I have a history of beriberi for several years, and I have little effect after drug treatment. I heard that tender willow leaves can be used to treat beriberi. I tried a handful of tender willow leaves and boiled them in water, and then washed my feet. It didn't work very well several times, and now I have also treated beriberi.
This method tells several friends who have beriberi that they have also relieved their pain after using it. If only the toe seam is ulcerated, tender willow leaves can be rubbed into small pills, sandwiched between the toes, and sandwiched at night (socks can be put on), which will take effect the next day.
White sugar can cure beriberi.
Soak your feet in warm water and wash them. Take a little sugar and rub them repeatedly in the part with beriberi. Wash them after rubbing, or don't wash them.
Once every two or three days, after three times, patients with mild beriberi can generally recover, especially for toe beriberi.
Treating beriberi with pepper salt water
A friend suffered from beriberi for many years. Last year, he was introduced by a friend and cured after trial.
Specific method: Add 0/0g of Zanthoxylum bungeanum/kloc-0 and 20g of salt, add them into water and cook them slightly. When the temperature does not burn your feet, you can soak and wash them for 20 minutes every night, and you can recover after a week of continuous soaking and washing. Used pepper salt water can be used continuously if it is heated the next day. Use with caution in patients with ulcer.
Leek can cure beriberi.
A netizen's feet itch all the year round, and the toes often fester, which is ineffective after long-term treatment.
On the one hand, half a catty of fresh leek is washed, cut into pieces, put in a basin and poured into boiling water. When it is cooled to the feet, soak your feet for half an hour, and the amount of water should not exceed the foot surface, so you can rub it with your feet at the same time. Wash it again after a week, and the effect is very good.