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.

Meadowsweet

Meadowsweet

Herbal Aspirin

Family: Rosaceae; (includes Rose, Almond, Apple, Raspberry, Cherry)

Genus and Species: Filipendula Ulmaria, formerly Spiraea Ulmaria
Also known as: Spiraea, Bridewort, Queen-of-the-meadow
Parts used: Leaves and flower tops

It’s a rare medicine cabinet that doesn’t contain aspirin, but it’s even rarer to find anyone who knows we owe the word “aspirin” to the beautiful. aromatic meadowsweet.

Original Air Freshener

During the Middle Ages, meadowsweet’s delicate almond fragrance made it a popular air freshener, or “strewing herb.” It was scattered around homes at a time when people rarely bathed and when farm animals often shared human living quarters. Later, this herb’s sweet aroma and lovely blossoms earned it a place in bridal bouquets, hence the name bridewort. Later herbalists recommended meadowsweet to treat fevers, arthritis, “falling sickness” (epilepsy). and respiratory ailments.

Colonists introduced the plant into North America, and the 19th-century Eclectics considered it “an excellent astringent - in diarrhea. [It] is less offensive to the stomach than other agents of its kind.” They also prescribed it for menstrual cramps and vaginal discharges.

From Salicin to Aspirin

In 1839, a German chemist discovered meadowsweet flower buds contained salicin, the same chemical isolated from white willow bark I 1 years earlier. Salicin has powerful paine relieving (analgesic), fever-reducing, and anti-inflammatory properties. Unfortunately, salicin (and its close chemical relatives, notably salicylic acid) also causes potentially haze ardous side effects: stomach upset, nausea, diarrhea, stomach bleeding, ringing in the ears (tinnitus), and at high doses even respiratory paralysis and death.

Chemists began tinkering with salicylic acid, hoping to pree serve its benefits while minimizing its hazards, In 1853, German chemists working with an extract of meadowsweet synthesized acetylsalicylic acid. The new drug still had salicylic acid’s side effects but was much more potent. To name the new drug, they took the a from acetyl-the chemical they added to the extract-and spirin from meadowsweet’s Latin name, Spiraea, and came up with aspirin. News of aspirin’s development was published in an obscure German medical journal and forgotten for almost 50 years.

Bayer Does It Better

Then in the late 1890s, a German chemist, Felix Hoffman, bee came upset that his father’s rheumatoid arthritis medication brought him so little relief. Hoffman worked at the Fredrich Bayer pharmaceutical company, and he began combing the journals for leads to a better arthritis treatment. He came upon the old reports of aspirin and prepared the drug. His father improved significantly after taking it. At first, Bayer officials were not interested in Hoffman’s arthritis remedy, but eventually they saw its potential, and in 1899 they introduced acetylsalicylic acid in Europe and North America under the brand name Aspirin.

Aspirin quickly became the household drug of choice for a broad range of everyday medical needs. But in one of the earliest u.s. trademark-protection battles, Bayer lost its trademark to aspirin. The court ruled the word had passed into general usage.

Contemporary herbalists recommend meadowsweet for colds and flu, nausea, heartburn and other digestive upsets, muscle aches, dropsy (congestive heart failure), and childhood diarrhea.

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