The Pharmacy In The Forest
Herbal Remedies
As you walk down the aisles of your local drugstore seeing
the array of brightly colored bottles and boxes whose
contents are designed to treat an almost endless variety of
ailments, could you ever imagine them as flowers once
growing on a forest floor or as bark cut from one of its
trees? Is there even a remote relationship between the life
of the woods and the bottles on the shelf?
The nationally known author and environmental scientist G.
Tyler Miller tells us that in America one of every four
drugs sold either over-the-counter or by prescription has
its origin in plant life. From the chemicals developed by
nature have actually come 25 percent of all our
medications. In some nations the percentage is as high as
50. There is a pharmacy in the forest.
The history of the relationship between products from
living plants and healing medications goes back to the very
beginnings of medicine itself. There are museum records of
prescriptions dating back to Egypt in 3700 B.C. Their work
was followed by the Chinese, and later, Greek and Roman
medicine came into its own. By 600 A.D. the Arab world had
developed a health care system while scientific medicine
and pharmacy began to flourish in Europe in the eighth
century.
The American experience is deeply rooted in the lore of
Native Americans. Indian nations from coast to coast
developed a considerable volume of knowledge of natu ral
substances and used them with great success in treating
their sick. The first official compendium (called a
Pharmacopeia) was published in 1778, just two years
following the American Revolution. By 1787, an American
physician, Dr. Schoepf, had published his Materia Medica
Americana, listing not only European remedies, but also
dozens of drugs coming from our indigenous plants.
Information regarding their preparation and uses had come
largely from the accumulated knowledge of native American
medicine men.
Unfortunately the relationship between these natural
products and viable healing drugs was to suffer an image
problem when those motivated by quick profit got into the
act. The many Western movies with their portrayal of the
traveling medicine show and its list of "cures for what
ails you" wasn't a fabrication but an actual and dominant
part of the medical scene. Lost in the vaudeville shuffle
of questionable oils and tinctures was the fact that
hundreds of pharmaceutical manufactures and dedicated
physicians continued to produce and dispense medications
which served to improve the health of our people. Many of
these medications came from plant sources and were very
effective.
What follows are nine of my favorite natural remedies with
a history of usage that may go back hundreds, or even
thousands, of years. Unfortunately, we've largely distanced
ourselves from many of them as they found their way onto
drugstore shelves as active ingredients of highly
sophisticated (and very often artificially expensive)
medicines. Yet the plants and the cures are ours to grow.
Yarrow
One quite versatile and commonly encountered wound healer
is the yarrow plant, botanically know as Achillea
millefollium. Belonging to the Composite family, it carries
such common names as bloodwart, milfoil, sanguinary,
stanchgrass, and thousand-leaf. Yarrow is native to Europe,
but has been naturalized in most temperate regions of the
United States, and can be found in fields, roadsides, and
other open places. Its usage in medicine goes back to the
ancient Greeks, who employed it in the treatment of cuts,
wounds, burns, and bruises. Its genus name, Achillea,
refers to the hero Achilles in Homer's Iliad, who is said
to have used it on his soldiers's wounds. Yarrow was also
used in the Middle Ages and appears in many English herbal
notebooks of that day. The Navajo of the United States have
also employed it for healing purposes.
You can prepare a poultice of yarrow by mixing ground-up
yarrow tips in onequarter cup hot water with a few
teaspoons each of glycerin, boric acid, and oil of
wintergreen. This results in a soft semiliquid that, when
applied to an infected area, tends to draw the infectious
material from diseased tissues because of its absorptive
properties.
Pumpkin
In autumn across a large part of North America, cultivated
pumpkins are seen in fields, heralding the start of fall.
The pumpkin belongs to the gourd family and is a cousin of
squashes and zucchinis.
When the first explorers arrived in America, they noticed
the pumpkins in the cultivated corn fields of the Indians
who had long since discovered their medicinal value.
Although native to tropical America, the pumpkin has been
cultivated almost everywhere in the world.
According to the American Pharmaceutical Association,
pumpkin seeds are a proven anthelmintic, which is a
substance that kills intestinal worms and expels them from
the body. An excellent preparation that is not only
excellent for tapeworms but also as a diuretic promoting
regular passage of urine can be made by grinding up several
ounces of pumpkin seeds and placing them in a small cup of
corn syrup, which is flavored with oil of cinnamon.
Laxatives are prominent on grocery and drugstore shelves,
but many of them treat the bowels harshly. The seeds of the
psyllium plant are the natural way to handle this problem.
Psyllium, also known as fleaseed, fleawort, and plantain,
is native to southern Europe, North Africa, and western
Asia. and is also cultivated in North America. It is an
annual herb growing up to 15 inches tall with narrow
lance-shaped leaves growing in opposite pairs and whorls of
three to six. Its habitat is usually poor soils and waste
places in full sun.
Psyllium has long been used as an intestinal lubricant and
laxative. The best way of making use of this herbal
medicine is to soak an ounce of seeds in water for a couple
of hours before taking. The gum of the seeds soaks up the
water and provides both bulk and softness to the bowels,
working as a nature-based alternative to the harshness of
many commercial preparations.
Tea for Stomach Irritation
Heartburn and gastritis (inflammation of the gastric
mucosa), both of which are caused by excess stomach acid,
are almost always chronically recurring disorders. Three to
five cups of this tea daily will bring gradual but
effective relief. It is best to space out the drinking of
this tea over the whole day.
8 parts angelica root
4 parts chamomile flowers
4 parts balm leaves
4 parts peppermint leaves
2 parts caraway seed
2 parts fennel seed
1 part wormwood
Privet
Who of us hasn't experienced a sore throat that doesn't
seem to want to go away? We try over-the-counter remedies
that appear somewhat ineffective when we could be tapping
into nature's drugstore for a time-tested source of relief.
One of these sources is the privet, a plant transported to
North America for cultivation as a hedge and readily
available at most nurseries. Its abundant leaves form a
thick screen and if the plant is allowed to grow it can,
like psyllium, reach 15 feet in height.
The privet belongs to the olive family and grows well from
the Canadian border south to Pennsylvania and North
Carolina. It has lance-shaped-to-elliptical leaves which
are smooth and dark green and grow in opposite pairs.
Numerous small white flowers appear during the summer,
appearing in terminal clusters, followed by the development
of black berries.
The privet has a solid reputation as a medicinal plant,
particularly as a gargle for sore throat. To prepare this
herbal medicine, simply boil a cup of ground privet leaves
in a pan of water, then filter through a cloth and when the
extract has cooled down, use as a throat gargle.
Meadowsweet
Every time you reach for an aspirin you owe a debt to the
plant called mead owsweet, for it was this herb from which
salicylic acid was first obtained. Salicylates found in the
flowers of the meadowsweet are the basis of its
longstanding reputation as a remedy for flu, rheumatism,
arthritis, and fevers.
The herb grows from Canada south to West Virginia and east
to Ohio. It is a stout perennial growing up to six feet
tall with a creeping underground stem (rhizome) with fleshy
nodules. The leaves are pinnate with oval-toothed green
leaflets and prominent veins below. It produces tiny,
fragrant, cream-white-petaled flowers during summer.
Don't pay the drugstore for synthetic chemical remedies
when you can prepare a very effective extraction of the
flowers by boiling a cup of them in a small pan of water,
straining off the extract, and drinking it for flu
symptoms. Just another example of using nature's pharmacy
in exchange for high-priced flu remedies sold in stores.
Goldenseal
Sometimes when we suffer a cut it seems to happen at the
most inopportune time. While various commercial
preparations are available, the Cherokee Indians have long
valued the goldenseal plant for its ability to stop
bleeding and even hemorrhaging. Few wildflowers were as
important to the American Indians in general as the
versatile goldenseal, not only for its hemostatic
properties, but also as a dye and paint material.
Goldenseal belongs to the buttercup family and is also
known in different regions by other names such as eyeroot,
ground raspberry, Indian dye, yellow puccoon, and yellow
Indian paint. It is widespread in eastern United States,
although many of the natural sites have been exterminated
by commercial harvesting. It is a perennial herb with a
hairy stem 6-18 inches high. The blossoming stem bears two
alternate either five- or seven-lobed leaves. It displays a
greenish-white solitary flower in the spring which has no
petals and eventually develops into a mature red fruit that
looks like a small raspberry.
The next time you suffer a cut, have some ground
golden-seal ready to place on it. You can prepare it by
pulverizing the rhizome (underground stem) of a plant or
purchase it already in powder from a natural food store.
Nerve-Calming Tea
Valerian tea is rather neglected as a homemade remedy
because the roots smell so strong during preparation. The
flavor is also quite "singular," souse valerian in a
mixture with other pleasant-tasting herbs, as in the
following recipe:
8 parts valerian root
6 parts hops
3 parts peppermint leaves
3 parts hibiscus flowers
It is best to soak these herbs overnight in lukewarm water,
heat up to drinking temperature in the morning, and then
strain them off. The results are excellent. One of the most
remarkable things about valerian is that it is calming, yet
does not inhibit concentration and awareness. Can the same
be said of any chemical tranquilizer?
Valerian seems to totally fascinate and hypnotize cats, so
store it carefully if there are felines about the house.
Camphorated Oil
We are always searching for relief from cold symptoms
including the inflamed sinuses and clogged nasal passages
that usually accompany a cold. Old-time drugstores used to
carry a compound called "camphorated oil" which, when
applied to inflamed or clogged areas, gave almost immediate
relief. It has long disappeared from the shelves and
several young pharmacists whom I talked to never heard of
it.
Camphorated oil is a combination of two medicinal herbs,
camphor and cottonseed oil. The camphor tree is native to
eastern Asia and grows as tall as 100 feet. It is also
cultivated in the warm subtropical regions of the United
States. The aromatic leaves are harvested and the oil is
extracted and distilled into colorless camphor crystals
which are shipped all over the world. Some pharmacies still
carry small amounts of camphor for compounding. Cottonseed
oil, sometimes also called sweet oil, may be found in
natural food stores and at times in hardware stores.
To make your own super-decongestant, place about half an
ounce of camphor crystals in a Pyrex glass with a matching
lid. Add a cup of cottonseed oil and gently warm until all
camphor crystals have dissolved in the oil. Do not heat
beyond this point. Then cover the container with a lid and
allow the mixture to cool. You have compounded a very old
prescription which is still very effective.
Podophyllum and Benzoin
Warts on the skin can be extremely irritating and there are
numerous commercial preparations which may work with
varying degrees of success, though they'll cost you. One of
the best preparations for wart removal is also a mixture of
two natural sources: podophyllum and benzoin.
Podophyllum powder is obtained from the May apple, a
perennial herb 6-18 inches high usually found in patches in
wooded areas of the eastern United States. May apple is
sometimes called mandrake, devil's apple, hog apple,
umbrella plant, and wild lemon. It may be obtained front
herbal outlets or natural food stores, if you are unable to
locate any near you in nature c . Benzoin comes from a
large tree grrowing in the Far East. It was brought to
Europe in 1498 by the Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama,
who had obtained it from the peo ple in those regions.
Tincture of benzoin, which is an alcoholic solution, is a
yellow ish-brown fluid. Many drugstores carry it on their
shelves in two-ounce bottles.
To make an excellent wart remover, mix a teaspoon of
podophyllum which has been ground to powdered form in about
a quarter of an ounce of tincture of benzoin n and mix
thoroughly until the powder is dissolved. Apply to warts
and watch them disappear within a couple of days.
There are hundreds more natural remedies dies out there for
the growing and talking but it is very important to
remember that they are not a substitute for the advise and
care of your physician. Let them know what you are taking.
Make health care meeting of your two minds, not a personal
declaration of independence.
Dr. Dickson is a chemistry instructor m the nursing and
pre-pharmacy program Catawba Valley Community College in
Hickory, North Carolina.
BEATING THE BUM RAP
HERBAL REMEDIES STILL SUFFER FROM THE NEGATIVE IMAGE
CREATED BY TRAVELING SNAKE-OIL SALESMEN.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Cold and Flu Teas
Colds and flu are heralded by such symptoms as runny nose,
aching throat, hoarseness, coughing, back pain, aching
muscles, and general fatigue. In children particularly,
these conditions may be accompanied by earache or high
fever. There are many herbs that can strengthen the body's
immune system, several of which are included in the
following .
...for adults
6 parts ephedra herb
3 parts elder flowers
3 parts rose hips
2 parts willow bark
2 parts linden flowers
2 parts chamomile flowers
2 parts hawthorn leaves with flowers
...for children
4 parts linden flowers
4 parts mullein
4 parts elder flowers
4 parts rose hips
4 parts thyme
This second tea has an antiinflammatory effect and promotes
sweating, which is one of the classical means by which you
can prevent a cold from taking hold. Children love the
taste of this tea, especially when it is sweetened by a
little honey.
When you have just come down with bronchitis, you should
use anti-inflammatory herbs that discourage bacterial
growth as well as coat and protect inflamed mucous
membranes. A good cough tea mixture with this objective is
the following.
8 parts plantain leaves
8 parts coltsfoot flowers
2 parts marshmallow root
2 parts mallow
The herbal teas listed in both parts of our herbal special
feature section have been adapted from The Family Herbal
(Healing Arts Press, 1994, an imprint of Inner Traditions
International) by Barbara anti Peter Theiss.
Other Woodland Remedies of Note
0n the banks of streams, and now cultivated in yards, is
the witch hazel bush. It is of particular
interest because of the appearance of yellow flowers which
do not appear until October and November and remain until
temperatures become quite cold. Botanists call this bush
hamemelis, and its leaves and bark, long used by Indian
tribes, are distilled with diluted alcohol to produce the
popular astringent sold in drugstores and also used in
cosmetics called hamemelis water, or just simply witch
hazel.
While not being a native North American plant, the
aloe , with some 170 different species,
has become widely cultivated here and thereby a part of
both the garden and the woodlands scene. The dried juice of
the leaves was known to the ancients as far back as the
time of Alexander the Great. It continues to be used in
pharmacy today in two ways: first, as an ingredient in drug
mixtures designed to induce bowel movements and secondly,
as a healing agent used in various ointments applied to
burns and cuts.
A flowering plant native to Europe, but now found in
American woods, and particularly grandma's flower garden,
is the popular purple foxglove , known
botanically as Digitalis purpurea. From the dried flowers
of this plant have been isolated some powerful heart
medications often marketed under the general name of
Digoxin. The history of digitalis goes back to the tenth
century when the British physicians were using it to treat
cardiac irregularities. It remains a widely used drug to
this day.
One of the most common trees we encounter in our walk
through the forest is the elm, which grows over a wide
range of territory. The specific tree of pharmaceutical
value is the slippery elm , or Ulmus
fulva. For centuries American Indians used the bark for
preserving fatty substances from becoming rancid by
melting, for example, bear's fat with the bark and then
straining off the fat. The other use, however, is the one
that has continued to this day. A warm infusion of the bark
was discovered to relieve throat irritations. It is now
used either alone or as an ingredient of throat lozenges
which can be purchased over the counter in drug and grocery
stores.
Our next stop in our journey through the wild forest brings
us to the jimson or Jamestown weed, which
grows wild throughout the United States. The thornapple
species of the annual plant is called the Datura
strammonium, and from its dried leaves and flowering tops
is obtained the drug strammonium. It was first brought to
England from the East Indies where natives there were
smoking it for the relief of asthma symptoms. The fluid
extract of strammonium continues to be used in medicine as
a bronchial dilator for the relief of breathing problems
associated with asthma.
The final stop on this journey through the forest brings us
to the willow tree. This tree is one of
the original sources for what has become the most widely
used drug in the world-the aspirin tablet. For centuries
medicine men of native tribes recommended chewing the bark
of the Spirea ulmaria as an antidote for pain and fevers.
But it wasn't until the 19th century that a German chemist
discovered that its main ingredient, salicylic acid, was
indeed both an antipyretic (fever reducer) and an analgesic
(pain reliever). As a result of all this the compound
acetylsalicylic acid, or ASA to your nurse, or just plain
aspirin, has found its way to the shelves or virtually
every home medicine chest in America.