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"Shoe smells" help epilepsy

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Old 30th August 2008, 07:29 AM
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Default "Shoe smells" help epilepsy

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Scientific basis behind traditional practice of application of "shoe-smell" in controlling epileptic seizures in the eastern countries.
Jaseja H.
Clin Neurol Neurosurg. 2008 Jun;110(6):535-8.
Quote:
Epilepsy has been known for thousands of years and has been subjected to various forms of conventional and non-conventional therapies including a non-pharmacological conservative treatment known as aromatherapy, ever since. One commonly practiced form of aromatherapy that persists as an immediate first-aid measure even today in some parts of developing countries in the East is the application of "shoe-smell" during an epileptic attack. The questionable remedial role has intrigued neuro-scientists at least in these parts of the world. This brief paper attempts to provide an insight to the basis of persistence of this practice and to explore a possible scientific logic behind its unscientifically reported remedial effectiveness. The neurophysiology of olfactory stimulation from "shoe-smell" reveals a sound and scientific reasoning for its remedial efficacy in epilepsy; olfactory stimuli in this study have been found to possess significantly effective anti-epileptic influence which could have formed the basis for the use of application of "shoe-smell" in earlier times and also for its persistence even today in those parts of developing regions.
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