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Hygiène nasale - Prévention active
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Où acheter Physiomer 
?????
Grèce - Avril 2009
Annonce presse publiée lors du lancement du Mouche Bébé PHYSIOMER en Grèce.
Türkör
République Tchéque - Mars 2009
Article presse sur Physiomer Décongestionnant.
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Presse coréenne
Corée du Sud - Février 2009
Campagne presse à l'occasion du lancement de PHYSIOMER Enfant en Corée du Sud.
ACTA
Italie - Octobre 2008
Annonce presse publiée dans le Journal Italien Officiel de la Société d'Otorhinolaryngologie.
The New York Times
USA - 22 janvier 2008
Nostrums: Seawater seems to Beat Medicine in Fighting Colds by Nicholas Bakalar
There is no cure for the common cold, but researchers might have found a safe and simple way to reduce a child's symptoms and the chance of recurrence: wash out the nose with seawater.

In a study published Monday in The Archives of Otolaryngology: Head and Neck Surgery, scientists assigned 289 cold or flu patients ages 6 to 10 to be given a nasal wash three times a day with water from the Atlantic Ocean that had been commercially processed but retained seawater's trace elements and minerals.

As comparison, a group of 101 children used ordinary over-the-counter cough and cold medicines. Their symptoms were tracked over three months.

Patients on the saline treatment used fewer over-the-counter medicines, had fewer breathing problems and other cold symptoms, and reported fewer illnesses and school absences. The differences were statistically highly significant.

The authors acknowledge that the study was not blind and that the results depended in part on self-reporting by patients. The work was financed by Goemar Laboratoires, a French manufacturer of a saline solution based on seawater.

“It makes sense to clean the cavity where the microbes that might worsen the infection are present,” said Dr. Jana Skoupá, a co-author of the study, who works for a company that provides information to the pharmaceutical industry. “That's what the seawater does, and it's the minerals and trace elements in the seawater that help to restore the mucus lining of the nose.”
HealthDay News
USA - 21 janvier 2008
Saline Nasal Wash Helps Kids Fight Colds, Flu by Amanda Gardner
Rinsing with a special saline nasal wash made from Atlantic seawater improves symptoms in children with colds and flu, and may prevent recurrence of these infections, a new study claims.

We brush our teeth every day, however, we do not pay attention to our noses -- a potential gate for infection, said study co-author Dr. Jana Skoupa, of Pharma Projects in Prague, Czech Republic. Nasal wash should be used, based on our findings, immediately.

The study seems to confirm what many doctors already know.

We have recommended this for years. This study gives some objective evidence, said Dr. Jonathan Field, emeritus director of the pediatric allergy and asthma clinic at New York University/Bellevue Medical Center in New York City.

An alternative to the many cough and cold medications that line drugstore shelves comes not a moment too soon.

Just last week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued an advisory stating that over-the-counter cough and cold medicines should not be given to infants and children under the age of 2. The agency has not come to a final decision on the use of such products in children aged 2 to 11.

This is very promising, but there need to be more studies to confirm what the authors have found, Dr. Tom DeWitt, director of general pediatrics at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. It is a suggestion that it may be an alternative to cold preparations that the FDA [recently issued a public health advisory about].

The saline technique could provide a more holistic alternative to such over-the-counter medications, and has the added advantage of having little downside and not contributing to the growing problem of antibiotic resistance.

The study, published in the January issue of the Archives of Otolaryngology-Head Neck Surgery, involved about 400 children aged 6 to 10 with colds or the flu. The children were randomly assigned to receive either standard medication plus the nasal wash, or standard medication alone.

The nasal wash formula was given six times a day for eight weeks, then three times a day for the next four weeks.

By the second visit, patients receiving the nasal wash had less stuffy and runny noses. By eight weeks, those in this group had less severe sore throats, coughs, nasal obstructions and secretions.

Also, after week eight, only 9 percent of children in the saline group were using fever-reducing drugs, compared with 33 percent in the control group only 5 percent were using decongestants, versus 47 percent in the control group and only 6 percent of saline recipients were using antibiotics, compared with 21 percent in the control group. Children using the nasal wash also had shorter illnesses and fewer missed school days.

Compliance, however, may become an issue outside the context of a clinical study. They did it six times a day, DeWitt pointed out. How many parents are going to do that six times a day?

The trial was funded by French company Goemar Laboratoires, which makes the product, Physiomer, that used in the study.

As far as I know, Physiomer is not available in the U.S. It is the leading brand in Europe, Skoupa said. The manufacturing process uses electro-dialysis (not simple dilution of seawater) to achieve isotonicity. This results in preserving the majority of minerals and trace elements in similar concentrations to seawater from the Atlantic Ocean.

An isotonic solution has the same concentration of salt as the human body.

I would not just simply expect a normal saline solution to be the same thing, DeWitt said.

More information

The Medical College of Wisconsin has more on respiratory infections in children.

SOURCES: Jana Skoupa, M.D., Pharma Projects, Prague, Czech Republic Jonathan Field, M.D., emeritus director, pediatric allergy and asthma clinic, New York University/Bellevue Medical Center, New York City Tom DeWitt, M.D., director, general pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center January 2008 Archives of Otolaryngology-Head Neck Surgery

Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.attention to our noses -- a potential gate for infection, said study co-author Dr. Jana Skoupa, of Pharma Projects in Prague, Czech Republic. Nasal wash should be used, based on our findings, immediately.

The study seems to confirm what many doctors already know.

We have recommended this for years. This study gives some objective evidence, said Dr. Jonathan Field, emeritus director of the pediatric allergy and asthma clinic at New York University/Bellevue Medical Center in New York City.

An alternative to the many cough and cold medications that line drugstore shelves comes not a moment too soon.

Just last week, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued an advisory stating that over-the-counter cough and cold medicines should not be given to infants and children under the age of 2. The agency has not come to a final decision on the use of such products in children aged 2 to 11.

This is very promising, but there need to be more studies to confirm what the authors have found, Dr. Tom DeWitt, director of general pediatrics at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. It is a suggestion that it may be an alternative to cold preparations that the FDA [recently issued a public health advisory about].

The saline technique could provide a more holistic alternative to such over-the-counter medications, and has the added advantage of having little downside and not contributing to the growing problem of antibiotic resistance.

The study, published in the January issue of the Archives of Otolaryngology-Head Neck Surgery, involved about 400 children aged 6 to 10 with colds or the flu. The children were randomly assigned to receive either standard medication plus the nasal wash, or standard medication alone.

The nasal wash formula was given six times a day for eight weeks, then three times a day for the next four weeks.

By the second visit, patients receiving the nasal wash had less stuffy and runny noses. By eight weeks, those in this group had less severe sore throats, coughs, nasal obstructions and secretions.

Also, after week eight, only 9 percent of children in the saline group were using fever-reducing drugs, compared with 33 percent in the control group only 5 percent were using decongestants, versus 47 percent in the control group and only 6 percent of saline recipients were using antibiotics, compared with 21 percent in the control group. Children using the nasal wash also had shorter illnesses and fewer missed school days.

Compliance, however, may become an issue outside the context of a clinical study. They did it six times a day, DeWitt pointed out. How many parents are going to do that six times a day?

The trial was funded by French company Goemar Laboratoires, which makes the product, Physiomer, that used in the study.

As far as I know, Physiomer is not available in the U.S. It is the leading brand in Europe, Skoupa said. The manufacturing process uses electro-dialysis (not simple dilution of seawater) to achieve isotonicity. This results in preserving the majority of minerals and trace elements in similar concentrations to seawater from the Atlantic Ocean.

An isotonic solution has the same concentration of salt as the human body.

I would not just simply expect a normal saline solution to be the same thing, DeWitt said.

More information

The Medical College of Wisconsin has more on respiratory infections in children.

SOURCES: Jana Skoupa, M.D., Pharma Projects, Prague, Czech Republic Jonathan Field, M.D., emeritus director, pediatric allergy and asthma clinic, New York University/Bellevue Medical Center, New York City Tom DeWitt, M.D., director, general pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center January 2008 Archives of Otolaryngology-Head Neck Surgery

Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
BIMBISANI E BELLI
Italie - Octobre 2006
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IO E IL MIO BAMBINO
Italie - Octobre 2006
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Femme Actuelle
France - Octobre 2005
Être vigilant dès le mois d'octobre
L'épidémie de bronchiolite est récurrente et saisonnière. Les parents doivent être attentifs d'octobre à avril, surtout si leur bébé pèse moins de 6 kg. On ne peut jouer que sur la prévention, au moment de l'épidémie, par exemple se laver les mains avant de s'occuper de bébé, et prendre l'habitude de lui laver le nez.
Quest
Pays-Bas - Automne 2005
Le lavage nasal avec Physiomer
Physiomer préserve les 80 minéraux et éléments traces naturellement présents dans l'eau de mer. Physiomer est le soin idéal pour rétablir la respiration notamment en cas de sinusite aigue, rhinite allergique et d'allergies. Physiomer aide à limiter le recours aux corticoïdes et aux spécialités médicamenteuses
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Žmonės
Lituanie - Avril 2006
Leták
République Tchèque - Avril 2006
δελτίο ΦΑΡΜΑΚΟΠΟΙΩΝ
Grèce - Mars 2006
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