Salt chambers

Salt chambers, projecting, build, building

walls with belighted salt panels

Salt caves

Salt caves, making, projecting

walls with salt crystal lumps

Salt caverns

Salt caverns, building, build

walls with white salt blocks

Salt saunas

Salt panels for saunas, salt saunas, making

New! Salt panels for any kind of saunas

Krysztalowy Swiat Wieliczka - About Us

Wishing to meet the needs of contemporary people, our company presents the Crystal World of Health. These are specially prepared wall panels that make use of the natural properties of salt crystals. They create a specific microclimate, close to sea or mountain conditions, which has a significant effect on our health and well-being.The main source of energy, essential for the human system to function properly, is the energy taken in directly from the natural surroundings . The regenerating and neutralising properties of salt have been known to people for a long time. The air around us contains a large number of positively charged particles (called positive ions), and negative ones (called negative ions).

According to contemporary knowledge, deficiency of negative ions has a detrimental effect on our health. A source of these natural, beneficial particles are also the panels we manufacture; they enable taking advantage of the properties of the salt lumps, and thus create very positive conditions in our surroundings. Each panel is a unique piece of handwork, and an inexhaustible source of energy contributing to the proper functioning of the human system. Through their beneficial ionising action and energetic effects of colour, the salt panels provide a positive effect on our health and mental well-being and for this eason they should be found in every household.

Our firm acts on market from 1999 year. We execute orders on highest level, assuring our clients fast, proficient, clean and forward installment. We offer checked equipment, for which we own all spare parts. We offer fulltime service (during guarantee and after), as well as constant service attendance on wish of client.

From life of the company

Opening first in the world of restaurant in crystal salt chamber, Cracow 2005.

Inventive person and chairman of company Kryształowy Świat, Grzegorz Pajdak, was the investor. They were on solemnity of opening between other: Minister of foreign affairs of Slovakia, world fame opera singer Peter Dvorsky, ambassador of Czech Republic, general consul of Slovakia, speaker of Sejm Marek Borowski, board of management Wieliczka Salt Mine and other.

The restaurant in crystal chamber

crystal salt chambers

salt cavern

salt

Salt caverns

rock salt

Salt cave

Krysztalowy Swiat

salt lamps

Kryształowa Komnata Solna firmy Kryształowy ¦wiat w Muzeum w Kopalni Soli w Wieliczce.

Museum in Salt Mine

salt mine

company of salt

salt plates

salt panels

crystal chambers



Press about us:

"telegraph.co.uk"

salt chamber

"Gazeta Krakowska"

Salt caves

"Newsweek"

salt chamber

salt saunas

"Doradca Hotelarza"

Asthma

Asthma is a chronic disease of the respiratory system in which the airway occasionally constricts, becomes inflamed, and is lined with excessive amounts of mucus, often in response to one or more triggers. These episodes may be triggered by such things as exposure to an environmental stimulant (or allergen), cold air, warm air, moist air, exercise or exertion, or emotional stress. In children, the most common triggers are viral illnesses such as those that cause the common cold. This airway narrowing causes symptoms such as wheezing, shortness of breath, chest tightness, and coughing. The airway constriction responds to bronchodilators. Between episodes, most patients feel well but can have mild symptoms and they may remain short of breath after exercise for longer periods of time than the unaffected individual.

The symptoms of asthma, which can range from mild to life threatening, can usually be controlled with a combination of drugs and environmental changes.
Public attention in the developed world has recently focused on asthma because of its rapidly increasing prevalence, affecting up to one in four urban children.
History
The word 'asthma' is derived from the Greek aazein, meaning "sharp breath." The word first appears in Homer's Iliad; Hippocrates was the first to use it in reference to the medical condition, in 450 BC. Hippocrates thought that the spasms associated with asthma were more likely to occur in tailors, anglers, and metalworkers. Six centuries later, Galen wrote much about asthma, noting that it was caused by partial or complete bronchial obstruction. In 1190 AD, Moses Maimonides, an influential medieval rabbi, philosopher, and physician, wrote a treatise on asthma, describing its prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. In the 17th century, Bernardino Ramazzini noted a connection between asthma and organic dust. The use of bronchodilators started in 1901, but it was not until the 1960s that the inflammatory component of asthma was recognized, and anti-inflammatory medications were added to the regimens.
Signs and symptoms
In some individuals asthma is characterized by chronic respiratory impairment. In others it is an intermittent illness marked by episodic symptoms that may result from a number of triggering events, including upper respiratory infection, stress, airborne allergens, air pollutants (such as smoke or traffic fumes), or exercise. An acute exacerbation of asthma is referred to as an asthma attack. The clinical hallmarks of an attack are shortness of breath (dyspnea) and either wheezing or stridor. Although the former is "often regarded as the sine qua non of asthma," some patients present primarily with coughing, and in the late stages of an attack, air motion may be so impaired that no wheezing may be heard. When present the cough may sometimes produce clear sputum. The onset may be sudden, with a sense of constriction in the chest, breathing becomes difficult, and wheezing occurs (primarily upon expiration, but can be in both respiratory phases).
Signs of an asthmatic episode include wheezing, rapid breathing (tachypnea), prolonged expiration, a rapid heart rate (tachycardia), rhonchous lung sounds (audible through a stethoscope), and over-inflation of the chest. During a serious asthma attack, the accessory muscles of respiration (sternocleidomastoid and scalene muscles of the neck) may be used, shown as in-drawing of tissues between the ribs and above the sternum and clavicles, and the presence of a paradoxical pulse (a pulse that is weaker during inhalation and stronger during exhalation). During very severe attacks, an asthma sufferer can turn blue from lack of oxygen, and can experience chest pain or even loss of consciousness. Just before loss of consciousness, there is a chance that the patient will feel numbness in the limbs and palms may start to sweat. Feet may become icy cold. Severe asthma attacks, which may not be responsive to standard treatments (status asthmaticus), are life-threatening and may lead to respiratory arrest and death. Despite the severity of symptoms during an asthmatic episode, between attacks an asthmatic may show few signs of the disease.
Source: www.en.wikipedia.org

31.07.2007. 11:04