Beyond the Neti

Written by Stefanie on March 31, 2008 – 11:33 pm -

Beyond the salt

Breakfast at Stefanie’s reader Adam asked: Do you have any remedies for sinus-y itchy throat & cough stuff?
I have a neti pot, he said.

I said, well, this is what I find works great. It might not be for everyone!

I like to use the nasal spray bottles — I think it works better than the neti for healing sinus trouble, cough, irritated throat. The salt water has a chance to rinse over the whole sinuses.
normally the neti pot just rinses over one area and doesn’t get deep in there.

For simplicity I get a nasal spray product in a bottle that can be opened and emptied. Like from, say, Walgreens - they have a “salt solution” or “saline solution” which has a bunch of chemical stuff in it. I pour it out and add a salt solution using good quality salt. A dropper bottle will work, too, but you have to use 3 droppers full on each side. I think “Real Salt” from Whole Foods might be okay and not so expensive. Or salt sold for use with the Neti pot, or what you will. Don’t ever use “regular” commercial processed salt.

The solution should be very salty to the taste, but not, like, over the top salty. (start with no more than 1/4 tsp salt to 1/3c water) Pour it into your nasal spray bottle. Using warm water is best, but not absolutely necessary.
Here is what I do: I take my bottle with salt mix and lay down on my back. I tilt my head back.
Then I squeeze some solution into my sinuses, breathe through my mouth, and tilt my head to one side, then the other side. I then sit up and blow my nose (have my hanky handy).

If you have too much salt it will be very uncomfortable and may cause a little bleeding of the tissues. Just dilute a little and try again about an hour later if this happens.

If it hurts it’s too strong.  
If it isn’t salty enough, it won’t have any noticeable result. 
If it is merely uncomfortable and salty you got it just right.

If congestion is really bad, do a few rinses — you will proably notice improvement after a couple of hours. I noticed that when there was a lot of congestion, the salt water kind of sat and mixed and started to loosen it up, and in about an hour I had salty nose blowing going on. What a relief!
Do this a couple or a few times depending on how bad your condition is.
The salt water that drips into your throat will relieve some of that throat pain
It should relieve the cough too.

Last night my mother called me and mentioned she was just not quite getting well from the flu. She had a cough that wouldn’t go away. I mentioned the salt water rinses. Now, you should know that my mother is a scientist and she doesn’t put up with rumours about this or that remedy. She wants the hard science. She couldn’t believe that this would help her cough, because she was unaware of any congestion or post nasal drip. Rinsing the sinuses shouldn’t help as far as she could see. However I have noticed when I am recovering from allergies and illnesses that sinus congestion dries up, but causes a lot of irritation. Sometimes even a very sore throat, laryngitis, or a lingering cough.

I was rooming with a dancer named Sam for work on a show in New York. Cold and flu season. Sam had a bad cold, and the cough was not only bad, but was keeping her awake. She didn’t really want me to try to pour salt water in her nose (I didn’t have a bottle handy, so I was figuring out how to use a paper cup). But she did get some relief for her cough by gargling with warm salt water (I did have salt with me). A few days later she recounted our salt water story to her mother. Her mother, in a rich Long Island accent had said, “Well, that girl knows what she is talking about! You should listen to her!”

BOOKMARK
Share on Facebook Add to your StumbleUpon Add to Reddit Digg it Add to Technorati Favorites
Tags: , , , ,
Posted in Food Cures, Remedies |


5 Responses to “Beyond the Neti”

  1. By Adam on Apr 2, 2008 | Reply

    your remedy worked really well. it felt really good every time i did it, and i recovered from a pretty harsh headcold in a matter of just a few days.i’m going to try to do it as a preventative measure from now on.

    that is a very cool picture by the way.

  2. By Suzanne Ahmed Leonora on Apr 4, 2008 | Reply

    This is all good. I’m dealing with recurrent sinusitis, deviated septum, and CPAP machine blowing air past my delicate mucus membranes all night. I can’t use a Neti pot because it doesn’t get the salt water past my deviated septum. I use two other treatments that I like very much.
    The first is a nose/sinus rinse system I got at Kaiser. It consists of a squeeze bottle, somewhere in the 12-16 oz. range, and a saline solution. You stand over the sink and squeeze the solution up into your nostrils, about half a bottle per nostril. You’re fairly vertical the whole time. A few minutes later the saline streams out of your nose and makes a mess; just be ready for it. It’s a very easy and very gentle and very effective system. The manufacturer is NeilMed in Santa Rosa, CA: http://www.neilmed.com http://www.sinusrinse.com http://www.nasalrinse.com They sell you the bottle and single-use packets of the powder that makes up the solution to put in the bottle. But I make my own: half-and-half table salt and baking soda, about a third or a quarter of a teaspoon per bottle. The salt and soda kill the bacteria that are buggin’ ya. Results are pretty quick. The system is so gentle that you can use it a lot. If I were really smart I would do it when I get home from work where I’m dealing with fabric all day (fibers up your nose, yay!). It’s also good for moisturizing dried-out nasal membranes, which will keep you well, because dry nasal membranes can’t do their #1 job, protecting you from airborne germs.
    The second method is Muslim ritual washing and prayer. The relevant physical action is snurfing just plain water up your nose, and bowing, standing, kneeling, bowing, standing, etc. If you snurf a little water five times a day, believe me, you gonna be clean. But I can’t say how well this system works without the religion; for me reciting the Koran is one of the things that clears my nose. Alhamdulillah.
    Don’t forget you can dilute the irritation of the post-nasal drip mucus– drink lots of unsweet (except honey) unmilky liquids, the hotter the better.
    My response to your mother, Stefanie, is that as a voice teacher I found that a lot of people are pretty unconscious about what’s happening in, e.g., their throats. Coughing masks some stuff, as do throat lozenges and cough syrups. Drip definitely can be happening even if you don’t have the means to observe it.

  3. By Stefanie on Apr 4, 2008 | Reply

    Thank you for posting this valuable info. Baking Soda - great idea.

  4. By Pennie on Apr 17, 2008 | Reply

    Hi Stefanie,

    What type/brand of salt do you use for this?

    Thanks so much,
    Pennie

  5. By Stefanie on Apr 17, 2008 | Reply

    Hello Pennie,
    You have caught me before my in depth research on this subject, so for now here is what I have heard and tried.
    Himalayan pink salt is supposed to be the purest salt available.
    A more affordable option is Real Salt finely ground salt powder which dissolves easily. I have also used the regular Real Salt with no problems. It can be found at health food stores and Whole Foods.

    Let me know how it goes!

Post a Comment


Links to Site