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Old 10-17-2008   #311 (permalink)
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Re: Herbs and Herbal Supplements

I picked up a few liquid herbs the other day. I like the liquid form, and just use drops of the herb into water.

Among them was Goldenseal, aka Yellow root, a popular herb amongst those who wish to "pee clean" for a drug test.
Although I don't think theres much science to correlate that claim.

Goldenseal is listed as an endangered species

The low down:

Quote:
Use of goldenseal arises from American Indian usage. The Cherokee used the roots as a wash for local inflammations, a decoction for general debility, dyspepsia, and to improve appetite. The Iroquois used a decoction of the root for whooping cough, diarrhea, liver disease, fever, sour stomach, flatulence, pneumonia, and, with whiskey, for heart trouble.
Quote:
Botanists know the plant as Hydrastis canadensis. It is a member of the buttercup family that occurs in rich woods in the eastern deciduous forest. Goldenseal occurs from Vermont to Minnesota, south to Georgia, Alabama, and Arkansas. As early as 1884, John Uri Lloyd and Curtis Gates Lloyd noted dramatic declines in wild populations, to an extent as a result of root harvest, but more so as the result of habitat loss through deforestation
Goldenseal, Goldenseal root, Goldenseal photos, Goldenseal article, Hydrastis canadensis photos, article by Steven Foster

Its the root that people use, but heres what the plant looks like



More Info:

Goldenseal [NCCAM Herbs at a Glance]

Goldenseal

Goldenseal
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Old 10-18-2008   #312 (permalink)
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Re: Herbs and Herbal Supplements

Watch Golden seal It is a squaw herb .
It changes/reduces the density of vaginal mucosa making it easier for sperm to find/get to the egg.
Hence facilitating pregnancy.


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Old 10-18-2008   #313 (permalink)
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Re: Herbs and Herbal Supplements

There was a marvelous herbal remedy for anxiety/insomnia that was an extract of the Kava root. I found it superior to other herbals and to the pharmaceuticals. Unfortunately however one poor soul took an overdose and died of it (Australia). The regulators promptly removed it from the market and I've been unable since to find anything as good. It was powerful enough to work yet gentle enough to cause no after effect. How many people have died of overdosing on paracetemol yet it is still available. Unfair!
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Old 10-18-2008   #314 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cooloola View Post
There was a marvelous herbal remedy for anxiety/insomnia that was an extract of the Kava root. I found it superior to other herbals and to the pharmaceuticals. Unfortunately however one poor soul took an overdose and died of it (Australia). The regulators promptly removed it from the market and I've been unable since to find anything as good. It was powerful enough to work yet gentle enough to cause no after effect. How many people have died of overdosing on paracetemol yet it is still available. Unfair!
agreed
I don't think Kava is banned
A google source:
Quote:
#
Kava Kava

Kava 2400mg by Thompsons
Great value for money
www.vitaminselect.com.au
Kava Kava 2400 mg

We don't talk about overdosing, deaths etc when talking about prescription drugs we use the euphemism "Adverse Drug Reactions"
(ADEs)
EG
Quote:
An article in this issue of the Journal by Miller and colleagues1 provides further evidence of the magnitude and seriousness of the problem of adverse drug events (ADEs) in general practice. Their study highlights our ongoing failure to address the problem of ADEs — medication-related incidents that cause patient harm.

“Consumer Medicine Information needs to be routinely used in medical encounters, so that patients can recognise ADEs and know what to report to their GP . . .”

Each year in Australia, about 17.5 million people make 95 million visits to their general practitioner.2 Based on Miller et al’s estimate — that 10.4% of patients attending general practice experience an ADE — almost 2 million people have an ADE annually. Moreover, their findings show that these ADEs are not trivial, with about 1 million being moderate or severe and 138 000 requiring hospitalisation, a finding consistent with previous estimates.3 Many of these ADEs are preventable, although the exact proportion of preventable events can be debated.

There have now been more than 30 Australian studies estimating the number of ADEs in different settings.3 It is clear that counting is not enough — it is time for action, but what can be done?
. . .
If we do not develop a culture of safety, we will continue to have an extra 140 000 hospitalisations per year caused by ADEs
and
Quote:
Results:

From 8215 encounters, GPs reported that 852 patients (10.4%) had experienced an ADE in the previous 6 months. Patients aged over 45 years (versus under 45 years), children aged 1–4 years (versus older children), and female patients (versus male patients) were significantly more likely to have experienced an ADE.
  • Most patients (83.5%) had experienced only one ADE,
  • with 10.7% and 5.8% experiencing two and three or more events, respectively.
  • For 71.9% of patients, one reason for the most recent event was a recognised side effect, followed by drug sensitivity (12.4%) and allergy (11.0%).
  • Over half of patients were rated as having a “mild” event, with 35.8% rated as “moderate”, and 10.0% as “severe”.
  • GPs classified 23.2% of events as preventable, and 7.6% of events resulted in hospitalisation.
    Conclusion:

    Our study reveals the high frequency of ADEs in patients attending general practice.
    This level of morbidity makes ADEs one of the most significant causes of morbidity in the Australian community.
eMJA: Adverse drug events in general practice patients in Australia
Quote:
Definition of Morbidity
Morbidity: Illness, disease.
Morbidity definition - Medical Dictionary definitions of popular medical terms easily defined on MedTerms
See the latest dangerous ones here
Australian Adverse Drug Reactions Bulletin, Volume 24, Number 3, June 2005

Some info on Kava "toxicty"
eMJA: Kava: herbal panacea or liver poison?


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Old 05-17-2009   #315 (permalink)
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News _________________________________________
Saffron may stop vision loss

A bowl containing my year's salary in saffron!
May 12, 2009 – for immediate release
SAFFRON: GOLDEN SECRET OF CLEARER SIGHT
The herb saffron may hold one of the keys to preventing the loss of sight in old age – and may even help to improve vision in people suffering certain blinding eye diseases.
Research by Professor Silvia Bisti of the ARC Centre of Excellence in Vision Science (The Vision Centre) and University of L’Aquila, Italy, has established that saffron has remarkable effects on the genes which regulate the performance of the eye’s key vision cells.
Her research has shown that the high‐priced golden culinary herb made from crocus flowers not only protects the vision cells (photoreceptors) from damage, it may also acts to slow and possibly even reverse the course of blinding diseases such as age‐related macular degeneration (AMD) and retinitis pigmentosa.
A clinical trial with patients suffering AMD in Rome has found early indications that treatment with a dietary supplement of saffron may cause damaged eye cells to recover.
“Saffron is not simply an anti‐oxidant. It seems to possess a number of other properties which are protective to vision,” Prof Bisti, who is currently visiting colleagues in The Vision Centre in Australia, says.
“For example it appears to affect genes which regulate the fatty acid content of the cell membrane, and this makes the vision cells tougher and more resilient.
“Secondly we have shown in animal models that a saffron diet will protect the eye from the damaging effects of bright light – something we all suffer whenever we go out in the sun.”
Prof. Bisti says a third line of research has found that saffron is active in affecting genetic diseases of the eye, such as retinitis pigmentosa, which can cause life‐long blindness in young people. Animal research here too offers the prospect of slowing down the progression of sight loss.
And fourthly, saffron given to human patients suffering from age‐related macular degeneration, which causes partial or total loss of sight to many people in old age, has shown signs of cell recovery.
“We are excited by these early findings. We will know more when all the results are in later this year,” Prof. Bisti says. The saffron diet treatment may also be trialled as part of a wider experiment involving ways to prevent vision loss in humans in Sydney and Rome later this year.
Prof. Bisti said she began to study the effects on saffron at L’Aquila, in Italy’s mountainous Abruzzi country because it was a widely‐grown local crop. It was already well‐known as an anti‐oxidant, but no‐one had explored its effects on eyesight before.
“The point about saffron is that it is completely safe and harmless. It has been used in cooking and medicine for three thousand years.”
Prof. Bisti’s team are also working to isolate the active components of saffron which produce the various beneficial effects on vision with the goal of developing therapies based on them.
Prof. Bisti’s laboratory at L’Aquila University was severely damaged in the recent earthquake in Italy and her experiments disrupted. In view of the tragedy and the importance of her work, The Vision Centre has agreed to support one of her key researchers to come to Australia and work at the Australian National University for a year, Centre director Professor Trevor Lamb has announced. Two more of her research staff will be working at the University of Sydney, enabling this important research to proceed.
More information:
Professor Silvia Bisti, The Vision Centre and University of L’Aquila, +61 (0)403 854 732 email: s.bisti@team.it
Professor Trevor Lamb, The Vision Centre, ph +61 (0)2 61258929 or 0434022375
Professor Julian Cribb, The Vision Centre media contact, 0418 639 245

http://www.vision.edu.au/news/acevs%20saffron.pdf


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Last edited by modest; 05-17-2009 at 09:55 PM.. Reason: added link
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