Home Guide to Herbs - davies


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The Complete Home Guide tiomHmerubns,itNyatural Healing, and Nutrition  
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could help balance major deleterious immune trends through its ability to  
fortify against environmental pollutants and radiation. It helps to regulate  
blood sugar levels and influences and nourishes the pituitary and adrenal  
systems. It protects the liver and helps eliminate drug residues from the  
body. Taken on a daily basis, Siberian ginseng increases our ability to  
resist infection; it has also been shown to suppress cancer cells by  
enhancing phagocytosis and the production of leukocytes. It is a good  
long-term tonic that should be used by those suffering from many  
conditions ranging from myalgic encephalomyelitis (chronic fatigue  
syndrome) to cancer and all the various autoimmune diseases, including  
multiple sclerosis. I use a mixture of this and milk thistle seed to treat and  
support those turning around from drug and alcohol addiction.  
Additionally, it increases endurance by improving the cells’ ability to use  
phosphorus-containing molecules and by disposing of lactic acid and  
other unwanted and often-harbored by-products of metabolism. It is  
wonderful for stress, and one teaspoon of tincture before breakfast can  
really help the quality of one’s day and of one’s night of sleep. You can  
take up to three doses daily. It is a good idea to stop for two days in every  
ten and then repeat the cycle for up to nine months (or longer under  
supervision). Siberian ginseng also affects the adrenal cortex and will  
therefore have a slight hormonal effectwhich could be estrogenic, but  
is more likely to be simply an endocrine tonic and balancer.  
Although it is called a “ginseng,” it is in no way related to true ginsengs  
(
members of the genus Panax), either by its action or by its botanical  
structure. It got its name purely because it gives vitality. In order to avoid  
confusion, it may be wiser to refer to it by one of its other common  
names, eleuthero.  
There are literally hundreds of herbs worldwide that stimulate the  
immune system and attack microbes: they include turmeric root, burdock  
root, plantain leaf, and oregano leaf, but of late echinacea root has been  
very popular. Echinacea (Echinacea angustifolia) is a well-known herb  
cultivated in Britain, America, and Europe. The only place it still grows in  
its natural habitat is North America. It is capable of rallying the top  
defenses of the  
immune army. Native American tribes have been aware of the benefits of  
this herb for many centuries. While white Americans grudgingly accepted  
its medicinal value toward the end of the eighteenth century, it has only  
comparatively recently reached Europe. It was used as a major immune-  
system stimulator by the indigenous peoples, who loved this pretty  
purple-pink-rayed flower with its attractive center. They sucked on the  
root, with its tingling, almost metallic taste, all day when they were sick.  
The tingling is caused by the chemical isobutylamine. Many herbal  
scientists have said that the tingling is incidental to its healing properties,  


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