. A Friedman test of differences among repeated measures was conducted. Post hoc analyses were performed using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. A significant decrease in salivary cortisol concentration was seen between pre- and post-moor bath in week 1 ( Z = −3.355, p = 0.0008). A non-significant decrease was seen between pre- and post-moor bath in week 3. Mood state improved significantly after both moor baths. This pilot study has provided initial evidence on the stress-relieving effects of single moor baths, which can be a sensible and recommendable therapeutic element of multimodal stress-reducing prevention programs. The full potential of moor baths still needs to be validated. A randomized controlled trial should be conducted comparing this balneo-therapeutic approach against other types of stress reduction interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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221. Balneotherapeutic effects of high mineral spring water on the atopic dermatitis-like inflammation in hairless mice via immunomodulation and redox balance.
- Author
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Bajgai, Johny, Fadriquela, Ailyn, Ara, Jesmin, Begum, Rahima, Ahmed, Md Faruk, Cheol-Su Kim, Soo-Ki Kim, Kwang-Yong Shim, and Kyu-Jae Leen
- Subjects
ATOPIC dermatitis treatment ,THERAPEUTIC use of mineral waters ,ANIMAL experimentation ,ANTIOXIDANTS ,BALNEOLOGY ,BIOMARKERS ,ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay ,IMMUNOLOGICAL adjuvants ,INFLAMMATION ,MICE ,OXIDATION-reduction reaction - Abstract
Background: Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic relapsing allergic inflammatory skin disease that currently affects millions of children and adults worldwide. Drugs used to treat these inflammatory diseases include anti-histamines, corticosteroids and calcineurin inhibitors but these drugs have their limitations such as adverse effects with their long-term usage. Thus, researcher's interest in several alternative and complementary therapies are continually growing and balneotherapy is one of these approaches. Therefore, we investigate the bathing effect of high concentration mineral spring water (HMW) on redox balance and immune modulation in 2,4-dinitrochlorobenzene (DNCB)-induced atopic dermatitis like inflammation in hairless mice. Methods: We induced AD-like inflammation by application of DNCB on the dorsal skin of female skh-1 hairless mice. The mice were treated with 100% pure HMW (PHMW) and 10% diluted HMW (DHMW) through bathing once a day for 4 weeks. Tacrolimus ointment (0.1%) was used as positive control (PC) and only DNCB treatment as negative control (NeC) group. The severity of skin lesion inflammation was assessed through clinical scoring and observing scratching behavior. Levels of immunoglobulin E (IgE) and inflammatory cytokines in serum were detected by ELISA and multiplex bead array system, and the levels of oxidative stress-related biomarkers and antioxidant enzyme were also measured. Results: We found that HMW significantly decreased the scratching behavior in PHMW and DHMW groups at the 2nd week and in PHMW group at 4th week compared to NeC group. Likewise, serum IgE level was significantly decreased in DHMW group as compared to NeC group. In line, the level of inflammatory cytokines in serum such as interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-13 and tumor necrosis factor-a were significantly inhibited in PHMW and DHMW groups compared to NeC group. In parallel, total reactive oxygen species (ROS) of serum level was significantly decreased in PHMW treatment groups compared to NeC group. Consistently, serum malondialdehyde (MDA) level in PHMW group was lower than in NeC group. By contrast, glutathione peroxidase (GPx) activity was significantly enhanced in PHMW than NeC. Conclusion: Collectively, our study indicates a balneotherapeutic effect of HMW on DNCB-induced AD like inflammation in hairless mice via immunomodulation and redox balance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
222. Anti-inflammatory effect as a mechanism of effectiveness underlying the clinical benefits of pelotherapy in osteoarthritis patients: regulation of the altered inflammatory and stress feedback response.
- Author
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Ortega, E., Gálvez, I., Hinchado, M., Guerrero, J., Martín-Cordero, L., and Torres-Piles, S.
- Subjects
OSTEOARTHRITIS ,BALNEOLOGY ,INFLAMMATION ,HYDROCORTISONE ,CYTOKINES ,PATIENTS - Abstract
The purpose of the present investigation was to evaluate whether an anti-inflammatory effect together with an improvement of the regulation of the interaction between the inflammatory and stress responses underlies the clinical benefits of pelotherapy in osteoarthritis (OA) patients. This study evaluated the effects of a 10-day cycle of pelotherapy at the spa centre 'El Raposo' (Spain) in a group of 21 OA patients diagnosed with primary knee OA. Clinical assessments included pain intensity using a visual analog scale; pain, stiffness and physical function using the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index; and health-related quality of life using the EuroQol-5D questionnaire. Serum inflammatory cytokine levels (IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-8, IL-6, IL-10 and TGF-β) were evaluated using the Bio-Plex® Luminex® system. Circulating neuroendocrine-stress biomarkers, such as cortisol and extracellular 72 kDa heat shock protein (eHsp72), were measured by ELISA. After the cycle of mud therapy, OA patients improved the knee flexion angle and OA-related pain, stiffness and physical function, and they reported a better health-related quality of life. Serum concentrations of IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-8, IL-6 and TGF-β, as well as eHsp72, were markedly decreased. Besides, systemic levels of cortisol increased significantly. These results confirm that the clinical benefits of mud therapy may well be mediated, at least in part, by its systemic anti-inflammatory effects and neuroendocrine-immune regulation in OA patients. Thus, mud therapy could be an effective alternative treatment in the management of OA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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223. STUDY REGARDING THE IMPACT OF THE COMMUNICATION STYLE AND THE COMMUNICATION BARRIERS IN THE PHYSICAL THERAPY INTERVENTION.
- Author
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CIOCAN, Dana Maria, PLĂMĂDEALĂ, Mihaela, and JORGIĆ, Bojan
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PHYSICAL therapists ,PATIENTS ,COMMUNICATION styles ,ORAL communication ,BALNEOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Sport & Society / Sport si Societate is the property of Altius Academy Foundation and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2017
224. Can balneotherapy improve the bowel motility in chronically constipated middle-aged and elderly patients?
- Author
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Dandinoglu, Taner, Dandin, Ozgur, Ergin, Tuncer, Tihan, Deniz, Akpak, Yasam, Aydın, Oguz, and Teomete, Uygar
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BALNEOLOGY ,OLDER patients ,LAXATIVES ,GASTROINTESTINAL agents ,CONSTIPATION - Abstract
Balneotherapy or spa therapy is usually known for different application forms of medicinal waters and its effects on the human body. Our purpose is to demonstrate the effect of balneotherapy on gastrointestinal motility. A total of 35 patients who were treated for osteoarthritis with balneotherapy from November 2013 through March 2015 at our hospital had a consultation at the general surgery for constipation and defecation disorders. Patients followed by constipation scores, short-form health survey (SF-12), and a colonic transit time (CTT) study before and after balneotherapy were included in this study, and the data of the patients were analyzed retrospectively. The constipation score, SF-12 score, and CTT were found statistically significant after balneotherapy ( p < 0.05). The results of our study confirm the clinical finding that a 15-day course of balneotherapy with mineral water from a thermal spring (Bursa, Turkey) improves gastrointestinal motility and reduces laxative consumption in the management of constipation in middle-aged and elderly patients, and it is our belief that treatment with thermal mineral water could considerably improve the quality of life of these patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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225. Congresul National de Balneologie / National Congress of Balneology, 4--7 Mai 2017, Baile Govora Abstacts Volume.
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BALNEOLOGY ,URBAN planning ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
226. Balneological outpatient treatment for patients with knee osteoarthritis; an effective non-drug therapy option in daily routine?
- Author
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Özkuk, Kağan, Gürdal, Hatice, Karagülle, Mine, Barut, Yasemin, Eröksüz, Rıza, and Karagülle, Müfit
- Subjects
OSTEOARTHRITIS ,BALNEOLOGY ,CLINICAL trials ,HYDROTHERAPY ,MENTAL health - Abstract
This study aims to compare the effects of balneological treatments applied at consecutive and intermittent sessions without interfering with their daily routine in patients with knee osteoarthritis. This is a randomized, controlled, single-blind clinical trial. Fifty patients diagnosed with knee osteoarthritis were included. The patients were divided into two groups. All patients were given a total of ten sessions of balneological treatment consisting of hydrotherapy and mud pack therapy. Group 1 received consecutive treatment for 2 weeks, while group 2 received intermittent treatment for 5 weeks. Local peloid packs at 45 °C were applied for 20 min, after a tap water (38 °C) bath. Evaluations were conducted before, after treatment, and at 12th week of post-treatment by Pain (VAS), Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), and Short Form-36 (SF-36). Both balneological treatment regimens of knee osteoarthritis had statistically significant clinical effects as well as effects on the quality of life. Patients' well-being continued at 3 months, except for joint stiffness (WOMAC), role-emotional (SF-36), and vitality (SF-36) in group 1 and for mental health (SF-36) in both groups. Both patient groups had improved compared to baseline. However, at 3 months after the treatment, the well-being of group 2 was unable to be maintained in terms of role-physical (SF-36) parameter, while the well-being of group 1 was unable to be maintained in terms of pain, WOMAC (pain, physical functions, total), and SF-36 (physical functioning, role-physical, pain, role-emotional, and mental health) variables, compared to data obtained immediately after treatment. Our study suggests that traditional and intermittent balneological therapies have similar efficacy in patients with knee osteoarthritis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
227. Bathing in carbon dioxide-enriched water alters protein expression in keratinocytes of skin tissue in rats.
- Author
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Kälsch, Julia, Pott, Leona, Takeda, Atsushi, Kumamoto, Hideo, Möllmann, Dorothe, Canbay, Ali, Sitek, Barbara, and Baba, Hideo
- Subjects
BALNEOLOGY ,CARBONATED beverages ,PROTEOMICS ,ARTERIAL diseases ,IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Beneficial effects of balneotherapy using naturally occurring carbonated water (CO enriched) have been known since the Middle Ages. Although this therapy is clinically applied for peripheral artery disease and skin disorder, the underlying mechanisms are not fully elucidated. Under controlled conditions, rats were bathed in either CO-enriched water (CO content 1200 mg/L) or tap water, both at 37 °C, for 10 min daily over 4 weeks. Proliferation activity was assessed by Ki67 immunohistochemistry of the epidermis of the abdomen. The capillary density was assessed by immunodetection of isolectin-positive cells. Using cryo-fixed abdominal skin epidermis, follicle cells and stroma tissue containing capillaries were separately isolated by means of laser microdissection and subjected to proteomic analysis using label-free technique. Differentially expressed proteins were validated by immunohistochemistry. Proliferation activity of keratinocytes was not significantly different in the epidermis after bathing in CO-enriched water, and also, capillary density did not change. Proteomic analysis revealed up to 36 significantly regulated proteins in the analyzed tissue. Based on the best expression profiles, ten proteins were selected for immunohistochemical validation. Only one protein, far upstream element binding protein 2 (FUBP2), was similarly downregulated in the epidermis after bathing in CO-enriched water with both techniques. Low FUBP2 expression was associated with low c-Myc immune-expression in keratinocytes. Long-term bathing in CO-enriched water showed a cellular protein response of epithelial cells in the epidermis which was detectable by two different methods. However, differences in proliferation activity or capillary density were not detected in the normal skin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
228. ABOUT GENERAL INFRASTRUCTURE AND ACCOMMODATION SYSTEM IN ROMANIAN BALNEOLOGY
- Author
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ILIE ROTARIU and ALEXANDRE KOSTOV
- Subjects
balneology ,accommodation system ,privatization ,competition ,Commercial geography. Economic geography ,HF1021-1027 ,Economics as a science ,HB71-74 - Abstract
A strong infrastructure is a precondition for the development of balneology. On this base new tourism might build the modern services that supply the experiences. The key factor is the labor force: an EU project about labor force in Romania and Bulgaria in balneology allow us to present the preliminary findings focusing on general infrastructure and accommodation which allow the development of the balneology as well as the additional conditions as the existence of a social pact, easy access facilities etc. Our paper gives more details about the accommodation facilities in Romania insisting about the results of the transition and privatization of the former socialist facilities and the transformation of the property into private ones and the consequences of this. It also present the capability of new developed accommodation units built after 1990 and how they might compete in an international competition. The findings force us to conclude that the actual facilities do not allow the balneology resorts to compete in the international competition and might fill only a poor and low demanding tourists
- Published
- 2013
229. Thermal fields of the Ebeko volcano (Paramushir Island, Kuril Islands) and their recreational and tourist potential
- Author
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R.V. Zharkov
- Subjects
geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,lcsh:Dynamic and structural geology ,paramushir island ,lcsh:QE420-499 ,recreation ,ebeko volcano ,hydrothermal mud ,lcsh:Petrology ,Oceanography ,balneology ,Volcano ,lcsh:QE500-639.5 ,lcsh:Stratigraphy ,lcsh:Engineering geology. Rock mechanics. Soil mechanics. Underground construction ,lcsh:TA703-712 ,tourism ,Recreation ,Tourism ,Geology ,thermal waters ,lcsh:QE640-699 - Abstract
The paper provides with the research results of physicochemical and balneological properties of thermal waters and hydrothermal mud of the Ebeko volcano (Paramushir Island, Kuril Islands). To assess recreational and tourist potential, we sample the most intensive thermal waters outputs. Ultra-acidic spring no. 1 of the Verkhne-Yuryeva group has a temperature of 88 °C, its mineralized (M – 13 g/l) chloride-sulfate waters contain biologically active elements in elevated concentrations (Si, B, Br, Fe2 +). Thermal waters of the Verkhne-Yuryeva springs can be roughly attributed to the Gaisky type of the acid water group and recommended for external use in the treatment and prevention of a wide range of diseases. Given the complexity of the route to the springs, the real development of this territory is considered not as a balneotherapy complex, but as an object of recreational and tourist activities. A similar situation is with an ultra-acidic sulfate thermal spring in the North-Eastern solfataric field. In addition to hydrotherms, it contains thin deposits of hydrothermal mud , which is almost impossible to use as a therapeutic due to its insufficiently good physical indicators and relatively small volume. The most promising deep hydrotherms for recreation and balneotherapy are opened by a well P-2 in the area of Severo-Kurilsk. In 2014, the hydrotherms temperature was 82 °C, mineralized water (M – 8.6 g/l) chloride-hydrocarbonate sodium, slightly alkaline (pH 7.6), with an elevated content of biologically active components (Si, B, Br). According to the physical and chemical properties, the thermal waters of well P-2 can be tentatively attributed to the Lazarevsky hydrochemical type of therapeutic drinking water of chloride-hydrocarbonate sodium group, and as an external (balneological) use, they are tentatively close to the Kuldur type of siliceous thermal waters of various ion composition.
- Published
- 2020
230. PROPOSAL OF MINERAL WATER ABSTRACTION IN IŠĽA AND ITS USE FOR HEALTH PURPOSES.
- Author
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Zeleňáková, Martina, Mižáková, Monika, and Sarka, Dušan
- Subjects
MINERAL waters ,WATER supply ,BALNEOLOGY ,HYDROGEOLOGY ,WATER chemistry ,WATER management - Abstract
Slovakia is a country rich in natural mineral water resources. They are used for balneology purposes and as a natural mineral water. There is a large amount of resources in Slovakia that appear to be potential for further use, but for various reasons they are not. This is a big disadvantage for the country. The aim of this work is a proposal on how to use the local spring in Išľa, north eastern Slovakia, and change this area into attractive spa for domestic or foreign tourists. In the past, mineral springs in the spa Išľa were exploited quite intensively in the region. The spa capacity ceased to be in the 70-ties of 20th century. It was mainly due to undue interference with the rock environment. As a result of drainage activities in the area were springs in Išľa deteriorated by the change of hydrogeological conditions. Over time, however, it leads to the destruction of completed drainage, resulting in a gradual recovery of hydrogeological conditions. Appropriate and mainly targeted approach, respecting the realities of the site, is possible the reconstruction of the sources and the surrounding area to achieve a substantial increase in the quality of water chemistry in the spring to the original condition. This work analyses the current condition of water management, as a collection of groundwater by horizontal or vertical ways. It analyses the current state of mineral water, discusses their classification, occurrence and its usage. It contains a proposal for detention facilities and its usage for healing. There are included description, history, geological and hydro geological conditions of the proposed area as well as the current conditions of the territory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
231. Balneology: Spa Science.
- Author
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Williams, Kathryn R.
- Subjects
- *
BALNEOLOGY , *PHYSICAL therapy , *THERAPEUTIC use of mineral waters , *BATHS , *WATER chemistry , *CHEMISTRY education , *THERAPEUTICS , *PHYSIOLOGICAL therapeutics , *CHEMISTRY - Abstract
The article discusses key issues concerning balneology, which refers to the study of the therapeutic use of baths and mineral springs. The author cites the research paper titled "Magic and Science of Natural Healing Waters" by Oskar Baudisch that was published in an issue of the "Journal of Chemical Education" in 1939. Baudisch emphasized the importance of the therapeutic use of natural mineral waters and the need for continued research into balneology. Also included is a discussion of the issues' implications for water chemistry and chemical education.
- Published
- 2008
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232. Effect of spa therapy with saline balneotherapy on oxidant/antioxidant status in patients with rheumatoid arthritis: a single-blind randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Karagülle, Mine, Kardeş, Sinan, Karagülle, Oğuz, Dişçi, Rian, Avcı, Aslıhan, Durak, İlker, and Karagülle, Müfit
- Subjects
ALTERNATIVE treatment for rheumatoid arthritis ,BALNEOLOGY ,OXIDANT status ,SALINE waters ,THERAPEUTIC use of antioxidants ,EQUIPMENT & supplies ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Oxidative stress has been shown to play a contributory role in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Recent studies have provided evidence for antioxidant properties of spa therapy. The purpose of this study is to investigate whether spa therapy with saline balneotherapy has any influence on the oxidant/antioxidant status in patients with RA and to assess clinical effects of spa therapy. In this investigator-blind randomized controlled trial, we randomly assigned 50 patients in a 1:1 ratio to spa therapy plus standard drug treatment (spa group) or standard drug treatment alone (control group). Spa group followed a 2-week course of spa therapy regimen consisting of a total of 12 balneotherapy sessions in a thermal mineral water pool at 36-37 °C for 20 min every day except Sunday. All clinical and biochemical parameters were assessed at baseline and after spa therapy (2 weeks). The clinical parameters were pain intensity, patient global assessment, physician global assessment, Health Assessment Questionnaire disability index (HAQ-DI), Disease Activity Score for 28-joints based on erythrocyte sedimentation rate (DAS28-4[ESR]). Oxidative status parameters were malondialdehyde (MDA), nonenzymatic superoxide radical scavenger activity (NSSA), antioxidant potential (AOP), and superoxide dismutase (SOD). The NSSA levels were increased significantly in the spa group ( p = 0.003) but not in the control group ( p = 0.509); and there was a trend in favor of spa therapy for improvements in NSSA levels compared to control ( p = 0.091). Significant clinical improvement was found in the spa group compared to the control in terms of patient global assessment ( p = 0.011), physician global assessment ( p = 0.043), function (HAQ-DI) ( p = 0.037), disease activity (DAS28-4[ESR]) (0.044) and swollen joint count (0.009), and a trend toward improvement in pain scores (0.057). Spa therapy with saline balneotherapy exerts antioxidant effect in patients with RA as reflected by the increase in NSSA levels after spa therapy; whether this antioxidant effect contributes to the clinical improvements observed remains to be verified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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233. Therapeutic properties in Tunisian hot springs: first evidence of phenolic compounds in the cyanobacterium Leptolyngbya sp. biomass, capsular polysaccharides and releasing polysaccharides.
- Author
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Trabelsi, Lamia, Mnari, Amira, Abdel-Daim, Mohamed M., Abid-Essafi, Salwa, and Aleya, Lotfi
- Subjects
ANTIOXIDANTS ,BACTERIA ,BALNEOLOGY ,HIGH performance liquid chromatography ,MICROSCOPY ,PHENOLS ,REGRESSION analysis ,SCANNING electron microscopy ,DATA analysis software ,ONE-way analysis of variance - Abstract
Background: In Tunisia, the use of hot spring waters for both health and recreation is a tradition dating back to Roman times. In fact, thermal baths, usually called "Hammam" are recommended as a therapeutic and prophylactic measure against many types of illness and toxicity. While the chemical concentration of thermal water is admittedly associated with its therapeutic effects, the inclusion in spa waters of efficient bioproduct additives produced by photosynthetic microorganisms and that act against oxidative stress may comprise a significant supplementary value for thermal centers. The aim of this study was to investigate the antioxidant potential of the Tunisian thermophilic cyanobacterium Leptolyngbya sp. and to determine its phytochemical constituents and phenolic profile. Methods: BME (Biomass Methanolic Extract), CME (Capsular polysaccharides Methanolic Extract) and RME (Releasing polysaccharides Methanolic Extract) of Leptolyngbya sp. were examined for their antioxidant activities by means of DPPH, hydroxyl radical scavenging and ferrous ion chelating assays. Their total phenols, flavonoids, carotenoids, Mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) and vitamin C contents, as well as their phenolic profiles were also determined. Results: BME has the highest content of phenols (139 ± 1.2 mg/g), flavonoids (34.9 ± 0.32 mg CEQ/g), carotenoids (2.03 ± 0.56 mg/g) and vitamin C (15.7 ± 1.55 mg/g), while the highest MAAs content (0.42 ± 0.03 mg/g) was observed in CME. BME presented both the highest DPPH and hydroxyl radical scavenging ability with an IC
50 of 0.07 and 0. 38 mg/ml, respectively. The highest ferrous chelating capacity was detected in CME with an IC50 = 0.59 mg/ml. Phenolic profiles revealed the presence of 25 phenolic compounds with the existence of hydroxytyrosol, oleuropein, resveratrol and pinoresinol. Conclusion: The study demonstrated that the cyanobacterium Leptolyngbya sp. possesses abundant natural antioxidant products which may have prophylactic and therapeutic effects on many types of illness and toxicity. The present findings not only explain and reinforce the rationale behind traditional therapeutic practices in Tunisia in the exploitation of the country's hot springs, but support the addition of Leptolyngbya to thermal waters as a means to enhance the value and reputation of the curative nature of Tunisian thermal waters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
234. Combining balneotherapy and health promotion to promote active and healthy ageing: the Balaruc-MACVIA-LR approach.
- Author
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Blain, H., Bernard, P., Canovas, G., Raffort, N., Desfour, H., Soriteau, L., Noguès, M., Camuzat, T., Mercier, J., Dupeyron, A., Quéré, I., Laffont, I., Hérisson, C., Solimene, H., and Bousquet, J.
- Subjects
MUSCULOSKELETAL system diseases ,VENOUS insufficiency ,BALNEOLOGY ,CHRONIC diseases ,HEALTH promotion ,HEALTH status indicators ,HOSPITAL care ,MEDICAL care ,EVALUATION of medical care ,PATIENTS ,QUALITY assurance ,ACTIVE aging ,EVALUATION ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Scaling up and replication of successful innovative integrated care models for chronic diseases is one of the targets of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing (EIP on AHA). MACVIA-LR (MAladies Chroniques pour un VIeillissement Actif en Languedoc-Roussillon) is a Reference Site of the EIP on AHA. The main objective of MACVIA-LR is to develop innovative solutions in order to (1) improve the care of patients affected by chronic diseases, (2) reduce avoidable hospitalization and (3) scale up the innovation to regions of Europe. The MACVIA-LR project also aims to assess all possible aspects of medicine-including non-pharmacologic approaches-in order to maintain health and prevent chronic diseases. These approaches include hydrotherapy and balneotherapy which can be of great importance if health promotion strategies are considered. Balneotherapy at Balaruc-les-Bains focusses on musculoskeletal diseases and chronic venous insufficiency of the lower limbs. Each year, over 46,000 people attend an 18-day course related to a new falls prevention initiative combining balneotherapy and education. On arrival, each person receives a flyer providing information on the risk of fall and, depending on this risk, a course is proposed combining education and physical activity. A pilot study assesses the impact of the course 6 and 12 months later. This health promotion strategy for active and healthy ageing follows the FEMTEC (World Federation of Hydrotherapy and Climatotherapy) concept. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. Effects of sulfur bath on hip osteoarthritis: a randomized, controlled, single-blind, follow-up trial: a pilot study.
- Author
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Kovács, Csaba, Bozsik, Ágnes, Pecze, Mariann, Borbély, Ildikó, Fogarasi, Andrea, Kovács, Lajos, Tefner, Ildikó, and Bender, Tamás
- Subjects
OSTEOARTHRITIS ,PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of sulfur ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,BALNEOLOGY ,EXERCISE therapy - Abstract
The effects of balneotherapy were evaluated in patients with osteoarthritis of the hip. This randomized, controlled, investigator-blinded study enrolled outpatients with hip osteoarthritis according to ACR criteria. In addition to home exercise therapy, one patient group received balneotherapy for 3 weeks on 15 occasions. The mineral water used in this study is one of the mineral waters with the highest sulfide ion content (13.2 mg/L) in Hungary. The control group received exercise therapy alone. The WOMAC Likert 3.1 index and the EQ-5D quality of life self-administered questionnaire were completed three times during the study: prior to first treatment, at the end of the 3-week treatment course, and 12 weeks later. The main endpoint was achievement of Minimal Clinically Important Improvement (MCII) at 12 weeks, defined as ≥7.9 points in a normalized WOMAC function score. The intention to treat analysis included 20 controls and 21 balneotherapy patients. At 12 weeks, 17 (81 %) balneotherapy group patients had Minimal Clinically Important Improvement and 6 (30 %) of controls ( p = 0.001). Comparing the results of the two groups at the end of treatment, there was a significant difference in the WOMAC stiffness score only, whereas after 12 weeks, the WOMAC pain, stiffness, function, and total scores also showed a significant difference in favor of the balneotherapy group. The difference between the two groups was significant after 12 weeks in point of EQVAS score, too. The results of our study suggest that the combination of balneotherapy and exercise therapy achieves more sustained improvement of joint function and decreases in pain than exercise therapy alone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
236. Max Hirsch (1875-1941): His forgotten fate and his contributions to the founding of modern rheumatology.
- Author
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Keitel, Wolfgang, Olsson, Leif, and Matteson, Eric L.
- Subjects
RHEUMATOLOGY ,BALNEOLOGY ,HISTORY - Abstract
Objective: To elucidate the connections between balneology and rheumatology in the founding period of the discipline of rheumatology, and describe the contributions of Max Hirsch, MD in the formation of professional rheumatology societies. Material and Methods: Historical documents from the medical history collection of Vogelsang-Gommern, Germany, and original personal documents of the Hirsch family and information from the medical and historical period literature were used in developing this report. Results: The first efforts at organizing rheumatology as a recognized clinical and academic discipline took place in the 1920s. Many of the first proponents were balneologists who cared for patients with chronic arthritic conditions without the benefit of effective medications. Max Hirsch, MD was a major figure in the development of modern rheumatology as it emerged from the provenance of balneology and orthopedics as a recognized organized medical discipline, contributing to the founding of the German Society for Rheumatology and the International League Against Rheumatism. Conclusion: Max Hirsch made significant contributions to scientific and organized rheumatology in the early days of the discipline. His contributions to the field and his fate as a Jewish physician have only recently come to light. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
237. Geothermal Energy in Turkey.
- Author
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Kilic, Fatma Canka
- Subjects
GEOTHERMAL resources ,POWER resources ,ELECTRIC power production ,BALNEOLOGY ,AQUACULTURE - Abstract
Turkey is rich in geothermal energy resources. It ranks seventh in the world for this type of energy resource and among the top five for geothermal heat and thermal spring applications (electricity generation, heating and cooling homes and greenhouses, drying, thermal tourism, balneological use, mineral extraction, agricultural and aquaculture applications, etc.). Interest in this energy field is rising due to government support for renewables. An overview of geothermal energy in Turkey is presented and its potential is evaluated. The study aims to contribute to the future developments of this energy technology in Turkey, with some barriers also considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
238. The impact of hydrotherapy on a patient’s perceived well-being: a critical review of the literature.
- Author
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Carere, Amy and Orr, Robin
- Subjects
CHRONIC disease treatment ,TREATMENT of musculoskeletal system diseases ,AQUATIC exercises ,BALNEOLOGY ,CINAHL database ,HEALTH ,HYDROTHERAPY ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDLINE ,ONLINE information services ,QUALITY of life ,STATISTICS ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,PAIN measurement ,INTER-observer reliability - Abstract
Background:Physiotherapists commonly use hydrotherapy as a treatment approach for various types of conditions. As hydrotherapy utilizes the hydrodynamic properties of water to promote relaxation and decrease pain perception, previous research has suggested that hydrotherapy may help to decrease the health burden of musculoskeletal (MSK) conditions. The aim of this review was to critically examine literature investigating (a) the benefits of hydrotherapy on reducing pain and disability associated with chronic MSK conditions, and (b) report on literature findings regarding the perceived benefit of hydrotherapy on the well-being of adults with chronic MSK conditions. Methods:Select electronic databases were searched to identify relevant articles. Studies meeting the inclusion criteria were critically analyzed using the Downs and Black protocol with agreement between raters assessed via Kappa analysis. Results:Nine original articles addressing the benefits of hydrotherapy on adult populations with chronic MSK conditions were analyzed. The mean critical appraisal score was 73% (κ = 0.87) with the evidence suggesting that hydrotherapy had a positive effect on pain, quality of life, condition-related disability and functional exercise capacity. It was also noted that following hydrotherapy, the perceived benefit of well-being was superior to land-based exercise protocols in cases where water temperature was within a thermoneutral range (33.5–35.5 °C). Conclusion:Hydrotherapy helps to reduce the health burden of MSK conditions. Improvements in the perception of well-being are likely to occur following hydrotherapy that is conducted in water within the thermoneutral range. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. Unexpected Complication Associated with Balneotherapy: Skin and Soft Tissue Infection.
- Author
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Alım, Bülent, Bostancı, Fahrettin, Servi, M. Alperen, Çetinel, Sinan, and Bingö, M. Ozan
- Subjects
BALNEOLOGY ,OINTMENTS ,SKIN ,DIABETES risk factors ,OBESITY - Abstract
Balneotherapy cure is an ongoing process, but patients can benefit most when cure is complete. For these reason, patients should be closely monitored and necessary precautions should be taken in terms of the complications that may occur in order to prevent the interruption or discontinuation of balneotherapy. Here, we wanted to represent a case that developed left leg soft tissue infection during the application of balneotherapy and because of this reason we stopped the balneotherapy As a result, when balneotherapy is planned for patients with risk factors such as diabetes and obesity, frequent examination of the skin and the application of skin moisturizers will be beneficial to prevent itching and skin dryness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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240. Bioclimatology at the Dead Sea in Israel
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David J. Abels, Dov Efron, and Zvi Even-Paz
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Dead sea ,History ,biology ,Balneology ,Judaism ,Climate ,Oceans and Seas ,Bioclimatology ,Dermatology ,Ancient history ,biology.organism_classification ,Talmud ,Skin Diseases ,Queen (playing card) ,Old Testament ,Cleopatra ,Josephus ,Humans ,Israel - Abstract
The first mention of the Dead Sea region is found in the Old Testament (Genesis XIV3), and it is referred to as the Salt Sea. Much later, writers and historians such as Aristotle, Flavius Josephus, Galen, and Pliny the Elder, refer to the Dead Sea and its medicinal pr0perties.i In addition, references linking the Dead Sea and the Queen of Sheba, King Solomon, Cleopatra, and King Herod are observed in historical chronicles. The Talmud, a compilation of Jewish civil and ecclesiastic law (third to sixth centuries), discusses bathing in the Dead Sea in several of its tractates. A great hiatus existed until a scientific report was written in the mid-eighteenth century (1741-1742) by the British physician Charles Perry.2 In this article, a qualitative chemical analysis of the Dead Sea water was discussed. Over the next 200 years, a few papers were published concerning various aspects of the Dead Sea water and its proposed medicinal values. The current literature, which appeared from the late 195Os, will be primarily discussed in this paper.
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- 1996
241. Hydrothermal facilities: essential services in the age of pandemics
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Marc Cohen
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Balneology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Geography ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Bathing ,Environmental health ,Public health ,Pandemic ,medicine - Abstract
This paper provides evidence to support the classification of hydro-thermal facilities as “essential services” in an age of pandemics. Hydro-thermal therapies such as hot baths, cold plunges, sauna...
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- 2020
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242. Geochemical Characterization of Geothermal Spring Waters Occurring in South Part of Gujarat and West Coast Geothermal Province of Maharashtra, India
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Kriti Yadav, Hemangi Oza, Namrata Bist, and Anirbid Sircar
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Balneology ,Hydrology ,Hot spring ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Spring (hydrology) ,Environmental science ,Weathering ,Desalination ,Geothermal gradient ,Groundwater ,Deposition (geology) - Abstract
Geothermal waters are extensively useful for various purposes such as in industrial plants, societal benefits, irrigation, and domestic consumptions. However, its physiochemical characterization is very important before using it for any rationale. The main objective of this paper is to identify the hydro-chemistry of geothermal water which is placed in southern part of Gujarat such as Unai hot springs and Saputara geothermal springs, and west coast geothermal province (WCGP) like Tural-Rajwadi group of hot springs. The standard methods were used to carry out the analysis of geothermal water. Piper, Stiff, Gibbs, Extended Durov, and Wilcox diagrams have been plotted to categorize water samples in facies. Spatial distribution curves have also been plotted for geothermal regions of Gujarat and Maharashtra. The geochemistry of groundwater is influenced by the presence of most important ions like Na+, Ca2+, Mg2+, K+, Cl-, HCO3-, and SO42-. Geothermal spring of Unai contains high TDS concentration around 1000 mg/l thus it cannot be used for drinking purposes but it can be utilized for domestic, balneology, and industrial purposes. However, after desalination this water can be utilized for drinking purposes. In Tural-Rajwadi hot springs TDS concentration was > 900 mg/l and pH range was between7-8 hence it can be used for domestic and industrial purposes. The temperature range of Tural-Rajwadi geothermal hot spring is 55-65°C which is very useful for milk pasteurization, industrial operations, space heating, balneology facilities like greenhouses and aquaculture ponds, and domestic purposes.
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- 2021
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243. Debris flows of 28 June 2014 near the Arshan village (Siberia, Republic of Buryatia, Russia).
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Kadetova, Alena, Rybchenko, Artem, Kozireva, Elena, and Pellinen, Vadim
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RAINFALL ,DEBRIS avalanches ,BALNEOLOGY ,BUILDING failures - Abstract
On 28 June 2014, high intensity rainfall resulted in seven simultaneous debris flows going down the slopes of the Tunka Ridge in the vicinity of Arshan village, which is a balneological and alpine resort (51° 54′ 31″ N, 102° 25′ 44″ E). The debris flows caused one life loss and several injuries, 112 buildings were damaged, and 15 were completely destroyed. The total volume of the transported deposits amounted to 3 × 10 m. Debris flows' formation began with the failure of weak sediments in the hanging cirques. Similar phenomena had not been recorded in the study area for over 40 years. The article presents a complete picture of the event and analysis of geological, geomorphological, and meteorological conditions for debris flows formation, for which extreme local rainfall was the major cause. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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244. The chemical characterization of the thermal waters in Budapest, Hungary by using multivariate exploratory techniques.
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Déri-Takács, Judit, Erőss, Anita, and Kovács, József
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GEOTHERMAL resources ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,BALNEOLOGY ,WATER quality - Abstract
Europe's largest naturally flowing thermal water system can be found in Budapest, Hungary. The thermal waters are used mainly for balneological purposes, and hence a huge database is available about the chemical status of these waters at the bath company. This study has been prepared with the purpose of characterizing the chemical composition of the thermal waters of Budapest through descriptive statistics and multivariate exploratory techniques. A further objective was to determine the factors influencing the physico-chemical parameters and to investigate the temporal changes in water quality. The characterization was based on a database containing regular quarterly water chemical analyses of wells and springs collected over several decades (1960-2009). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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245. Does addition of 'mud-pack and hot pool treatment' to patient education make a difference in fibromyalgia patients? A randomized controlled single blind study.
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Bağdatlı, Ali, Donmez, Arif, Eröksüz, Rıza, Bahadır, Güler, Turan, Mustafa, and Erdoğan, Nergis
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FIBROMYALGIA ,PATIENT education ,THERAPEUTIC use of clay ,HYDROTHERAPY ,BALNEOLOGY ,PATIENTS - Abstract
The aim of this randomized controlled single-blind study is to explore whether addition of mud-pack and hot pool treatments to patient education make a significant difference in short and mild term outcomes of the patients with fibromyalgia. Seventy women with fibromyalgia syndrome were randomly assigned to either balneotherapy with mud-pack and hot pool treatments (35) or control (35) groups. After randomization, five patients from balneotherapy group and five patients from control group were dropped out from the study with different excuses. All patients had 6-h patient education programme about fibromyalgia syndrome and were given a home exercise programme. The patients in balneotherapy group had heated pool treatment at 38 °C for 20 min a day, and mud-pack treatment afterwards on back region at 45 °C. Balneotherapy was applied on weekdays for 2 weeks. All patients continued to take their medical treatment. An investigator who was blinded to the intervention assessed all the patients before and after the treatment, at the first and the third months of follow-up. Outcome measures were FIQ, BDI and both patient's and physician's global assessments. Balneotherapy group was significantly better than control group at after the treatment and at the end of the first month follow-up assessments in terms of patient's and physician's global assessment, total FIQ score, and pain intensity, fatigue, non-refreshed awaking, stiffness, anxiety and depression subscales of FIQ. No significant difference was found between the groups in terms of BDI scores. It is concluded that patient education combined with 2 weeks balneotherapy application has more beneficial effects in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome as compared to patient education alone. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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246. Balneotherapy year in review 2021: focus on the mechanisms of action of balneotherapy in rheumatic diseases.
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Cheleschi, Sara, Tenti, Sara, Seccafico, Iole, Gálvez, Isabel, Fioravanti, Antonella, and Ortega, Eduardo
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RHEUMATISM ,CARTILAGE cells ,BALNEOLOGY ,MINERAL waters ,MINERALS in water ,INFLAMMATORY mediators - Abstract
Balneotherapy (BT) is one of the most commonly used non-pharmacologic complementary therapies for different rheumatic diseases. Its beneficial properties probably derived from a combination of mechanical, thermal, and chemical effects, but the exact mechanism of action is not elucidated. This review aimed at summarizing the current knowledge about the effects of BT, and identifying its possible mechanism of action in different rheumatic diseases. Pubmed and Scopus were used to perform a search of the literature to extract articles including terms related to BT and rheumatic diseases published in the period from 2010 to 2021. We selected pre-clinical studies, randomized controlled trials, and clinical trials. The results of clinical studies confirmed the beneficial properties on different mediators and factors of inflammation, oxidative stress, cartilage metabolism, and humoral and cellular immune responses in patients affected by chronic degenerative musculoskeletal disorders. The data derived from OA and RA-induced murine models revealed the efficacy of different BT treatments in decreasing pain, inflammation, and improving mobility, as well as in reducing the expression of matrix-degrading enzymes and markers of oxidative stress damage. Different in vitro studies analyzed the potential effect of a mineral water, as a whole, or of a mineral element, demonstrating their anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and chondroprotective properties in OA cartilage, synoviocytes and chondrocytes, and osteoblast and osteoclast cultures. The presented data are promising and confirm BT as an effective complementary approach in the management of several low-grade inflammation, degenerative, and stress-related pathologies, as rheumatic diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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247. Non-pharmacological intervention for rehabilitation of post-stroke spasticity
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Hu, Guanyu, Zhang, Hongshi, Wang, Yufeng, and Cong, Deyu
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Balneology ,Network Meta-Analysis ,Stroke Rehabilitation ,spasticity ,stroke ,rehabilitation ,Treatment Outcome ,systematic review ,Muscle Spasticity ,Study Protocol Systematic Review ,Humans ,Medicine, Chinese Traditional ,Physical Therapy Modalities ,Research Article ,Systematic Reviews as Topic - Abstract
Background: Post-stroke spasticity (PSS) is a major worldwide health problem, and timely and effective rehabilitation is associated with the risk of diabetes development; there are a variety of non-pharmacological interventions applied to the rehabilitation of PSS in these treatments; however, the relative efficacy and safety of different therapies remain uncertain, and we will conduct a systematic review and network meta-analysis to evaluate different non-pharmacological interventions. The relative efficacy and safety of intervention in PSS rehabilitation, thus providing evidence to support the optimization of the PSS rehabilitation program. Methods: We searched the following databases electronically, including four English literature databases (i.e., PubMed, Medline, Embase, and Cochrane Library) and two Chinese literature databases (i.e., China National Knowledge Infrastructure and VIP). We will also search for randomized controlled trials on non-pharmacological interventions for post-stroke spasticity, and the search time limit is from its establishment to May 2020. Two reviewers working independently will screen the titles, abstracts, and full papers. Data extraction will be completed by two independent authors. The primary outcome was the motor function. The secondary outcome was the assessment of daily living ability. We will use RevMan V.5.3 software to compute the data synthesis carefully when a meta-analysis is allowed. We will conduct Bayesian network meta-analysis using the Markov Chain Monte Carlo random effects model in Aggregate Data Drug Information System version 1.16.8 (Drugis, Groningen, NL). Results: This study provides a high-quality synthesis to assess the effectiveness and safety of non-pharmacological interventions for patients with PSS. Conclusion: The results of this study will provide evidence to judge whether non-pharmacological interventions are effective interventions for patients with post-stroke spasticity. Ethics and dissemination: The results of this meta-analysis and meta-regression will be disseminated through publication in a peer-reviewed journal and presented at a relevant conference. The data used in the network meta-analysis did not contain individual patient data. Therefore, ethical approval was not required. INPLASY registration number: INPLASY202140059
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- 2021
248. Dmitriy Dmitriyevich Yablokov (to the 110th anniversary)
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Editorial Article
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д.д. яблоков ,клиническая медицина ,история медицины ,терапия ,курортология ,d.d. yablokov ,clinical medicine ,history of medicine ,therapy ,balneology ,Medicine - Abstract
In 2006 there is the 110th jubilee of D.D. Yablokov – phthisiatrician and pulmonologist, radiologist and pathologist, parasitologist and physician, rheumatologist and balneologist. He is one of the best representatives and followers of the traditions of Russian doctors. The biographic paper about D.D. Yablokov from the book Tomsk Dynasties. Twentieth Century (Tomsk, 1996) by the well-known journalist T.Yu. Kupert.
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- 2006
249. Therapeutic Benefits of Balneotherapy on Quality of Life of Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis: A Systematic Review
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Maria Fernandez-Gonzalez, Carolina Fernandez-Lao, Lydia Martin-Martin, Angela Gonzalez-Santos, Maria Lopez-Garzon, Lucia Ortiz-Comino, and Mario Lozano-Lozano
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rheumatoid arthritis ,Quality of life ,Balneology ,Balneotherapy ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,balneotherapy ,Arthritis, Rheumatoid ,quality of life ,Humans ,Medicine ,Systematic Review ,Mineral Waters ,Rheumatoid arthritis ,Hydrotherapy - Abstract
This paper has external funding for publication from the "Catedra Hammam Al Andalus I + D + I en Bienestar Humano" (Hammam Al Andalus Chair in Human Well-being), University of Granada, Spain., Background: Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is the most common inflammatory rheumatic disease. RA symptoms make the disease disabling and strongly impact the quality of life of patients. Among the available forms of treatment, balneotherapy seems to be one of the most common forms of nonpharmacological treatment for rheumatic disease. The aim was to explore the effectiveness of balneotherapy for improving the quality of life of patients with RA. Methods: Pubmed, Scopus, Web of Science and The Cochrane library were searched for randomized or clinical controlled trials published in English or Spanish until May 2021. Risk of bias of included articles were assessed using the Cochrane tool. A total 535 records were retrieved, and seven met the inclusion criteria. All the included studies showed statistically significant improvements in the quality of life of patients who received balneotherapy treatment despite differences in treatment administration. Sessions should be approximately 20 min long and use natural mineral waters enriched with elements, or mud, at a water temperature between 35–38ºC. Conclusions: Balneotherapy benefits the quality of life of people with RA. The obtained results show positive effects for both mineral bathing and immersion in sand or mud on the quality of life of people who suffer from RA., "Catedra Hammam Al Andalus I + D + I en Bienestar Humano" (Hammam Al Andalus Chair in Human Wellbeing), University of Granada, Spain
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- 2021
250. Sustainable Modularity Approach to Facilities Development Based on Geothermal Energy Potential
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Dušan Ignjatović, Dejan Milenic, Ana Vranjes, Nataša Ćuković Ignjatović, and Olivera Krunić
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биоклиматска архитектура ,стратегије пасивног дизајнирања ,Wellness and spa facilities ,Thermal power station ,02 engineering and technology ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,7. Clean energy ,01 natural sciences ,lcsh:Technology ,law.invention ,lcsh:Chemistry ,law ,11. Sustainability ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,General Materials Science ,bioclimatic architecture ,модуларни објекти ,Instrumentation ,Geothermal gradient ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,energy efficiency ,Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Geothermal cascade use ,Србија ,Petroleum engineering ,Geothermal energy ,General Engineering ,Bioclimatic architecture ,Passive design strategies ,геотермална каскада ,6. Clean water ,lcsh:QC1-999 ,Computer Science Applications ,балнеологија ,geothermal energy ,бањски центри ,Thermal energy ,геотермална енергија ,Heat pump ,Efficient energy use ,Modular building ,Resource (biology) ,020209 energy ,geothermal cascade use ,Modularity ,Панонски басен ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,business.industry ,lcsh:T ,Balneology ,Process Chemistry and Technology ,енергетска ефикасност ,balneology ,Energy efficiency ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,lcsh:TA1-2040 ,Pannonian basin ,passive design strategies ,Environmental science ,wellness and spa facilities ,business ,lcsh:Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,modular building ,lcsh:Physics - Abstract
The study presented in this paper assessed the multidisciplinary approach of geothermal potential in the area of the most southeastern part of the Pannonian basin, focused on resources utilization. This study aims to present a method for the cascade use of geothermal energy as a source of thermal energy for space heating and cooling and as a resource for balneological purposes. Two particular sites were selected—one in a natural environment, the other within a small settlement. Geothermal resources come from different types of reservoirs having different temperatures and chemical compositions. At the first site, a geothermal spring with a temperature of 20.5 °C is considered for heat pump utilization, while at the second site, a geothermal well with a temperature of 54 °C is suitable for direct use. The calculated thermal power, which can be obtained from geothermal energy is in the range of 300 to 950 kW. The development concept was proposed with an architectural design to enable sustainable energy efficient development of wellness and spa/medical facilities that can be supported by local authorities. The resulting energy heating needs for different scenarios were 16–105 kW, which can be met in full by the use of geothermal energy.
- Published
- 2021
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