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HERBAL MEDICINE
History
- Herbal Medicine is the oldest form of
medicine known to mankind and herbs have played an important part in our
development. More
than 2,000 years ago, Hippocrates wrote extensively about herbal medicine
and healing. Dioscordies, a Greek
surgeon in Nero’s army (54 - 68 AD),
described more than 600 plants in his extensive De Materia Medica.
It was the mainstay of many early
civilizations
and still the most widely practiced form of medicine in the world today.
Currently, approximately 25%
of all prescription drugs are derived from trees,
shrubs or herbs. The World Health Organization estimates that 4 billion
people, 80% of the world’s population, presently use herbal medicines for
some aspect of their primary health care.
The essential difference between herbalism
and conventional medicine is that in herbal medicine extracts from the
whole plant are used; while in conventional medicine, the most active constituent
is extracted from the plant and then synthesized in the laboratory to make
a "drug."
Digitalis is a powerful drug extracted
from the leaves of foxglove herb - The discovery
of the cardioactive properties of foxglove (Digitalis purpurea
Linnaeus) was perhaps one
of the most important steps toward modern
medicine. In the 1780s, William Withering
(1741-1799) came to understand the
correlation between heart function and health. Withering didn't know why
foxglove worked but he knew when the heart beat stronger, fluid retention
(edema) decreased and his patients got better.
Unfortunately, the cardioactive
properties of foxglove varied from plant to plant; even
the stage of the plant's life made a difference in the quantity of the
drug present. Dosages were an educated guess. Withering almost
killed a patient with Digitalis leaf and his reputation often
suffered, due to the unpredictability of side-effects. Not until the
mid-1800s would chemists begin extracting and separating the cardioactive
glycosides. Almost another hundred years would pass before all the
compounds were elucidated, dosages computed and pure, standardized
digitalis-extract began saving
more lives than it ended.
Morphine and Codeine are derived from
the opium poppy.
Scholars believe that man first discovered the opium poppy growing wild in
mountains bordering the eastern Mediterranean sometime in the Neolithic
Age. It was known to Hippocrates in Greece and in Roman times to the great
physician Galen. Although physicians had used various forms of opium for
three or four thousand years, it was not until 1805 that medical science
finally extracted pure morphine from raw opium. Orally taken, morphine
soon became an important medical anesthetic. It was not until 1858 that
two American doctors first experimented with the use of the hypodermic
needle to inject morphine directly into the bloodstream. These discoveries
were important medical breakthroughs, and they greatly improved the
quality of medical treatment in the nineteenth century.
Cancer
Prevention and Herbs – The
use of an ancient herbal remedy for lung cancer prevention is now being
studied at the BC Cancer Agency in Vancouver. Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer
death in men and women in Canada and the U.S. More people die each year
from lung cancer than from breast, colon, and prostate cancers combined.
The Lung Health Study at BCCA, headed by Dr.
Stephen Lam, is testing the most recent in a series of chemopreventive
agents aimed at reducing the amount of pre-cancerous cells in the lungs of
smokers and ex-smokers. The agent being studied, ACAPHA, is a combination
of six herbs and has
been used for disease prevention in China for centuries. In earlier studies in China, ACAPHA has been shown
to reduce the risk of esophageal cancer by 40 to 50 percent. A preliminary
open study at BCCA also showed promising results in preventing the
development and progression of
pre-cancerous lesions in the lung.
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Osteoarthritis - Several studies have
found that taking devil's claw (an
herb used for |
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thousands of years by the
Khoisan peoples of the Kalahari Desert) can substantially reduce pain
and improves physical functioning in people with osteoarthritis. In a
large, well-designed 4-month study including 122 people with knee and
hip osteoarthritis, devil's claw root powder reduced pain and improved
functional ability as effectively as standard doses of a leading
medication for osteoarthritis. Additionally, those who received
devil's claw experienced fewer side effects and required fewer
pain-reducing medications throughout the study.
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devil's claw root |
Inflammation
- Goldenseal
is an herb that was introduced to the early American settlers by the
Cherokee Indians for its antiseptic wound-healing properties. Goldenseal
Root is extracted from the dried roots (rhizome) of the small forest plant
Hydrastis canadensis. It can also be used for its soothing action on
inflamed mucous membranes. Goldenseal's major healing compounds are
thought to be alkaloid compounds called hydrastine and berberine. The
latter has been more widely researched; studies have shown that it can
kill microbes, reduce inflammation and possibly stimulate immunity.
Herbal Side
Effects - Herbal
remedies are generally less likely to cause unpleasant
side effects than orthodox
drugs. Medicinal plants can contain a variety of phytochemicals as well as minerals, vitamins and trace elements. Some
of these are pharmacologically active and can exert a
therapeutic
action on the body. However, it should be borne in mind that
plant remedies are very powerful and can be dangerous, if prescribed
dosage is exceeded. Herbal remedies should not be taken
alongside conventional drugs or in pregnancy without consulting your doctor. If
you are scheduled for surgery, stopping herbal supplements for a time
prior to surgery is recommended.
Potency
and purity - The efficacy of botanical extracts in
Western medicine is gaining increasing recognition. However, how an herb
or botanical is harvested, how it is processed and when and if it is
tested for purity can make a major difference in the quality and
effectiveness of a product. Unlike manufacturers of pharmaceuticals, U.S.
supplement producers have no set national guidelines to follow. Supplement
quality is the responsibility of manufacturers and comes down to purity
of ingredients. The recent growth of herbal and botanical products
contributes to this problem, as manufacturers' level of experience may
vary greatly.
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Sources: |
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1. American Botanical
Council |
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2.
Medline Health Information |
Vision & Health Newsletter courtesy of:
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Dr. Philip Smith & Associates
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1855 1st Ave #100 San Diego, CA 92101
619-297-4331 |
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