Home Guide to Herbs - davies


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The Complete Home Guide tiomHmerubns,itNyatural Healing, and Nutrition  
119  
but professional practitioners have proved time and again that it is  
actually vitally important. Echinacea angustifolia is the preferred species,  
rather than the garden perennial Echinacea purpurea. The tingling and  
numbing of the tongue should be the deciding factor when buying the  
tincture or root. Alternatively, you could make your own.  
As with all herbs, the quality of the tincture is of the utmost  
importance; some echinacea tinctures on the market are weak and  
ineffectual. Some people have told me that echinacea has made no  
difference to the way they felt; however, further investigation has revealed  
that they had bought poor-quality tincture. Tinctures are relatively easy  
to make if you have a quality benchmark to be guided by; otherwise you  
can buy them from reliable suppliers. You can also consume teas and  
decoctions or simply chew on the crude root.  
Sioux, Cheyenne, Comanche, Pawnee, and other tribes all over  
America traditionally used echinacea in many ways, from stimulating  
energy or soothing toothache to treating deadly rattlesnake bites.  
Echinacea can be put directly onto bites, stings, and cuts, and enters the  
bloodstream that way. If the white blood count is very low and general  
immunity is severely depleted, echinacea cannot work fully unless vitality-  
building herbs and foods (and other immunity stimulants) are used  
alongside it to build up the bone marrow reserve. It was thought for a  
decade (the 1990s) that echinacea should never be used by people with  
autoimmune diseases; it was felt that it would only exacerbate the out-of-  
balance immune response, provoking it to “eat itself” and thus lower  
immune levels even more. These warnings were theoretical and as there is  
no convincing empirical evidence to support these ideas and as many  
autoimmune patients flourish on echinacea, the ban is lifted.  
It was a hard battle to get echinacea accepted by the medical  
profession. They viewed it as a type of quack medicine; yet by 1914 it was  
scientifically proved to activate phagocytes. Recognized in Germany  
during the 1930s, it has been welcomed back in a new wave of interest  
there and is now being used more than ever. Germany is the largest  
producer and importer of echinacea in Europe, using the superior fresh  
tincture from wild organic plants from America. More recently Germans  
have been growing their own and making fresh tincture. They also  
produce hundreds of medicinal products with echinacea as one of the  
ingredients. Up-to-date scientific data shows that echinacea broadly acts  
by doubling or tripling the number of T cells in the body (although some  
tests have shown that it can increase available T cells tenfold, and some  
research has shown an increase by a factor of up to fifteen thousand). It  
also activates areas of the immune system that mobilize only for serious  
conditions (macrophage production); and it vastly increases the amounts  
of interferon, interleukin, immunoglobulin, and other important natural  


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127 128 129 130 131

Quick Jump
1 79 159 238 317