Herbs & Herbal Remedies @ Green Papaya

Green Papaya lists 240 of the most medically useful American plants...Papaya - a world class meat tenderizer, natural digestive aid, prevents ulcers, and also a soft contact lense cleaner.

The remembrance of these astounding folk discoveries... should sober our thoughts when we criticise too freely the old pharmacopoeias. It is easy to make fun of medieval recipes: it is more difficult and may be wiser to investigate them. Instead of assuming that the medieval pharmacist was a benighted foot we might wonder whether there was not sometimes a justification for his strange procedure. -- George Sartori, Harvard Professor and Author

DISCLAIMER: Green Papaya offers Home Remedies with specific annotations to health and well-being. Such remedy advices are offered as emergency first aid and are governed by the Good Samaritan Act. Under the common 'Good Samaritan laws' - "a citizen is obliged to provide first aid when necessary and is immune from prosecution if assistance given in good faith turns out to be harmful". Within our developing "wireless world" there comes a time when the only immediate assistance is that offered through the Internet. Green Papaya therefore feels that obligation and thereby offers this resource of Home Remedies as necessary.

Green Papaya's home remedies are meant for temporary relief and first aid measures; for the average person without any special needs or uncommon or compounding medical conditions. Green Papaya's advice, regardless of the situation, IS NOT a replacement for professional care and consultation. Please consultant with your family doctor or any emergency service immediately.

Burdock the Safety Factor

Burdock No one questioned burdock’s safety until the Journal of the American Medical Association linked it to one case of poisoning that could have proved fatal.

A woman who drank a strong decoction experienced blurred vision, dry mouth, and hallucinations-classic symptoms of atropine poisoning. Burdock does not contain atropine, but a plant that looks similar does-belladonna. Presumably, some belladonna accidentally adulterated the woman’s burdock.

One case of adulteration is not cause for alarm, but if you use burdock, buy it from a reliable source, and if you develop any symptoms of atropine poisoning-dry mouth, blurred vision, and hallucinations-seek emergency medical treatment immediately. The Toxicol0gy of Botanical Medicines identifies burdock as a uterine stimulant. Pregnant women shouldn’t use it.

The Food and Drug Administration lists burdock as an herb of “undefined safety,” but except for that one case of atropine poisoning, it apparently never has caused problems. For otherwise healthy nonpregnant, nonnursing adults, burdock is considered safe in amounts typically recommended.

Burdock should be used in medicinal amounts only in consultation with your doctor. If burdock causes minor discomforts, such as stomach upset or diarrhea, use less or stop using it. Let your doctor know if you experience any unpleasant effects or if the symptoms for which the herb is being used do not improve significantly in two weeks.

Medicine is in the Roots

Burdock’s medicinal root has brown bark and a white, spongy, fibrous interior, which becomes hard when dried. Its stem is multibranched, with long, egg-shaped leaves. Each branch is topped by a bristled “flower,” actually a clump of many purplish flowers, which produces its infamous burrs.

Burdock grows easily from seeds planted in spring. Thin seedlings to o-inch spacing. Burdock prefers moist. rich, deeply cultivated soil and full sun but tolerates poorer soils. Many herbalists mix wood chips and sawdust into burdock beds to keep the soil loose so roots are easier to harvest. Burdock roots deeply, so transplanting is not advised for established plants. Harvest the roots during the fall of the first year or the spring of the second.

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