Nix Arthritis Aches NATURALLY
By James Duke, Ph.D.
This practice, called urtication - from nettle's botanical
name, Urtica dioica - dates back at least 2,000 years.
Although it's an odd-sounding practice, there's no escaping
the fact that it's been around so long precisely because it
helps so many people.
Our banjo player kept a plant in his kitchen so he could
self-urticate when his arthritis flared up. The guitar
player's mother-in-law was unable to write because of
arthritis in her hands, but the sting of the nettle
improved that. The fiddle player's mother soon had stinging
nettle taking over her garden and said her arthritis was
much improved.
Just so you don't think that urtication is something only
crazy musicians indulge in, my former secretary at the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) kept a nettle plant in the
office. She would use the nettle to discreetly sting
herself when arthritis stiffened her fingers. On a
before-and-after photocopied image of her hand, you could
see how the swelling went down.
Urtication often provides considerable relief, sometimes
very quickly. I've seen arthritic swelling subside within
minutes after the stings were administered.
THE CASE FOR THE STING
I'm open to the notion that stinging nettle's
anti-arthritis action is based on distraction, meaning the
irritation of the sting simply takes people's minds off
their arthritis pain. That's an explanation you might hear
from medical doctors. But as a botanist, I think what's
going on is more chemical than psychological.
The tiny stingers of the nettle plant provide
microinjections of several chemicals responsible for the
stinging sensation the plant causes. One M.D. told me many
of these chemicals might also trigger anti-inflammation
action that would help relieve arthritis. The sting injects
a histaminic substance and the body mounts an
antihistaminic reaction, some of which goes to the sting,
some to the other inflammation.
On every continent where it grows, stinging nettle has
developed a reputation as a treatment for arthritis. I
don't think that's a coincidence. If you'd like to give
urtication a try, you shouldn't have much problem locating
a plant. It's a common weed throughout most of the United
States. If you're not sure how to identify it, someone who
works at a plant nursery or your local county agricultural
extension agent should be able to help.
The Rheumatoid Disease Foundation suggests that three
milligrams of boron, taken daily, may be helpful in
treating osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis
JOINTS IN TROUBLE
Arthritis literally means "joint inflammation." According
to the Arthritis Foundation, there are more that 100
different diseases that produce joint pain and inflammation
- everything from the flu to certain cancers. But when
people say "arthritis," they usually mean osteoarthritis.
Also known as degenerative joint disease, osteoarthritis is
the most prevalent of more than a dozen different kinds of
arthritis. Some 16 million Americans have it. The hips,
knees, spine and tiny joints of the hands and feet are most
frequently affected. Osteoarthritis usually develops
gradually, beginning with minor aches that eventually lead
to extended pain, stiffness, swelling and limited range of
motion. Symptoms sometimes, but not always, subside with
gentle physical activity.
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA), another form of arthritis, has a
nasty reputation because it can cause crippling joint
deformity. But many of the 2.1 million Americans with RA -
approximately 75 percent of whom are women - have milder,
noncrippling cases that flare up and subside mysteriously.
Frequently both hands are affected, but RA can strike other
joints, as well. In addition to joint pain, swelling and
warmth, possible symptoms include fatigue, fever, loss of
appetite, enlarged lymph nodes, lumps under the skin and
muscle stiffness after sleep or inactivity. Stiffness
usually subsides with moderate activity.
GREEN PHARMACY FOR ARTHRITIS
Along with stinging nettle, there are a number of other
herbs that can help.
Ginger (Zingiber officinale), and
turmeric (Curcuma longo). I con sider
these the herbal alternative to the new drugs Celebrex and
Vioxx. In one study, Indian researchers gave three to seven
grams (1 1/2 to 3 1//2 teaspoons) of ginger a day to 18
people with osteoarthritis and 28 with rheumatoid
arthritis. More than 75 percent of those participating in
the study reported at least some relief from pain and
swelling. Even after more than two years of taking these
high doses of ginger, none of the people reported side
effects. Turmeric contains close chemical relatives of
compounds found in ginger, so I'm not surprised this herb
also has a major reputation as an arthritis treatment.
You can enjoy both herbs in a wide variety of spicy dishes,
as well as using them for teas.
Pineapple (Ananas Comosus). Some
intriguing research suggests bromelain, a chemical in
pineapple, helps prevent inflammation. For some time now,
athletic trainers have been recommending pineapple to
athletes to prevent and treat sports injuries. It's also a
good bet for people with arthritis. Bromelain can help the
body get rid immune antigen complex, compounds that are
implicated in some arthritis conditions. It also helps
digest fibrin, another compound suspected of being involved
in some types of arthritis. If you need an excuse to
indulge yourself with fresh, ripe pineapple, this is it.
Red Pepper (Capsicum, various species). Red pepper causes
some pain on the tongue but ironically interferes with pain
perception elsewhere around the body. The pain-relieving
chemical in red pepper, capsaicin, triggers the body to
release endorphins, nature's own opiates. Red pepper also
contains aspirin-like compounds known as salicylates.
You can make a tea by mixing red pepper into water, but it
would be a whole lot more pleasurable to have your red
pepper cooked in a variety of spicy dishes. For a quick
hit, try a splash of hot-pepper sauce in tomato juice. Just
biting into a hot pepper releases some of your own
painkillers into your body.
Compounds in red pepper can also help relieve arthritis
when you apply the herb to the skin. Researchers have
discovered you'll get significant pain relief if you apply
capsaicin cream directly to painful arthritic joints four
times daily. In one study of this treatment, the capsaicin
cream reduced RA pain by more than half. Osteoarthritis
pain was reduced by about one third.
Look for capsaicin in the ingredient list of
over-the-counter pain creams such as Zostrix and Capzasin-P
or ask your doctor for a prescription capsaicin product. If
you use capsaicin cream, be sure to wash your hands
thoroughly afterward: You don't want to get it in your eyes
or other tender places. Some people are quite sensitive to
this compound, so test it on a small area of skin to make
sure that it's OK for you to use. If it irritates your
skin, don't use it.
Stinging Nettle (Urtica dioica). Beyond
stinging painful joints, there's another method of using
this herb to treat arthritis: steaming the fresh leaves and
enjoying then as a vegetable. Although you have to wear
gloves to harvest the leaves, they lose their sting when
cooked.
The Rheumatoid Disease Foundation suggests that three
milligrams of boron daily may be helpful in treating both
os teo- and rheumatoid arthritis. An analysis of stinging
nettle provided by USDA scientists shows this herb contains
47 parts per million of the mineral boron, figured on a
dry-weight basis. That means a 100-gram serving of stinging
nettle - easily prepared by steaming several ounces of
young, tender leaves - could contain more than the
recommended amount of boron.
According to the Rheumatoid Disease Foundation, boron is
effective because it plays a role in helping bones retain
calcium. It also has a beneficial influence on the body's
hormonal system, and hor mones play a role in helping the
body maintain healthy bones and joints.
Dr. Duke's Arthritis Broth
To make this broth, begin with a couple of cups of water
and add red pepper, burdock, black pepper, celery seed,
dandelion, garlic, ginger, horseradish, juniper,
lemongrass, oregano, parsley, sarsaparilla, thyme,
turmeric, valerian, watercress, white mustard and willow
bark. Bring to a boil, then turn down the heat and simmer
for a few minutes.
I confess I have never made this broth in its entirety. I
just opportunistically seize any of these ingredients that
are near at hand. If you press me for a recipe, I'd say use
four dashes each of burdock, dandelion, parsley, turmeric
and watercress; two dashes of celery seed, garlic, ginger
and oregano; and one dash each of the others, as available.
If this is too spicy for you, alter the recipe to suit your
taste.
MultimintAntioxidant Arthritis
Tea
Rosemary and oregano are both antioxidant
mints. Add several more antioxidant herbs to these two, and
you get my Multimint Antioxidant Tea.The mints are basil,
bee balm, horehound, hyssop, lemon balm (also known as
melissa), marjoram, oregano, peppermint, rosemary, sage,
savory, spearmint and thyme. It makes sense to top it off
with a dash of ginger and turmeric. Many of these mints are
loaded with not one but several COX-2-inhibitors. Oregano
has more COX 2-inhibiting rosmarinic acid than rosemary
itself.
I checked my database to see if, in addition to their
antioxidant value, any of these herbs contain proven
anti-arthritis compounds. Sure enough, basil had five,
while marjoram, oregano and rosemary weighed in with a few
each. How much of each herb should you use to make this
tea? My teas are never the same; I use a little of this and
a little of that. To satisfy people who need recipes, I'll
say use two parts of the ingredients you like and one part
of those you find less appealing. Pour boiling water over
the herbs and let them steep for 10 to 20 minutes before
drinking.
Oregano (Origanum vulgare). Studies are
accumulating that the pizza herb, oregano, is a powerful
antioxidant. Like other antioxidants contained in fruits
and vegetables, the compounds in oregano may help prevent
the cell damage caused by free radicals - highly unstable
oxygen molecules that steal elec trons from other molecules
they encounter. Free radical reactions are probably
involved in inflammation, degenerative arthritis and the
aging process in general. And evidence is accumulating that
an tioxidants may help relieve osteo- and rheumatoid
arthritis.
In a test of nearly 100 plants in the mint family, of which
oregano is a member, the pizza herb was the one that had
the greatest total antioxidant activity. Research has shown
the antioxidant activity of oregano and other medicinal
mints is due in large part to rosmarinic acid, a compound
with antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant and
antiviral properties. Considering how highly it ranks for
this kind of protection, oregano is definitely worth adding
to your pizza, or any other food, if you have arthritis.
You could also try my Multimint Antioxidant Arthritis Tea
(see recipe above ).
Willow (Salix, various species),
garlic (Album sativum) and
licorice (Glycyrrhiza glabra). Willow bark
was the original herbal aspirin. It contains a chemical
called salicin, which Bayer eventually transformed into
little white tablets of acetylsalicylic acid, or aspirin.
Willow bark tea had pain-relieving and anti-inflammatory
effects similar to those of aspirin. But because the
irritation-causing ingredient in aspirin is diluted in tea,
you'll have less risk of stomach upset, ulcer and overdose
if you take the tea instead of the pills.
Still, because willow bark might upset your stomach, I've
included licorice in this formula. Not only does licorice
have antiinflammatory effects, it may also help treat any
gastrointestinal problems caused by the willow.
But the formula is not quite complete without garlic. While
long-term use or ingestion of large amounts of licorice can
raise some people's blood pressure and lead to other
problems (headache, lethargy, sodium and water retention,
excessive loss of potassium), garlic helps reduce blood
pressure. So here's the formula for a well-balanced
anti-arthritis tea: approximately three parts dried willow
bark, two parts dried licorice root and one part minced
garlic. Pour boiling water over the mixture and
steep for about 15 minutes. If you don't like the taste,
add lemon and/or honey, plus ginger and turmeric to taste.
When you're nibbling mixed ruts in company, don't apologize
for monopolizing the Brazil nuts.
Celery seed Since I wrote The Green
Pharmacy several years ago, I have not had a single
attack of gout, one especially painful type of arthritis. I
started taking celery seed when I read it helps lower
levels of uric acid - the gout culprit. In my database at
the USDA ( www.ars-grin.gov/duke ), I found there
are nearly two dozen antiinflammatory compounds in celery,
including one very important "miracle aspirin" called
apigenin. I now enjoy curried celery when I'm not on the
road, celery seed extracts when I am. And celery or
serendipity has prevented my gout for more than six years
now. (Knock my wooden leg.)
Brazil nut (Bertholettia excelsa) and
sunflower (Helianthus annus). SAM is
shorthand for S-adenosyl-methionine, a chemical shown to
have pain-relieving and anti-inflammatory properties
similar to those found in the over-the-counter medication
ibuprofen.
SAM can be found in high-methionine seeds and Brazil nuts.
It would take 250 grams of sunflower seeds (about 9 ounces)
of 500 grams of Brazil nuts (18 ounces) to provide a dose
of SAM that's more effective than a standard dose of
ibuprofen. It's not feasible to eat that many nuts and
seeds, but every little bit helps, especially if you use
the other natural approaches this article recommends.
Go ahead and sprinkle some sunflower seeds on your salad.
And when you're nibbling mixed nuts in company, don't
apologize for monopolizing the Brazil nuts.
Broccoli (Brassica oleracea) and other
herbs containing glutathione. Studies indicate people who
are low in the antioxidant compound glutathione are more
likely to have arthritis than those who have higher
amounts. Vegetables rich in glutathione include asparagus,
cabbage, cauliflower, potatoes, tomatoes and purslane.
Fruits with healthy amounts include avocados, grapefruit,
oranges, peaches and watermelon.
Rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis).
Rosemary was known in antiquity as the herb of remembrance,
which is fitting, since rosemary has antioxidants that help
prevent aging in cells, and the aging process is certainly
associated with memory loss. One Greek American herb grower
tells how her fishing relatives set out to sea with fish
dishes heavily covered with rosemary. Even when it was
unrefrigerated, this food lasted for days, thanks in part
to the antioxidant activity of the rose mary.
Can an herb that keeps fish from spoiling help preserve
your youth? The jury is still out on that one, but rosemary
has preservative powers comparable to the commercial
preservatives BHA and BHT. And since we know that
antioxidants do help treat arthritis, it makes sense that
this antioxidant-rich herb would help thwart this disease.
Vitamin C Vitamin C inhibits the
progression of osteoarthritis in guinea pigs. Does it work
in humans? There's no proof yet that it does. But it
certainly can't hurt to get more vitamin C. Red pepper and
many of the other herbs and vegetables mentioned
in this chapter contain good amounts.
Look for more excerpts from James Duke's The Green
Pharmacy in future issues of MOTHER EARTH NEWS. One of
the world's leading authorities on herbal healing, Duke is
author of The Green Pharmacy Anti-Aging
Prescriptions (Rodale Press). Active in rain forest
preservation, he regularly leads eco-tours in the Amazon.
Contact him at jduke@fathernaturesfarmacy.com .