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TRADITIONAL NATIVE HERBAL REMEDIES
ASTHMA
Skunk Cabbage.Used by the Winnebago
and Dakota tribes to stimulate the removal of phlegm in asthma. The rootstock
was official in the U.S. Pharmacopoeia from 1820 to 1882 when it was used
in respiratory and nervous disorders and in rheumatism and dropsy. Mullein.Introduced
by Europeans. The Menominees smoked the pulverized, dried root for respiratory
complaints while the Forest Potawatomis, the Mohegans, and the Penobscots
smoked the dried leaves to relieve asthma. The Catawba Indians used a
sweetened syrup from the boiled root, which they gave to their children
for coughs.
BACKACHE
Arnica.
Gentian.
The Catawba Indians steeped the roots in hot water and applied the hot
fluid on aching backs.
Horsemint.
The Catawba tribe crushed and steeped fresh horsemint leaves in cold water
and drank the infusion to allay back pain. Other tribes used horsemint
for fever, inflammation, and chills.
BRONCHITIS
Creosote Bush.
A tea of the leaves was used for bronchial and other respiratory problems.
Pleurisy Root.
The Natchez drank a tea of the boiled roots as a remedy for pneumonia
and was later used to promote the expulsion of phlegm,
Wormwood.
The Yokia Indians of Mendocino County used a tea of the boiled leaves
of a local species of wormwood to cure bronchitis.
BURNS
Yellow-Spined Thistle.
The Kiowa Indians boiled yellow-spined thistle blossoms and applied the
resulting liquid to burns and skin sores.
CHILDBIRTH
To Speed Childbirth:
Partridgeberry.
The Cherokee used a tea of the boiled leaves. Frequent doses of the tea
were taken in the few weeks preceding the expected date of delivery.
Blue Cohosh.
To promote a rapid delivery, an infusion of the root in warm water was
drunk as a tea for several weeks prior to the expected delivery date.
To Speed Delivery of the Placenta:
American Licorice.
A tea was made from the boiled roots.
Broom Snakeweed.
Navajo women drank a tea of the whole plant to promote the expulsion of
the placenta.
To Stop Post-Partum Hemorrhage:
Buckwheat.
Hopi women were given an infusion of the entire buckwheat plant to stop
bleeding.
Black Western Chokecherry.
Arikara women were given a drink of the berry juice to stop bleeding.
Smooth Upland Sumac.
The Omahas boiled the smooth upland sumac fruits and applied the liquid
as an external wash to stop bleeding.
To relieve the Pain of Childbirth:
Wild Black Cherry.
Cherokee women were given a tea of the inner bark to relieve pain in the
early stages.
Cotton.
The Alabama and Koasati tribes made a tea of the roots of the plant to
relieve the pains of labor.
COLDS
Boneset.
Boneset tea was one of the most frequently used home remedies during the
last century. The Menominees used it to reduce fever; the Alabamas, to
relive stomachache; the Creeks, for body pain; the Iroquois and the Mohegans,
for fever and colds.
COLIC
Catnip.
The Mohegans made a tea of catnip leaves for infant colic
CONTRACEPTIVES
Ragleaf Bahia.
The Navajos, who called the Ragleaf bahia herb twisted medicine, drank
a tea of the roots boiled in water for thirty minutes for contraception
purposes.
Indian Paintbrush.
Hopi women drank a tea of the whole Indian paintbrush to "Dry up
the menstrual flow."
Blue Cohosh.
Chippewa women drank a strong decoction of the powdered blue cohosh root
to promote parturition and menstruation.
Dogbane.
Generally used by many tribes, a tea from the boiled roots of the plant
was drunk once a week.
Milkweed.
Navajo women drank a tea prepared of the whole plant after childbirth.
American Mistletoe.
Indians of Mendocino County drank a tea of the leaves to induce abortion
or to prevent conception.
Antelope Sage.
To prevent conception, Navajo women drank one cup of a decoction of boiled
antelope sage root during menstruation.
Stoneseed.
Shoshoni women of Nevada reportedly drank a cold water infusion of stoneseed
roots everyday for six months to ensure permanent sterility.
COUGHS
Aspen.
The Cree Indians used an infusion of the inner bark as a remedy for coughs.
Wild Cherry.
The Flambeau Ojibwa prepared a tea of the bark of wild cherry for coughs
and colds, while other tribes used a bark for diarrhea or for lung troubles.
White Pine.
The inner bark was used by Indian people as a tea for colds and coughs.
Sarsaparilla.
The Penobscots pulverized dried sarsaparilla roots and combined them with
sweet flag roots in warm water and used the dark liquid as a cough remedy.
DIABETIES
Wild Carrot.
The Mohegans steeped the blossoms of this wild species in warm water when
they were in full bloom and took the drink for diabetes.
Devil’s Club.
The Indians of British Columbia utilized a tea of the root bark to offset
the effects of diabetes.
DIARRHEA
Blackcherry.
A tea of blackberry roots was the most frequently used remedy for diarrhea
among Indians of northern California.
Wild Black Cherry.
The Mohegans allowed the ripe wild black cherry to ferment naturally in
a jar about one year than then drank the juice to cure dysentery.
Dogwood.
The Menominees boiled the inner bark of the dogwood and passed the warm
solution into the rectum with a rectal syringe made from the bladder of
a small mammal and the hollow bone of a bird.
Geranium.
Chippewa and Ottawa tribes boiled the entire geranium plant and drank
the tea for diarrhea.
White Oak.
Iroquois and Penobscots boiled the bark of the white oak and drank the
liquid for bleeding piles and diarrhea.
Black Raspberry.
The Pawnee, Omaha, and Dakota tribes boiled the root bark of black raspberry
for dysentery.
Star Grass.
Catawbas drank a tea of star grass leaves for dysentery.
DIGESTIVE DISORDERS
Dandelion.
A tea of the roots was drunk for heartburn by the Pillager Ojibwas. Mohegans
drank a tea of the leaves for a tonic.
Yellow Root.
A tea from the root was used by the Catawbas and the Cherokee as a stomach
ache remedy.
FEVERS
Dogwood.
The Delaware Indians, who called the tree Hat-ta-wa-no-min-schi, boiled
the inner bark in water, using the tea to reduce fevers.
Willow.
The Pomo tribe boiled the inner root bark, then drank strong doses of
the resulting tea to induce sweating in cases of chills and fever. In
the south, the Natchez prepared their fever remedies from the bark of
the red willow, while the Alabama and Creek Indians plunged into willow
root baths for the same purpose.
Feverwort.
The Cherokees drank a decoction of the coarse, leafy, perennial herb to
cure fevers.
HEADACHE
Pennyroyal.
The Onondagas steeped pennyroyal leaves and drank the tea to cure headaches.
HEART and CIRCULATORY PROBLEMS
Green Hellebore.
The Cherokee used the green hellebore to relive body pains.
American Hemp and Dogbane.
Used by the Prairie Potawatomis as a heart medicine, the fruit was boiled
when it was still green, and the resulting decoction drunk. It was also
used for kidney problems and for dropsy.
HEMORRHOIDS
White Oak.
The Menominee tribe treated piles by squirting an infusion of the scraped
inner bark of oak into the rectum with a syringe made from an animal bladder
and the hollow bone of a bird.
INFLAMMATIONS and SWELLINGS
Witch Hazel.
The Menominees of Wisconsin boiled the leaves and rubbed the liquid on
the legs of tribesmen who were participating in sporting games. A decoction
of the boiled twigs was used to cure aching backs, while steam derived
by placing the twigs in water with hot rocks was a favorite Potawatomi
treatment for muscle aches.
INFLUENZA
Native Hemlock (as opposed Poison
Hemlock of Socrates fame).
The Menominees prepared a tea if the inner bark and drank it to relieve
cold symptoms. A similar tea was used by the Forest Potawatomis to induce
sweating and relieve colds and feverish conditions.
INSECT BITES and STINGS
Fendler Bladderpod.
The Navajos made a tea and used it to treat spider bites.
Purple Coneflower.
The Plains Indians used this as a universal application for the bites
and stings of all crawling, flying, or leaping bugs. Between June and
September, the bristly stemmed plant, which grows in dry, open woods and
on prairies, bears a striking purplish flower.
Stiff Goldenrod.
The Meskwaki Indians of Minnesota ground the flowers into a lotion and
applied it to bee stings.
Trumpet Honeysuckle.
The leaves were ground by chewing and then applied to bees stings.
Wild Onion and Garlic.
The Dakotas and Winnebagos applied the crushed bulbs of wild onions and
garlics.
Saltbush.
The Navajos chewed the stems and placed the pulpy mash on areas of swelling
caused by ant, bee and wasp bites. The Zunis applied the dried, powdered
roots and flowers mixed with saliva to ant bites.
Broom Snakeweed.
The Navajos chewed the stem and applied the resin to insect bites and
stings of all kinds.
Tobacco.
A favorite remedy for bee stings was the application of wet tobacco leaves.
INSECT REPELLENTS and INSECTICIDES
Goldenseal.
The Cherokee pounded the large rootstock with bear fat and smeared it
on their bodies as an insect repellent. It was also used as a tonic, stimulant,
and astringent.
RHEUMATISM
Pokeweed.
Indians of Virginia drank a tea of the boiled berries to cure rheumatism.
The dried root was also used to allay inflammation.
Bloodroot.
A favorite rheumatism remedy among the Indians of the Mississippi region
- the Rappahannocks of Virginia drank a tea of the root.
SEDATIVES
Wild Black Cherry.
The Meskwaki tribe made a sedative tea of the root bark.
Hops.
The Mohegans prepared a sedative medicine from the conelike strobiles
and sometimes heated the blossoms and applied them for toothache. The
Dakota tribe used a tea of the steeped strobiles to relieve pains of the
digestive organs, and the Menominee tribe regarded a related species of
hops as a panacea.
Wild Lettuce.
Indigenous to North American, it was used for sedative purposes, especially
in nervous complaints.
THRUSH
Geranium.
The Cherokee boiled geranium root together with wild grape, and with the
liquid, rinsed the mouths of children affected with thrush.
Persimmon.
The Catawba stripped the bark from the tree and boiled it in water, using
the resulting dark liquid as a mouth rinse.
NOTE:THESE REMIDIES SHOULD NOT BE USED ABOVE
YOUR DOCTORS ADVICE ! , HOWEVER YOU WILL FIND THAT THEY DO WORK.
Source: American Medicinal Plants. NY: Dover
Publications
Traditional Native Herbs and Their
Uses in Healing, Native Recipes
There are hundreds of herbs with dozens
of uses in Native American medicine, no room here to list all of them.
You can find books and internet resources for more detailed information
on specific herbs used by specific tribes. Below is just a small sampling.
As with all other forms of herbal medicine, get a checkup before treating
yourself with herbs, research each carefully for possible side effects.
Get in touch with Native Americans who might be well-versed in herbs and
healing.
Traditional healing herbs
* Burdock (
Arctium lappa L. ). Naturalized in North America, from Asia and Europe,
this plant grows from 2-5 ft.; can be found along roadsides and in all
vacant lots. Hunters will remember Burdock burrs adhering to their clothes
and being troublesome to their game dogs. The stems are stout with wide
spreading branches carrying alternately elongated heart-shaped leaves.
The purple flowers bloom in July and August, after which they dry out
and the base becomes the troublesome burr. The root, which should be dug
in the autumn or early spring, is thick, brownish-grey externally. with
white pith-like tissue inside. The root and seeds have a sweetish taste,
the leaves and stems being bitter.
Uses: Herbalists all
over the world use Burdock. Such an effective and ultimate blood purifying
plant has well earned the unpretending authentic value for which we know
it is capable. The root and seed of Arctium lappa is a soothing demulcent,
tonic, alterative; it slowly but steadily cleanses skin, soothes the kidneys,
and relieves the lymphatic's; eliminates boils, carbuncles, canker sores,
styes, felons, etc. Soothing to the mucous membrane throughout the entire
system, and is also used for gout, rheumatism, scrofula, syphilis, sciatica,
gonorrhea, and kidney diseases. Burdock is regarded as an excellent immune
system strengthener, a tonic for the liver, kidneys and lungs as well
as a blood purifier with the ability to neutralize poisons and cleanse
the lymphatic system. Burdock contains proven anti-bacterial and anti-fungal
as well as tumor-protective compounds. The leaves contain a substance
which promotes bile secretion and may be included in liver and gall bladder
formulas. An infusion or decoction of the root may be used as a skin wash
for burns, ringworms. acne and rashes. A poultice using the leaf material
will treat gout.
In the Orient, burdock root is used for its nutritive
and strengthening qualities. In Hawaii it is known by the Japanese name
'Gobo root' and is used to increase strength and endurance and works even
better when combined with other herbs. In China, where the seed pod is
dried and used for coughs, colds, measles, boils and sore throats, burdock
has been found listed as a useful medicine as early as 502 AD. Burdock
has been used medicinally by many Native American tribes. Plains Indians
adopted burdock for ceremonial use, and the Otos used a decoction of the
root for pleurisy. Burdock root was an ingredient of a medicine used by
Meskwaki women in labor. Flambeau Ojibwas used the root as part of a medicine
for stomach pain, and supposed it to have a tonic effect. The Potawatomis
made a burdock-root tea taken as a general tonic and blood purifier. Other
tribes to use the root of burdock are the Creeks, Cherokees, Micmacs,
Menomonee. Whites have used the root as an alterative in blood and skin
diseases. EarthKeepers and their ancestors
have been using Burdock in the Muscogee
Tea™ for close to five hundred
years with amazing results. Once used as a way to lift the spirits and
connect to the heart by increasing the levels of joy one can experience
for the conduct of ceremony, it is now referred to as a liver cleanse.
We believe as the heart is the seat of love, compassion, joy, etc. the
liver is the seat of sudden outburst of anger, resentment, bitterness
and the like. So when the liver is on its way to optimum health the heart
benefits by receiving cleaner blood flow, hence better sources of oxygen,
the life force, hence more opportunity to feel the joy life has to offer.
Burdock root is a major ingredient of the Muscogee
Tea™.
Precaution: Burdock
may have estrogen-like effects and therefore should be avoided during
pregnancy.
* Rabbit tobacco (Gnaphalium obtusifolium).
These annual herbs reach a height of 1 to 3 feet and have erect stems
with brown, shriveled leaves persisting into winter and stems covered
with feltlike hairs in summer. The leaves are 1 to 3 inches long, and
alternate. The flowers, minute in whitish heads, appear in late summer
to fall. Fields, pastures, and disturbed areas are the sites of this common
native plant of the eastern United States. It is used to treat colds,
flu, neuritis, asthma, coughs, and pneumonia. This is one of the most
popular plants used by the Lumbee. The decoction is drunk hot, like most
medicinal teas, and is said to cause profuse sweating.
* Poke (Phytolacca americana). Also
a common native plant of the eastern United States, poke is a robust,
perennial herb that reaches a height of 9 feet. It has a large white root;
a green, red, or purple stem; alternate leaves up to 1 foot long; and
white flowers in a drooping raceme. The fruit is a dark purple to black
berry, round, soft, and juicy. Poke is found in waste areas, road sides,
disturbed habitats, fields, and pastures. It is used to treat asthma,
spring tonic, boils (risings), sores, intestinal worms in people or chickens,
cramps, and stomach ulcers. Poke is said to inhibit gram-positive and
gram-negative bacteria and is listed as a parasiticide in the British
Herbal Pharmacopoeia.
* Pine (Pinus echinata, P. palustris,
P. virginiana). Pines are resinous evergreen trees with needlelike foliage
leaves in bundles of two to five. The male and female reproductive structures
are in separate cones on the same tree; the female cone matures to a large
woody cone with winged seeds; pollen sheds in the spring. Pine is used
to treat colds, flu, pneumonia, fever, heartburn, arthritis, neuritis,
and kidney problems.
* Oak (Quercus laevis, Q. phellos).
These deciduous trees have alternate, unlobed, or variously lobed leaves
and minute flowers; the fruit is an acorn. Oak is used to treat kidney
problems (including Bright's disease), bladder problems, virus, menstrual
bleeding, diarrhea, sores, sprains, and swellings. It is also used as
a booster for other remedies.
* Sassafras (Sassafras albidum).
These deciduous, aromatic, small trees or shrubs have green twigs and--when
mature--thick, furrowed bark. The leaves are 2.5 to 5 inches long; alternate;
and either unlobed, lobed on one side, or three-lobed. Flowers are small
and yellow in clusters at the end of twigs. The fruit is a dark blue,
fleshy drupe on a bright red stalk and cup. This common native plant of
fencerows, woodland borders, and old fields of the eastern United States
is used to treat measles, chicken pox, colds, flu, and fever. It is also
used as a "shotgun heart remedy," a blood purifier, and a spring
tonic.
According to the Handbook of Northeastern Indian Medicinal Plants Native
American Indians used about 25 percent of the flora of Maryland for medicinal
purposes (Duke, 1986). A few examples of medicinal plant species in Maryland
are as follows:
* Sheep Sorrel ( Acetosella vulgaris
). Sheep sorrel is a perennial plant that grows in rocky areas throughout
the world with the exception of the tropics. The plant is common along
roadsides in England and is sometimes cultivated in the United States.
The whole plant can be used before the stem is hollow in the second year.
The roots are woody, long and tapering. The furrowed or streaked stem
grows one to two feet high. The edible leaves are attached to the stem
by a slender leaf stalk and are green, the pigment indicating a high amount
of chlorophyll. Leaves are ovate with two lateral teeth. Upper part is
oblong and narrow. Green flowers with reddish tinge distinguish from the
orange-red female flowers. Sheep sorrel seeds are shiny, black, three-sided
small seeds resembling peppercorn. Harvest the plant early in the day
or in late afternoon May through August before it flowers and goes to
seed in September.
The whole herb when young and in its freshest state acts as a diuretic
and blood cleanser. The herb improves liver, intestinal and bowel functions,
prevents destruction of red blood cells and is used to break down tumors.
The chlorophyll in sheep sorrel carries oxygen through the bloodstream
which strengthens cell walls, helps remove deposits in blood vessels and
allows the body to store and use more oxygen. Chlorophyll may also reduce
radiation damage and restrict chromosome damage. The herb is smooth and
acid while the root has astringent properties and contains a substance
allied to crysophanic acid ( an iron-greening tannin diuretic ). Sheep
sorrel is taken for inflammatory diseases, tumors, incipient cancers and
urine and kidney diseases. The action is refrigerant, diaphoretic and
diuretic.
*Slippery Elm
( Ulmus fulva ). Slippery elm can be found in northern and central United
States and eastern Canada. It grows in moist woods and bottom land, along
streams, as well as in dry soil. The rough branches and long, tough, hairy
leaves help distinguish slippery elm which resembles a small tree and
can grow up to sixty feet tall. The dark green or yellowish leaves are
covered with yellow wool and have orange tips, while the bark is deeply
furrowed. The pinkish white, fibrous inner bark contains the healing properties.
The inner bark can be obtained whole or powdered. In its powdered state
it is pale pink brown in color.
Slippery elm is good for nervous problems, stomach and intestines, sore
throats and coughs. It contains inulin which helps the liver, spleen and
pancreas. The herb promotes urination, disperses swelling and acts as
a laxative. Chinese medicine listed the herb in 25 BC and noted that it
is good for diarrhea, ulcers, soothing inflamed colon, small intestine
and colon meridians. It has a sweet flavor with a neutral property. Indians
used it as a demulcent, salve, and laxative. Some believe it may help
diabetic conditions.
*Turkey Rhubarb (
Rheum palmatum ). Turkey rhubarb somewhat resembles the garden variety
rhubarb (rheum rhaponticum) but medicinally is quite a bit stronger. A
perennial, the herb is identified by its conical, fleshy root stock with
yellow interior. The seven-lobed, heart-shaped or rounded leaves grow
twelve inches in length and are attached by thick petioles to stems five
to ten feet tall. Topping the hollow flower stem is a leafy panicle of
greenish or whitish flowers. Turkey rhubarb is cultivated in China and
Tibet for decorative as well as medicinal purposes.
Turkey rhubarb has been used for centuries for its dual action as a laxative
and astringent as well as a purging treatment. In smaller doses it is
used to treat diarrhea or to stimulate the appetite. Larger amounts yield
a laxative effect. The herb stimulates the colon and abates distension
while promoting bile flow, clearing stasis and restoring the stomach and
liver. It has used as a stomach tonic to soothe digestion; to cleanse
the liver; as an anti-tumor; and an aid for thermal burns, jaundice, sores
and cancers. As a regulator, turkey rhubarb has both contractive and dilative
properties that help regulate menstruation and eliminative processes.
It is versatile in preparations as a balancing herb and anthelmintic In
Chinese medicine, its properties are considered bitter and cold entering
the stomach, colon, liver, spleen and pericardium meridians. Functions
to drain heat and dampness, moves stools, cools blood, disperses and invigorates
stagnant blood.
* Sweetflag or calamus (Acorus).
The root has been used to treat flatulence, colds, coughs, heart disease,
bowel problems, colic, cholera, suppressed menses, dropsy, gravel, headache,
sore throat, spasms, swellings, and yellowish urine. Some tribes considered
the root a panacea; others thought it had mystic powers.
* Bloodroot (Sanguinaria). This very
poisonous plant is emetic, laxative, and emmenagogue. It has been used
to treat chronic bronchitis, diphtheria, sore throat, uterine and other
cancers, tetterworm, deafness, and dyspepsia; it has also been used as
a pain reliever and sedative. In Appalachia it is carried as a charm to
ward off evil spirits.
* Yellowdock. Contains anthraquinones
of value in the treatment of ringworm and some types of psoriasis. Rumicin
from the roots reportedly destroys skin parasites. The anthraquinones
are proven laxatives.
* Coneflower (Echinacea, Rudbeckia).
Echinacea (purple coneflower) reportedly increases resistance to infection,
bad coughs, dyspepsia, venereal disease, insect bites, fever, and blood
poisoning.
* Witch hazel. A proven astringent
and hemostat (to stop bleeding).
* Lobelia (Lobelia cardinalis). Cardinal
flower was used to indurate ulcers and to treat stomachache, syphilis,
and worms. The leaf tea was used for cold, croup, epistaxis (nosebleed),
fever, headache, rheumatism, and syphilis. Lobelia inflata (Indian tobacco)
yields lobeline sulfate, used in antitobacco therapy. It is used as an
antiasthmatic, an expectorant, and a stimulant for bronchitis; it also
is used to treat aches, asthma, boils, croup, colic, sore throat, stiff
neck, and tuberculosis of the lungs. Some smoked the herb to break a tobacco
habit.
* Mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum).
Early Native American Indians used the roots as a strong purgative, liver
cleanser, emetic, and worm expellant. A resin made from the plant has
been used to treat venereal warts and exhibits antitumor activity; it
also is used for snakebite and as an insecticide for potato bugs.
* Wild cherry (Prunus virginiana).
The bark has been used to treat sores and wounds, diarrhea, cold and cough,
tuberculosis, hemoptysis, scrofula, sore throat, stomach cramps, and piles.
Native American Indians treated snow blindness by leaning over a kettle
of boiling bark "tea." Some smoked the bark for headache and
head cold.
* White willow (Salix alba). The
bark is astringent, expectorant, hemostatic, and tonic. It is used to
treat calluses, cancers, corns, tumors, and warts. Salicylic acid (used
to make aspirin) is found in white willow. Leaves and bark of different
willows are used in a tea to break a fever. Some Native American Indians
burned willow stems and used the ashes to treat sore eyes.
History of Herbal Medicine
Early humans recognized their dependence on nature in both health and
illness. Led by instinct, taste, and experience, primitive men and women
treated illness by using plants, animal parts, and minerals that were
not part of their usual diet. Physical evidence of use of herbal remedies
goes back some 60,000 years to a burial site of a Neanderthal man uncovered
in 1960 (Solecki, 1975). In a cave in northern Iraq, scientists found
what appeared to be ordinary human bones. An analysis of the soil around
the bones revealed extraordinary quantities of plant pollen that could
not have been introduced accidentally at the burial site. Someone in the
small cave community had consciously gathered eight species of plants
to surround the dead man. Seven of these are medicinal plants still used
throughout the herbal world (Bensky and Gamble, 1993). All cultures have
long folk medicine histories that include the use of plants. Even in ancient
cultures, people methodically and scientifically collected information
on herbs and developed well-defined herbal pharmacopoeias. Indeed, well
into the 20th century much of the pharmacopoeia of scientific medicine
was derived from the herbal lore of native peoples. Many drugs, including
strychnine, aspirin, vincristine, taxol, curare, and ergot, are of herbal
origin. About one-quarter of the prescription drugs dispensed by community
pharmacies in the United States contain at least one active ingredient
derived from plant material (Farnsworth and Morris, 1976).
Middle East medicine. The invention
of writing was a focus around which herbal knowledge could accumulate
and grow. The first written records detailing the use of herbs in the
treatment of illness are the Mesopotamian clay tablet writings and the
Egyptian papyrus. About 2000 B.C., King Assurbanipal of Sumeria ordered
the compilation of the first known materia medica--an ancient form of
today's United States Pharmacopoeia--containing 250 herbal drugs (including
garlic, still a favorite of herbal doctors). The Ebers Papyrus, the most
important of the preserved Egyptian manuscripts, was written around 1500
B.C. and includes much earlier information. It contains 876 prescriptions
made up of more than 500 different substances, including many herbs (Ackerknecht,
1973).
Greece and Rome. One of the earliest
materia medica was the Rhizotomikon, written by Diocles of Caryotos, a
pupil of Aristotle. Unfortunately, the book is now lost. Other Greek and
Roman compilations followed, but none was as important or influential
as that written by Dioscorides in the 1st century A.D., better known by
its Latin name De Materia Medica. This text contains 950 curative substances,
of which 600 are plant products and the rest are of animal or mineral
origin (Ackerknecht, 1973). Each entry includes a drawing, a description
of the plant, an account of its medicinal qualities and method of preparation,
and warnings about undesirable effects.
Muslim world. The Arabs preserved
and built on the body of knowledge of the Greco-Roman period as they learned
of new remedies from remote places. They even introduced to the West the
Chinese technique of chemically preparing minerals. The principal storehouse
of the Muslim materia medica is the text of Jami of Ibn Baiar (died 1248
A.D.), which lists more than 2,000 substances, including many plant products
(Ackerknecht, 1973). Eventually this entire body of knowledge was reintroduced
to Europe by Christian doctors traveling with the Crusaders. Indeed, during
the Middle Ages, trade in herbs became a vast international commerce.
East India. India, located between
China and the West, underwent a similar process in the development of
its medicine. The healing that took place before India's Ayurvedic medical
corpus was similar to that of ancient Egypt or China (i.e., sickness was
viewed as a punishment from the gods for a particular sin). Ayurvedic
medicine emerged during the rise of the philosophies of the Upanishads,
Buddhism, and other schools of thought in India. Herbs played an important
role in Ayurvedic medicine. The principal Ayurvedic book on internal medicine,
the Characka Samhita, describes 582 herbs (Majno, 1975). The main book
on surgery, the Sushruta Samhita, lists some 600 herbal remedies. Most
experts agree that these books are at least 2,000 years old.
China and Japan. The earliest written
evidence of the medicinal use of herbs in China consists of a corpus of
11 medical works recovered from a burial site in Hunan province. The burial
itself is dated 168 B.C., and the texts (written on silk) appear to have
been composed before the end of the 3rd century B.C. Some of the texts
discuss exercise, diet, and channel therapy (in the form of moxibustion--see
the "Alternative Systems of Medical Practice" chapter). The
largest, clearest, and most important of these manuscripts, called by
its discoverers Prescriptions for Fifty-Two Ailments, is predominantly
a pharmacological work. More than 250 medicinal substances are named.
Most are substances derived from herbs and wood; grains, legumes, fruits,
vegetables, and animal parts are also mentioned. Underlying this entire
text is the view that disease is the manifestation of evil spirits, ghosts,
and demons that must be repelled by incantation, rituals, and spells in
addition to herbal remedies.
By the Later Han Dynasty (25-220 A.D.), medicine had changed dramatically
in China. People grew more confident of their ability to observe and understand
the natural world and believed that health and disease were subject to
the principles of natural order. However, herbs still played an important
part in successive systems of medicine. The Classic of the Materia Medica,
compiled no earlier than the 1st century A.D. by unknown authors, was
the first Chinese book to focus on the description of individual herbs.
It includes 252 botanical substances, 45 mineral substances, and 67 animal-derived
substances. For each herb there is a description of its medicinal effect,
usually in terms of symptoms. Reference is made to the proper method of
preparation, and toxicities are noted (Bensky and Gamble, 1993).
Since the writing of the Classic of the Materia Medica almost 2,000 years
ago, the traditional Chinese materia medica have been steadily increasing
in number. This increase has resulted from the integration into the official
tradition of substances from China's folk medicine as well as from other
parts of the world. Many substances now used in traditional Chinese medicine
originate in places such as Southeast Asia, India, the Middle East, and
the Americas. The most recent compilation of Chinese materia medica was
published in 1977. The Encyclopedia of Traditional Chinese Medicine Substances
(Zhong yao da ci dian), the culmination of a 25-year research project
conducted by the Jiangsu College of New Medicine, contains 5,767 entries
and is the most definitive compilation of China's herbal tradition to
date (Bensky and Gamble, 1993).
Traditional Chinese medicine was brought to Japan via Korea, and Chinese-influenced
Korean medicine was adapted by the Japanese during the reign of Emperor
Ingyo (411-453 A.D.). Medical envoys continued to arrive from Korea throughout
the next century, and by the time of the Empress Suiko (592-628 A.D.),
Japanese envoys were being sent directly to China to study medicine. Toward
the end of the Muromachi period (1333-1573 A.D.) the Japanese began to
develop their own form of traditional oriental medicine, called kampo
medicine. As traditional Chinese medicine was modified and integrated
into kampo medicine, herbal medicine was markedly simplified.
Herbal Medicine in the United States
In North America, early explorers traded knowledge with the Native American
Indians. The tribes taught them which herbs to use to sharpen their senses
for hunting, to build endurance, and to bait their traps. In 1716, French
explorer Lafitau found a species of ginseng, Panax quinquefolius L., growing
in Iroquois territory in the New World. This American ginseng soon became
an important item in world herb commerce (Duke, 1989). The Jesuits dug
up the plentiful American ginseng, sold it to the Chinese, and used the
money to build schools and churches. Even today, American ginseng is a
sizable crude U.S. export.
As medicine evolved in the United States, plants continued as a mainstay
of country medicine. Approaches to plant healing passed from physician
to physician, family to family. Even in America's recent past, most families
used home herbal remedies to control small medical emergencies and to
keep minor ailments from turning into chronic problems. During this period
there was a partnership between home folk medicine and the family doctor
(Buchman, 1980). Physicians often used plant and herbal preparations to
treat common ills. Until the 1940s, textbooks of pharmacognosy--books
that characterize plants as proven-by-use prescription medicines--contained
hundreds of medically useful comments on barks, roots, berries, leaves,
resins, twigs, and flowers.
As 20th-century technology advanced and created a growing admiration for
technology and technologists, simple plant-and-water remedies were gradually
discarded. Today, many Americans have lost touch with their herbal heritage.
Few Americans realize that many over-the-counter (OTC) and prescription
drugs have their origins in medicinal herbs. Cough drops that contain
menthol, mint, horehound, or lemon are herbal preparations; chamomile
and mint teas taken for digestion or a nervous stomach are time-honored
herbal remedies; and many simple but effective OTC ache-and pain-relieving
preparations on every druggist's and grocer's shelf contain oils of camphor,
menthol, or eucalyptus. Millions of Americans greet the morning with their
favorite herbal stimulant--coffee.
Despite the importance of plant discoveries in the evolution of medicine,
some regulatory bodies such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)--the
main U.S. regulatory agency for food and drugs--consider herbal remedies
to be worthless or potentially dangerous (Snider, 1991). Indeed, today
in the United States, herbal products can be marketed only as food supplements.
If a manufacturer or distributor makes specific health claims about a
herbal product (i.e., indicates on the label the ailment or ailments for
which the product might be used) without FDA approval, the product can
be pulled from store shelves.
Despite FDA's skepticism about herbal remedies, a growing number of Americans
are again becoming interested in herbal preparations. This surge in interest
is fueled by factors that include the following:
* Traditional European and North American herbs are sold in most U.S.
health food stores. The same is true for Chinese and, to a lesser extent,
Japanese herbal medicinals. Ayurvedic herbals are available in most large
U.S. cities, as are culinary and medicinal herb shops called botanicas
that sell herbs from Central and South America and Mexico. The reemergence
of Native American Indian cultural influences has increased interest in
Native American Indian herbal medicines.
* Pharmaceutical drugs are seen increasingly as overprescribed, expensive,
even dangerous. Herbal remedies are seen as less expensive and less toxic.
* Exposure to exotic foreign foods prepared with non-European culinary
herbs has led many Euroethnic Americans to examine and often consider
using medicinal herbs that were brought to the United States along with
ethnic culinary herbs.
* People increasingly are willing to "self-doctor" their medical
needs by investigating and using herbs and herbal preparations. Many Americans--especially
those with chronic illnesses such as arthritis, diabetes, cancer, and
AIDS--are turning to herbs as adjuncts to other treatments.
The next section discusses the regulatory status of herbal medicine in
various countries around the world, particularly in Europe and Asia, as
well as in less developed countries. It is followed by an overview of
promising European and Asian herbal medicine research and recommendations
for making herbal medicine a more viable health care alternative in this
country.
Regulatory Status of Herbal Medicine Worldwide
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 4 billion people--80
percent of the world population--use herbal medicine for some aspect of
primary health care (Farnsworth et al., 1985). Herbal medicine is a major
component in all indigenous peoples' traditional medicine and is a common
element in Ayurvedic, homeopathic, naturopathic, traditional oriental,
and Native American Indian medicine (see the "Alternative Systems
of Medical Practice" chapter).
The sophistication of herbal remedies used around the world varies with
the technological advancement of countries that produce and use them.
These remedies range from medicinal teas and crude tablets used in traditional
medicine to concentrated, standardized extracts produced in modern pharmaceutical
facilities and used in modern medical systems under a physician's supervision.
Europe
Drug approval considerations for phytomedicines (medicines from plants)
in Europe are the same as those for new drugs in the United States, where
drugs are documented for safety, effectiveness, and quality. But two features
of European drug regulation make that market more hospitable to natural
remedies. First, in Europe it costs less and takes less time to approve
medicines as safe and effective. This is especially true of substances
that have a long history of use and can be approved under the "doctrine
of reasonable certainty." According to this principle, once a remedy
is shown to be safe, regulatory officials use a standard of evidence to
decide with reasonable certainty that the drug will be effective. This
procedure dramatically reduces the cost of approving drugs without compromising
safety. Second, Europeans have no inherent prejudice against molecularly
complex plant substances; rather, they regard them as single substances.
The European Economic Community (EEC), recognizing the need to standardize
approval of herbal medicines, developed a series of guidelines, The Quality
of Herbal Remedies (EEC Directive, undated). These guidelines outline
standards for quality, quantity, and production of herbal remedies and
provide labeling requirements that member countries must meet. The EEC
guidelines are based on the principles of the WHO's Guidelines for the
Assessment of Herbal Medicines (1991). According to these guidelines,
a substance's historical use is a valid way to document safety and efficacy
in the absence of scientific evidence to the contrary. (App. C contains
the complete WHO guidelines.) The guidelines suggest the following as
a basis for determining product safety:
A guiding principle should be that if the product has been traditionally
used without demonstrated harm, no specific restrictive regulatory action
should be undertaken unless new evidence demands a revised risk-benefit
assessment. . . . Prolonged and apparently uneventful use of a substance
usually offers testimony of its safety.
With regard to efficacy, the guidelines
state the following:
For treatment of minor disorders and for nonspecific indications, some
relaxation is justified in the requirements for proof of efficacy, taking
into account the extent of traditional use; the same considerations may
apply to prophylactic use (WHO, 1991).
The WHO guidelines give further advice for basing approval on existing
monographs:
If a pharmacopoeia monograph exists it should be sufficient to make reference
to this monograph. If no such monograph is available, a monograph must
be supplied and should be set out in the same way as in an official pharmacopoeia.
To further the standardization effort and to increase European scientific
support, the phytotherapy societies of Belgium, France, Germany, Switzerland,
and the United Kingdom founded the European Societies' Cooperative of
Phytotherapy (ESCOP). ESCOP's approach to eliminating problems of differing
quality and therapeutic use within EEC is to build on the German scientific
monograph system (below) to create "European" monographs.
In Europe, herbal remedies fall into three categories. The most rigorously
controlled are prescription drugs, which include injectable forms of phytomedicines
and those used to treat life-threatening diseases. The second category
is OTC phytomedicines, similar to American OTC drugs. The third category
is traditional herbal remedies, products that typically have not undergone
extensive clinical testing but are judged safe on the basis of generations
of use without serious incident.
The following brief overviews of phytomedicine's regulatory status in
France, Germany, and England are representative of the regulatory status
of herbal medicine in Europe.
France, where traditional medicines can be sold with labeling based on
traditional use, requires licensing by the French Licensing Committee
and approval by the French Pharmacopoeia Committee. These products are
distinguished from approved pharmaceutical drugs by labels stating "Traditionally
used for . . ." Consumers understand this to mean that indications
are based on historical evidence and have not necessarily been confirmed
by modern scientific experimentation (Artiges, 1991).
Germany considers whole herbal products as a single active ingredient;
this makes it simpler to define and approve the product. The German Federal
Health Office regulates such products as ginkgo and milk thistle extracts
by using a monograph system that results in products whose potency and
manufacturing processes are standardized. The monographs are compiled
from scientific literature on a particular herb in a single report and
are produced under the auspices of the Ministry of Health Committee for
Herbal Remedies (Kommission E). Approval of such remedies requires more
scientific documentation than traditional remedies, but less than new
pharmaceutical drug approvals (Keller, 1991).
In Germany there is a further distinction between "prescription-only
drugs" and "normal prescription drugs." The former are
available only by prescription. The latter are covered by national health
insurance if prescribed by a physician, but they can be purchased over
the counter without a prescription if consumers want to pay the cost themselves
(Keller, 1991). OTC phytomedicines--used for self-diagnosed, self-limiting
conditions such as the common cold, or for simple symptomatic relief of
chronic conditions--are not covered by the national health insurance plan.
England generally follows the rule of prior use, which says that hundreds
of years of use with apparent positive effects and no evidence of detrimental
side effects are enough evidence--in lieu of other scientific data--that
the product is safe. To promote the safe use of herbal remedies, the Ministry
of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Food and the Department of Health jointly
established a database of adverse effects of nonconventional medicines
at the National Poisons Unit.
Asia
In more developed Asian countries such as Japan, China, and India, "patent"
herbal remedies are composed of dried and powdered whole herbs or herb
extracts in liquid or tablet form. Liquid herb extracts are used directly
in the form of medicinal syrups, tinctures, cordials, and wines.
In China, traditional herbal remedies are still the backbone of medicine.
Use varies with region, but most herbs are available throughout China.
Until 1984 there was virtually no regulation of pharmaceuticals or herbal
preparations. In 1984, the People's Republic implemented the Drug Administration
Law, which said that traditional herbal preparations were generally considered
"old drugs" and, except for new uses, were exempt from testing
for efficacy or side effects. The Chinese Ministry of Public Health would
oversee the administration of new herbal products (Gilhooley, 1989).
Traditional Japanese medicine, called kampo, is similar to and historically
derived from Chinese medicine but includes traditional medicines from
Japanese folklore. Kampo declined when Western medicine was introduced
between 1868 and 1912, but by 1928 it had begun to revive. Today 42.7
percent of Japan's Western-trained medical practitioners prescribe kampo
medicines (Tsumura, 1991), and Japanese national health insurance pays
for these medicines. In 1988, the Japanese herbal medicine industry established
regulations to manufacture and control the quality of extract products
in kampo medicine. Those regulations comply with the Japanese government's
Regulations for Manufacturing Control and Quality Control of Drugs.
Developing Countries
Herbal medicines are the staple of medical treatment in many developing
countries. Herbal preparations are used for virtually all minor ailments.
Visits to Western-trained doctors or prescription pharmacists are reserved
for life-threatening or hard-to-treat disorders.
Individual herbal medicines in developing regions vary considerably; healers
in each region have learned over centuries which local herbs have medicinal
worth. Although trade brings a few important herbs from other regions,
these healers rely mainly on indigenous herbs. Some have extensive herbal
materia medica. A few regions, such as Southeast Asia, import large amounts
of Chinese herbal preparations. But the method and form of herb use are
common to developing regions.
In the developing world, herbs used for medicinal purposes are "crude
drugs." These are unprocessed herbs--plants or plant parts, dried
and used in whole or cut form. Herbs are prepared as teas (sometimes as
pills or capsules) for internal use and as salves and poultices for external
use. Most developing countries have minimal regulation and oversight.
Research Base
The professional literature of Europe and Asia abounds with efficacy
and safety studies of many herbal medicines. It is beyond this report's
resources to investigate the validity of this vast literature. The following
is an overview of some of the more promising research on herbal remedies
around the world.
Europe
European phytomedicines, researched in leading European universities
and hospitals, are among the world's best studied medicines. In some cases
they have been in clinical use under medical supervision for more than
10 years, with tens of millions of documented cases. This form of botanical
medicine most closely resembles American medicine. European phytomedicines
are produced under strict quality control in sophisticated pharmaceutical
factories, packaged and labeled like American medicines, and used in tablets
or capsules.
Examples of well-studied European phytomedicines include Silybum marianum
(milk thistle), Ginkgo biloba (ginkgo), Vaccinium myrtillus (bilberry
extract), and Ilex guayusa (guayusa). Their efficacy is well documented.
Herbs of American origin, such as Echinacea (purple coneflower) and Serenoa
repens (saw palmetto), are better studied and marketed in Europe than
in the United States. Below is an overview of recent research on these
phytomedicines and American herbs.
* Milk thistle (Silybum marianum).
Milk thistle has been used as a liver remedy for 2,000 years. In 1970s
studies, seed extracts protected against liver damage and helped regenerate
liver cells damaged by toxins (alcohol) and by diseases such as hepatitis
(Bode et al., 1977) and cirrhosis (Ferenci et al., 1989). More recently,
a 6-month treatment of milk thistle significantly improved liver function
in 36 patients with alcohol-induced liver disease (Feher et al., 1990).
Animal studies show that it may protect against radiation damage caused
by x rays (Flemming, 1971), and it gave "complete protection"
to rats against brain damage caused by the potent nerve toxin triethyltin
sulfate (Varkonyi et al., 1971). European hospital emergency rooms use
intravenous milk thistle extract to counteract cases of liver poisoning
from toxins such as those in the Amanita phalloides mushroom.
* Bilberry extract (Vaccinium myrtillus).
Bilberry extract is believed to help prevent or treat fragile capillaries.
Capillary fragility can cause fluid or blood to leak into the tissues,
causing hemorrhage, stroke, heart attack, or blindness. Less serious effects
include a tendency to bruise easily, varicose veins, poor night vision,
coldness, numbing, and leg cramping. Bilberry extract may protect capillaries
and other small blood vessels by increasing the flexibility of red blood
cell membranes. This action allows capillaries to stretch, increasing
blood flow, and red blood cells can deform into a shape that eases their
way through narrow capillaries.
European clinical trials have shown the effectiveness of bilberry extract
for venous insufficiency of the lower limbs in 18-to 75-year-old subjects
(Corsi, 1987; Guerrini, 1987). It has been used to treat varicose veins
in the legs, where it significantly improved symptoms of varicose syndrome
such as cramps, heaviness, calf and ankle swelling, and numbness (Gatta,
1982). These trials revealed no significant side effects, even at 50 percent
over the normal dose. In two clinical trials, a standardized bilberry
extract was given to 115 women with venous insufficiency and hemorrhoids
following pregnancy. Both studies documented improvements of symptoms,
including pain, burning, and pruritus, all of which disappeared in most
cases (Baisi, 1987; Teglio et al., 1987).
* Ginkgo biloba extract. Though this
oriental herb has a different traditional use in Asia, Ginkgo biloba is
one of Europe's most lucrative phytomedicines (Duke, 1988). In Europe,
ginkgo is used mainly against symptoms of aging. It is believed to stimulate
circulation and oxygen flow to the brain, which can improve problem solving
and memory. It was shown to increase the brain's tolerance for oxygen
deficiency and to increase blood flow in patients with cerebrovascular
disease (Haas, 1981). No other known circulatory stimulant, natural or
synthetic, has selectively increased blood flow to disease-damaged brain
areas. In a French study, "the results confirmed the efficacy of
[ginkgo extract] in cerebral disorders due to aging" (Taillandier
et al., 1988). In another experiment, those given ginkgo showed consistent
and significant improvement over the control group on all tests, including
mobility, orientation, communication, mental alertness, recent memory,
and other factors (Weitbrecht and Jansen, 1985). A "digit copying
test" and a computerized classification test confirmed the improved
cognitive function related to use of this herb (Rai et al., 1991).
Ginkgo extracts also stimulate circulation in the limbs, reducing coldness,
numbness, and cramping. In elderly people, ginkgo improved pain-free walking
distance by 30 percent to 100 percent (Foster, 1990). It also lowered
high cholesterol levels in 86 percent of cases tested and prevented oxygen
deprivation of the heart (Schaffler and Reeh, 1985). The extract seems
to affect neurons directly, as shown by a recent French study (Yabe et
al., 1992). Another French study proved protection against cell damage,
this time by ultraviolet light (Dumont et al., 1992).
A German study documented benefits of long-term ginkgo use in reducing
cardiovascular risks, including those associated with coronary heart disease,
hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, and diabetes mellitus (Witte et al.,
1992). By maintaining blood flow to the retina, ginkgo extracts inhibited
deteriorating vision in the elderly. An adequate amount of extract may
reverse damage from lengthy oxygen deprivation of the retina. The assessment
by doctors and patients of the patients' general condition showed a significant
improvement after therapy. These results show that visual field damage
from chronic lack of blood flow is reversible (Raabe et al., 1991).
* Ilex guayusa (guayusa). In animal
studies, a concentrated aqueous herbal preparation from guayusa leaves
significantly reduced uncontrolled appetite, excessive thirst, and weight
loss associated with diabetes (Swanston-Flatt et al., 1989). Although
guayusa's active principles are not established, guayusa contains guanidine,
a known hypoglycemic (blood sugar-lowering) substance (Duke, 1992b).
* Echinacea (purple coneflower).
The subject of more than 350 scientific studies, most conducted in Europe,
Echinacea seems to stimulate the immune system nonspecifically rather
than against specific organisms. In laboratory tests, Echinacea increased
the number of immune system cells and developing cells in bone marrow
and lymphatic tissue, and it seemed to speed their development into immunocompetent
cells (cells that can react to pathogens). It speeds their release into
circulation, so more are present in blood and lymph, and increases their
phagocytosis rate--the rate at which they can digest foreign bodies. Echinacea
also inhibits the enzyme hyaluronidase, which bacteria use to enter tissues
and cause infection. This inhibition helps wounds to heal by stimulating
new tissue formation.
Echinacea exhibits interferonlike antiviral activity documented through
extensive experiments in Germany. For example, in a double-blind, placebo-controlled
study of 180 volunteers, Echinacea's therapeutic effectiveness for treating
flu-like symptoms was "good to very good" (Braunig et al., 1992).
Another study showed that orally administered Echinacea extracts significantly
enhanced phagocytosis in mice (Bauer et al., 1988). Water-soluble Echinacea
components strongly activated macrophages (Stimpel et al., 1984), enhanced
immune system cell motility, and increased these cells' ability to kill
bacteria. Other immune system cells were stimulated to secrete the disease-fighting
tumor necrosis factor and interleukins 1 and 6 (Roesler et al., 1991).
Another study showed that Echinacea polysaccharides increased the number
of immunocompetent cells in the spleen and bone marrow and the migration
of those cells into the circulatory system. The authors said these effects
resulted in excellent protection of mice against consequences of lethal
listeria and candida infections (Coeugniet and Elek, 1987).
* Saw palmetto (Serenoa repens).
These berries have been used to treat benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH).
The standardized extract was clinically evaluated as effective, has no
observed side effects, and costs 30 percent less than the main prescription
drug marketed in the United States for BPH (Champpault et al., 1984).
Another effective herbal drug for treating BPH is made from Prunus africanum
and is widely prescribed in France. It is interesting to note that the
U.S. government is funding a multicenter study on BPH treatment to find
the most cost-effective criteria for surgical versus medical treatment.
However, because the study includes neither saw palmetto nor Prunus africanum,
it may not reflect the "state of the art" in clinical medicine
worldwide.
China
Since the early 19th century, attempts have been made to understand the
actions and properties of traditional Chinese medicine through scientific
research. Nearly all of this work has been conducted during the past 60
years, primarily in laboratories in China, Korea, Japan, Russia, and Germany.
It was also during this time that most of the drugs used in modern biomedicine
were developed. It is therefore not surprising that most of the biomedical
research into the effects and uses of traditional Chinese medicinal substances
has attempted to isolate their active ingredients and to understand their
effects on body tissues.
Several institutions and laboratories at the forefront of medicinal plant
research in China are working to identify and study the active ingredients
in traditional Chinese herbal remedies. Researchers at the Institute of
Materia Medica in Beijing study the use of herbal remedies to prevent
and treat the common cold, bronchitis, cancer, and cardiovascular disease
and to prevent conception. The institute has isolated compounds such as
bergenin from Ardisia japonica, traditionally used to treat chronic bronchitis,
and monocrotaline from Crotalaria sessiliflora, used in folk medicine
to treat skin cancer. Most of China's 5,000 medicinal plant species are
represented in the institute's herbarium. Other Chinese research organizations
with major programs on medicinal herbs are the Institute of Chinese Medicine,
Beijing; the Institute of Materia Medica, Shanghai; the Institute of Organic
Chemistry, Shanghai; the Municipal Hospital of Chinese Traditional Medicine,
Beijing; the College of Pharmacy, Nanking; and the Department of Organic
Chemistry and Biochemistry, Beijing University (Duke and Ayensu, 1985).
Many herbs in China have been extensively studied by using methods acceptable
from a Western perspective. For example, a 1992 article in the Journal
of Ethnopharmacology reported that during the preceding 10 years more
than 300 original papers on Panax ginseng had been published in Chinese
and English (Liu and Xiao, 1992). Ginseng is one of the world's most thoroughly
researched herbs. Following is an overview of recent research on ginseng
and other herbs in China. Unless otherwise indicated, the data on specific
herbs are taken from Chinese Herbal Medicine: Materia Medica, revised
edition, compiled and translated by Dan Bensky and Andrew Gamble (1993).
* Ginseng root
(Panax ginseng [ren shen]). The Chinese first used oriental ginseng
(Panax ginseng) more than 3,000 years ago as a tonic, a restorative, and
a specific treatment for several ailments. By the 10th century, oriental
ginseng had traveled the Silk Road to the Arabic countries (Kao, 1992),
and during the next 4 centuries it spread to Europe, where the French,
among others, used it to treat asthma and stomach troubles (Vogel, 1970).
In modern times, ginseng has been extensively studied in China, Japan,
and Korea and, to a lesser degree, in the United States. In its various
forms, ginseng or its compounds have various physiological effects. These
include antistress capabilities (Cheng et al., 1986; Yuan et al., 1988),
antihypoxia effects (Cheng et al., 1988; Han et al., 1979; Qu et al.,
1988), alteration of circadian rhythms by modifying neurotransmitters
(Lu et al., 1988; Zhang and Chen, 1987), cardiac performance effects (Chen
et al., 1982), protection against myocardial infarction in animals (Chen,
1983; Fang et al., 1986), histamine response effects (Zhang et al., 1988),
inhibition of platelet aggregation (Shen et al., 1987; Yang et al., 1988),
alteration of circadian variation of plasma corticosterone (Li et al.,
1988), modulation of immune functions (Qian et al., 1987; Wang et al.,
1980), and delay of the effects of aging (Tong and Chao, 1980; Zhang,
1989).
* Fresh ginger rhizome (Zingiber
officinale [sheng jiang]). In one study, preparations of sheng jiang and
brown sugar were used to treat 50 patients with acute bacillary dysentery.
A cure rate of 70 percent was achieved in 7 days. Abdominal pain and tenesmus
(an urgent but ineffectual attempt to urinate or defecate) disappeared
in 5 days, stool frequency returned to normal in 5 days, and stool cultures
were negative within 4 days, with no side effects.
In another study, 6 to 10 thin pieces of sheng jiang placed over the testes
were used to treat acute orchitis (inflammation of the testicles). The
ginger was changed daily or every other day. All participants felt a hot-to-numbing
sensation in the scrotum, while a few reported local erythema and edema.
Among 24 patients in the study, average cure time was 3 days. In a control
group of four patients, average healing time was 8.5 days. This technique
is not recommended for patients with scrotum lesions.
* Chinese foxglove root (Rehmannia
glutinosa [sheng di huang]). A preparation of this herb and Radix glycyrrhiza
uralensis (gan cao) was used to treat 50 cases of hepatitis in various
stages. Within 10 days, 41 cases showed improved symptoms, reduced liver
and spleen size, and improved liver function tests. Experiments from the
1930s seemed to show that sheng di huang, given to rats via gastric lavage
or injection, lowered serum glucose levels. Later studies of this problem
showed variable results. Work in Japan showed that the herb is useful
in treating experimental hyperglycemia in rats. In other studies, decoctions
of sheng di huang have been used to treat rheumatoid arthritis in adults
and children. In one uncontrolled study, 12 subjects all showed reduced
joint pain and swelling, increased function, improved nodules and rash,
and lowered temperature. Followup over 3 to 6 months showed only one relapse,
which was treated successfully with the same preparation.
* Baical skullcap root (Scutellaria
baicalensis [huang qin]). Huang qin was shown to inhibit the skin reaction
of guinea pigs to passive allergic and histamine tests. It has been shown
to be effective in treating guinea pigs with allergic asthma. Huang qin
also prevented pulmonary hemorrhage in mice subjected to very low pressure.
Huang qin has an inhibitory effect against many kinds of bacteria in vitro,
including Staphylococcus aureus, Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Pseudomonas
aeruginosa, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Neisseria meningitidis. In one
report, one strain of bacteria (Staph. aureus) that was resistant to penicillin
remained sensitive to this herb. According to one study, 100 patients
with bacillary dysentery received a prescription composed mainly of huang
qin. Mean recovery times were 2.5 days until symptoms disappeared, 3.3
days until normal stool examination, and 4.3 days until negative stool
cultures.
* Coptis rhizome, or yellow links
(Coptis chinensis [huang lian]). Huang lian and one of its active ingredients,
berberine, have broad effects in vitro against many microbes. It strongly
inhibits many bacteria that cause dysentery; it is more effective than
sulfa drugs but less effective than streptomycin or chloramphenicol. Decoctions
of huang lian have been effective against some bacteria that developed
resistance to streptomycin and other antibiotics. The herb's antimicrobial
ingredient is generally considered to be berberine. Experiments on chicken
embryos show that huang lian has an inhibitory effect against flu viruses
and the Newcastle virus.
Huang lian preparations have a strong inhibitory effect in vitro against
many pathogenic fungi. Capsules of powdered huang lian were given to patients
with typhoid fever, with good results. In one report, two cases that were
resistant to antimicrobials responded to this herb. In another study,
30 cases of pulmonary tuberculosis were treated with huang lian for 3
months; all improved.
A 10-percent solution of huang lian also was used to treat 44 cases of
scarlet fever. It was as effective as penicillin or a combination of penicillin
and a sulfa drug. Huang lian also has been successfully used to treat
diphtheria; in one study, the fever subsided in 1 to 3 days. Huang lian
ointments or solutions promoted healing and reduced infections in first-and
second-degree burns. It also has positive effects on blood pressure, smooth
muscle, lipid metabolism, and the central nervous system; is effective
as an anti-inflammatory; and has been used successfully in gynecology,
ophthalmology, and dermatology patients.
* Woad leaf (Isatis tinctoria [da
qing ye]). Da qing ye kills some kinds of bacteria, including some strains
resistant to sulfa drugs. It was reported effective in hundreds of cases
of encephalitis B, with cure rates of 93 percent to 98 percent. In most
cases the fever subsided in 1 to 4 days, and symptoms disappeared 3 to
5 days later. Da qing ye has been effective by itself in mild and moderate
cases; other herbs, acupuncture, and Western drugs should be added in
severe cases.
In a study of 100 subjects, only 10 percent of the group given a da qing
ye decoction twice daily had upper respiratory infections during the study
period versus 24 percent of the control group. When a mixture of decoctions
of da qing ye and Herba taraxaci mongolici cum radice (pu gong ying) was
given to 150 children with measles, signs and symptoms disappeared in
4 to 5 days. In 68 of 100 cases, da qing ye was used successfully to treat
infectious hepatitis.
* Wild chrysanthemum flower (Chrysanthemum
indicum [ye ju hua]). Ye ju hua has been used to treat hypertension, either
alone as an infusion or with Elos lonicerae japonicae (jin yin hua) and
Herba taraxaci mongolici cum radice (pu gong ying) in a decoction. Ye
ju hua preparations have an inhibitory effect in vitro against some bacteria
and viruses. Preparations given orally or as injections lowered blood
pressure. Preparations made from the whole plant had more toxicity and
less efficacy than those made from the flower alone.
One study was performed with 1,000 subjects to see whether ye ju hua would
prevent colds. The subjects were compared with their own histories and
against a matched set of 261 controls. A ye ju hua decoction was taken
once a month by people with histories of infrequent colds, twice a month
by those with three to five colds a year, and weekly by those with frequent
colds. Comparison with their own histories showed a 13.2-percent reduction
in frequency, but a greater frequency in comparison with the controls.
At the same time, another clinical series of 119 cases of chronic bronchitis
was observed. Using the same preparation, this group experienced a 38-percent
reduction in acute attacks in comparison with their seasonally adjusted
rate for the previous year.
* Bletilla rhizome (Bletilla striata
[bai ji]). Bai ji, in powdered form or in a powder made from starch and
a decoction of bai ji, helped control bleeding in seven of eight cases
of surgical wounds to dogs' livers. Pure starch was much less effective.
Similar results have been achieved with sponges soaked in a sterile water-extraction
solution of the herb. In anesthetized dogs with 1-mm-diameter stomach
perforations, washing the perforations with 9 g of powdered bai ji through
a tube closed the perforations in 15 minutes. Eight hours after the procedure
the abdomens were opened, and no trace of gastric contents was found.
When the dogs' stomachs were full or the perforations were larger, powdered
bai ji had no effect.
In another study, powdered bai ji was used to treat 69 cases of bleeding
ulcers, and in all cases the bleeding stopped within 6.5 days. In another
series of 29 perforated ulcer cases, the powdered herb was successful
in 23 cases, 1 required surgery, and the other 4 died (1 went into hemorrhagic
shock while under treatment, and the other 3 were in precarious condition
on admission).
In other studies, powdered bai ji was given to 60 chronic tuberculosis
patients who had not responded to normal therapy. After taking the herb
for 3 months, 42 were clinically cured, 13 significantly improved, and
2 showed no change. A sterile ointment made from decocted bai ji and petroleum
jelly was used in a local application to treat 48 cases of burns and trauma
(less than 11 percent of total body area). Dressings were changed every
5 to 7 days, and all patients recovered within 1 to 3 weeks.
* Salvia, or cinnabar root (Salvia
miltiorrhiza [dan shen]). Dan shen caused coronary arteries to dilate
in guinea pig and rabbit heart specimens. In one study of 323 patients
given a dan shen preparation for 1 to 9 months, there was marked improvement
in 20.3 percent of clinical cases and general improvement in 62 percent
of cases. Results were best when patients had coronary artery disease
and no history of myocardial infarction. In a clinical series of more
than 300 patients with angina pectoris, a combination of dan shen and
Lignum dalbergiae odoriferae (jiang xiang) given intramuscularly or intravenously
improved symptoms in 82 percent and electrocardiograms in 50 percent of
cases.
* Corydalis rhizome (Corydalis yanhusuo
[yan hu suo]). Yan hu suo is widely used to treat pain. Powdered yan hu
suo is a very strong analgesic, about 1 percent the strength of opium.
In one clinical study of 44 patients with painful or difficult menstruation,
50 mg of the yan hu suo active ingredient, dihydrocorydaline, given 3
times a day brought significant relief in 14 cases and reduced pain in
another 18 cases. Side effects included reductions in menstrual flow,
headaches, and fatigue.
* Root of Szechuan aconite (Aconitum
carmichaeli [fu zi]). Fu zi's toxicity has always been a major concern.
It is usually prepared with salt to reduce its toxicity. Anesthetized
dogs or cats given fu zi preparations showed a sharp drop in blood pressure.
In another experiment, fu zi caused blood vessels to dilate in lower extremities
and coronary vessels. In normal dosage for humans, fu zi slightly lowers
blood pressure, while a large overdose can cause rapid heartbeat or ventricular
fibrillation. This herb seems to have some cardiotonic function and a
regulatory effect on heart rhythm. Administered with herbs such as Cortex
cinnamomi cassiae (rou gui), Panax ginseng (ren shen), Rhizoma zingiberis
officinalis (gan jiang), and Radix glycyrrhiza uralensis (gan cao), fu
zi raised blood pressure in animals with acute hemorrhage. In one study,
patients with congestive heart failure were treated by intramuscular injections
of a fu zi preparation. In all cases, including one of cardiogenic shock,
the result was increased cardiac output as well as decreased breathing
difficulty, liver swelling, and general edema. A few cases showed temporary
side effects of flushing and slight tremors.
* Licorice root (Glycyrrhiza uralensis
[gan cao]). Gan cao preparations have been used with common antituberculosis
drugs in many large clinical studies among patients who did not respond
to standard treatment. In most cases, symptoms improved or disappeared
and x rays improved markedly. In many clinical studies using gan cao for
ulcers with groups of 50 to 200 subjects, effectiveness was around 90
percent. It was especially useful to treat the pain, which disappeared
or improved within 1 to 3 weeks. The more recent the onset of disease,
the better the results. In almost all cases the powdered herb was most
effective.
In rats with experimentally induced atherosclerosis, gan cao lowered cholesterol
levels and stopped progression of lesions. In several experiments, the
herb reduced the toxicity of some substances, including cocaine, and moderately
reduced the toxicity of others, including caffeine and nicotine. When
decocted with fu zi, it sharply reduced fu zi's toxicity.
* Dryopteris root, or shield fern
(Dryopteris crassirhizoma [guan zhong]). Dryopteris crassirhizoma is called
dong bei guan zhong because it is found in northeastern (dong bei) China.
In recent times this herb has been prescribed as a preventive measure
during influenza epidemics. Guan zhong preparations strongly inhibit the
flu virus in vitro. In one clinical trial, 306 people took twice-weekly
doses of guan zhong and 340 served as controls. In the treatment group,
12 percent became ill versus 33 percent of the controls. Local versions
of guan zhong from Guangdong, Hunan, and Jiangxi provinces have mildly
inhibitory effects in vitro against many pathogenic bacteria. Guan zhong
also is effective against pig roundworms in vitro, and it expels tapeworms
and liver flukes in cattle.
In other studies, decoctions and alcohol extracts of dong bei guan zhong
strongly stimulated the uterus of guinea pigs and rabbits. It increased
the frequency and strength of contractions. Intramuscular injections of
dong bei guan zhong preparations were used with more than 91-percent success
to treat postpartum, postmiscarriage, and postsurgical bleeding.
* Garlic bulb (Allium sativum [da
suan]). Da suan preparations have a strong inhibitory effect in vitro
against amebae. In one study, concentrated da suan decoctions were used
to treat 100 cases of amebic dysentery. The cure rate was 88 percent,
and the average hospital stay was 7 days. In this clinical study, purple-skinned
bulbs were more effective than white-skinned bulbs. Patients were discharged
on a regimen that included purple-skinned da suan in the daily diet.
When used with Chinese leek seeds, da suan juice and decoctions have a
strong inhibitory effect in vitro against many pathogenic bacteria. Da
suan can be effective against bacteria that resist penicillin, streptomycin,
and chloramphenicol. In one clinical study, 130 patients with bacillary
dysentery were given da suan enemas. Of the followup colonoscopies, 126
showed that pathological changes were resolved within 6.3 days. In other
studies with hundreds of patients, da suan's effectiveness against bacillary
dysentery was more than 95 percent. Again, purple-skinned garlic seemed
more effective than white-skinned, and fresh bulbs were more effective
than old ones. In one clinical study, 17 cases of encephalitis B were
treated with an intravenous drip of da suan preparations and supportive
care. Except for one fatality, all other cases recovered.
India
Ayurveda, the oldest existing medical system, is recognized by WHO and
is widely practiced. The word comes from two Sanskrit roots: ayus means
life or span; veda means knowledge or science. India recently increased
research on traditional Ayurvedic herbal medicines after observations
that they are effective for conditions to which they have traditionally
been applied. For example, the ancient Sanskrit text on Ayurveda, the
Sushruta Samhita, noted that Commiphora mukul was useful in treating obesity
and conditions equivalent to hyperlipidemia, or increased concentrations
of cholesterol in the body. The plant has been used by Ayurveda practitioners
for at least 200 years and may have been in use since the writing of the
Sushruta Samhita more than 2,000 years ago. In a recent study, the crude
gum from Commiphora mukul significantly lowered serum cholesterol in rabbits
with high cholesterol levels. The plant substance also protected rabbits
from cholesterol-induced atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries).
This finding led to pharmacological and toxicological studies that showed
this herbal remedy to be effective in humans, with no adverse side effects.
Approval was obtained from the national regulatory authority in India
for further clinical trials (Verma and Bordia, 1988). The drug is marketed
in India and other countries for treatment of hyperlipidemia (Chaudhury,
1992).
The following other Ayurvedic herbs have recently been studied in India
under modern scientific conditions:

* Eclipta alba. In Ayurvedic medicine,
Eclipta alba is said to be the best drug for treating liver cirrhosis
and infectious hepatitis. Eclipta alba and Wedelia calendulacea are widely
used in India for jaundice and other liver and gall bladder ailments.
One recent study showed that a liquid extract from fresh Eclipta leaves
was effective in vivo in preventing acute carbon tetrachloride-induced
liver damage in guinea pigs. Clinically, the powdered drug is effective
against jaundice in children (Wagner et al., 1986).
* Common teak tree (Tectona grandis).
Trunk wood and bark of the common teak tree are described in Ayurvedic
medicine as a cure for chronic dyspepsia (indigestion) associated with
burning pain. Teak bark forms an ingredient of several Ayurvedic preparations
used to treat peptic ulcer. Pandey et al. (1982) experimentally screened
teak bark and its effect on gastric secretory function and ulcers in albino
rats and guinea pigs. The solution reduced gastric ulcers in restrained
albino rats and significantly inhibited gastric and duodenal ulcers in
guinea pigs.
* Indian gooseberry (Emblica officinalis
[amla]). Jacob et al. (1988) studied the effect of total serum cholesterol
by using amla to supplement the diets of normal and hypercholesterolemic
men aged 35-55. The supplement was given for 28 days in raw form. Normal
and hypercholesterolemic subjects showed decreased cholesterol levels.
Two weeks after the supplement was withdrawn, total serum cholesterol
levels of the hypercholesterolemic subjects rose almost to initial levels.
* Picrorhiza kurroa. P. kurroa rhizomes
are main ingredients of a bitter tonic used in fever and dyspepsia (indigestion).
This drug occupies a prestigious position in Ayurveda. It often substitutes
for Gentiana kurroo, the Indian gentian. Powdered rhizomes also are used
as a remedy for asthma, bronchitis, and liver diseases. Other researchers
have reported that a P. kurroa-derived mixture called kutkin exhibits
hepatoprotective activity; that P. kurroa acts as a bile enhancer; that
it has antiasthmatic effects in patients with chronic asthma; and that
it has immunomodulating activity in cell-mediated and humoral immunity.
Another study (Bedi et al., 1989) shows that P. kurroa works to boost
the immune system as a supplement to other treatments in patients with
vitiligo, a skin disease that causes discolored spots.
* Articulin-F. This herbomineral
formula contains roots of Withania somnifera, stem of Boswellia serrata,
rhizomes of Curcuma longa, and a zinc complex. Kulkarni et al. (1991)
performed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study
of articulin-F to treat osteoarthritis, a common progressive rheumatic
disease characterized by degeneration and eventual loss of articular cartilage.
Articulin-F treatment produced a significant drop in pain severity and
disability score, whereas radiological assessment showed no significant
changes.
* Abortifacient plants. Nath et al.
(1992) organized a survey program in Lucknow and Farrukhabad, two towns
in Uttar Pradesh, India, from March to July 1987. During the survey, they
recorded the common folk medicine used by women and consulted Ayurvedic
and Unani drug encyclopedias for the antireproductive potential of the
following medicinal plants: leaves of Adhatoda vasica, leaves of Moringa
oleifera, seeds of Butea monosperma, seeds of Trachyspermum ammai, flowers
of Hibiscus sinensis, seeds of Abrus precatorius, seeds of Apium petroselinium,
buds of Bambusa arundensis, leaves of Aloe barbadensis, seeds of Anethum
sowa, seeds of Lepidium sativum, seeds of Raphanus sativus, seeds of Mucuna
pruriens, seeds of Sida cordifolia, seeds of Blepharis edulis, flowers
of Acacia arabica, and seeds of Mesua ferrea. Plant materials were collected,
authenticated, chopped into small pieces, air dried in shade, and then
ground to a 60-mesh powder. During the survey, female rats were given
aqueous or 90-percent ethanol extracts of the plants orally for 10 days
after insemination by males, with special attention to effects on fetal
development. Leaf extracts of Moringa oleifera and Adhatoda vasica were
100-percent abortive at doses equivalent to 175 mg/kg of starting dry
material.
* Neem (Azadiractica indica) and
turmeric (Curcuma longa). In the Ayurveda and Sidha systems of medicine,
neem and turmeric are used to heal chronic ulcers and scabies. Charles
and Charles (1991) used neem and turmeric as a paste to treat scabies
in 814 people. Ninety-seven percent of cases were cured within 3 to 15
days. The researchers found this to be a cheap, easily available, effective,
acceptable mode of treatment for villagers in developing countries, with
no adverse reactions.
* Trikatu. Trikatu is an Ayurvedic
preparation containing black pepper, long pepper, and ginger. It is prescribed
routinely for several diseases as part of a multidrug prescription. These
herbs, along with piperine (alkaloid of peppers), have biological effects
in mammals, including enhancement of other medicaments. Of 370 compounds
listed in the Handbook of Domestic Medicines and Common Ayurvedic Remedies
(Handbook, 1979), 210 contain trikatu or its ingredients. Trikatu is a
major decoction used to restore the imbalance of kapha, vata, and pitta,
the body's three humors (see the "Alternative Systems of Medical
Practice" chapter). Piper species are used internally to treat fevers,
gastric and abdominal disorders, and urinary difficulties. Externally
they are used to treat rheumatism, neuralgia, and boils. P. longum and
P. nigrum are folklore remedies for asthma, bronchitis, dysentery, pyrexia,
and insomnia (Akamasu, 1970; Chopra and Chopra, 1959; Perry, 1980; Youngken,
1950). In Chinese folklore, P. nigrum is mentioned as a treatment for
epilepsy (Pei, 1983). The efficacy of P. longum fruits in reducing asthma
in adults (Upadhyaya et al., 1982) and children has been reported (Dahanukar
et al., 1984). P. nigrum promoted digestive juice secretion (Shukla, 1984)
and increased appetite (Sumathikutty et al., 1979). P. longum was reported
useful in patients with gastric disorders accompanied by clinical symptoms
of achlorhydria (Kishore et al., 1990).
Barriers to Herbal Medicine Research in the United
States
The regulatory lockout of natural remedies has crippled natural products
research in U.S. universities and hospitals. There is no dedicated level
of support by the Federal Government for herbal medicine research. Herbalists
may apply under existing guidelines for approval of new pharmaceutical
drugs, but this burden is unrealistic because the total cost of bringing
a new pharmaceutical drug to market in the United States is an estimated
$140 million to $500 million (Wall Street Journal, 1993). Because botanicals
are not patentable (although they can be patented for use), an herbal
medicine manufacturer could never recover this expenditure. Therefore,
herbal remedies are not viable candidates for the existing drug approval
process: pharmaceutical companies will not risk a loss of this magnitude,
and herb companies lack the financial resources even to consider seeking
approval.
Another major barrier is that the academic infrastructure necessary for
proper study of ethnomedical systems has seriously eroded in recent decades
and must be reinvigorated to accommodate the newly recognized need for
preserving traditional medical systems and biological diversity. Pharmacognosy
and other academic studies of medicinal plants have declined alarmingly
in the United States. North American scientists, once at the forefront
of this research, lag behind their European and Japanese colleagues, reducing
the likelihood that they will discover useful new medicines from plants.
This problem is exacerbated by the fact that much of the discipline of
botany has moved away from field studies and into molecular and laboratory
approaches. Today only a handful of active full-time ethnobotanists are
trained to catalog information on the medicinal properties of plants.
In contrast to the United States, many European and Asian countries have
taken a more holistic approach to researching the efficacy of herbal remedies.
In Germany, France, and Japan, the past 20 years have seen a rapid increase
in research into and use of standardized, semipurified (still containing
multiple individual chemicals) herbal extracts called phytomedicines.
In Europe and Japan, phytomedicines treat conditions ranging from serious,
life-threatening diseases such as heart disease and cancer to simple symptomatic
relief of colds, aches and pains, and other conditions treated by OTC
drugs in the United States. Phytomedicines include preventive medicines,
an often-neglected area of medicine in the United States. The FDA has
approved many plant-derived "heroic" cures, but never a plant-derived
preventive medicine.
Research Needs and Opportunities
Much modern-day medicine is directly or indirectly derived from plant
sources, so it would be foolish to conclude that plants offer no further
potential for the treatment or cure of major diseases. Worldwide, the
botanical pharmacopoeia contains tens of thousands of plants used for
medicinal purposes. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of definitive texts,
monographs, and tomes on herbal remedies exist. But most of this information
is outside current databases and remains unavailable to physicians, researchers,
and consumers.
Globally, herbal remedies have been researched under rigorous controls
and have been approved by the governments of technologically advanced
nations. The scientific validation is good to excellent, and the history
of clinical use is even stronger. Many phytomedicines have been used by
thousands of physicians in their practices and are consumed under medical
supervision by tens of millions of people.
A great deal of literature exists on the use of phytomedicines in Europe
and within native medical systems in China, Japan, India, and North America.
Much of this literature can be found in a unique database developed and
maintained by the University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Pharmacy.
The database, NAPRALERT (Natural Products Alert), holds references for
more than 100,000 scientific articles and books on natural products (plant,
microbial, and animal extracts). NAPRALERT includes considerable data
on the chemistry and pharmacology (including human studies) of secondary
metabolites of known structure, derived from natural sources. About 80
percent of the references are from post-1975 literature, the rest from
pre-1975 literature (see the "Research Databases" chapter for
more information on NAPRALERT).
In 1981 the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), in conjunction with
the National Cancer Institute, concluded a 25-year study of plants with
possible anticancer properties. One result is published in the Handbook
of Medicinal Herbs (Duke and Ayensu, 1985). This work lists 365 folk medicinal
species and identifies more than 1,000 pharmacologically active phytochemicals.
Toxicity estimates are given for many of these biologically active compounds.
More recently, Dr. James Duke of USDA published databases on biologically
active compounds of more than 1,000 species of plants with potential medicinal
uses (Duke, 1992a, 1992b). Duke proposed to FDA a computer-calculated
toxicity index to parallel the Ames Human Exposure Rodent Potency (HERP)
index for carcinogenicity. He calls his index the Better Understanding
of Relative Potency (BURP) index.
Much of the literature on traditional Chinese and other Asian countries'
herbal medicine is only now beginning to be translated into English. While
much of this information is in the form of folklore, there is a growing
body of data from scientifically valid literature on herbal medicine research
in China as well as India and Japan. In 1986, the book Chinese Herbal
Medicine: Materia Medica was published by Dan Bensky and Andrew Gamble,
both of whom are fluent in Chinese dialects and studied herbal medicine
in Asia. Revised in 1993 (Bensky and Gamble, 1993), it presents an indepth
study of 470 herbs used in traditional Chinese medicine. Each entry details
the traditional properties, actions and indications, principal combinations,
dosage, and contraindications of the herbs, as well as summaries of abstracts
regarding pharmacological and clinical research conducted in Asia. The
revised edition also provides a brief description of the appearance of
each herb.
Although very little laboratory or clinical research has been performed
on Native American Indian herbal remedies, extensive listings of herbs
and their uses have been compiled by ethnobotanists for several tribes.
One source, American Indian Medicine (Vogel, 1970), cites references in
the professional ethnobotanical literature on herbal medicines for the
following tribes: Alabama-Koasati, Arakara, Algonquian, Arapaho, Aztec,
Catawba, Cheyenne, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Comanche, Congaree, Creek, Dakota,
Delaware, Hoh, Hopi, Houma, Huron, Illinois-Miami, Iroquois, Kwakiutl,
Lake St. John Montagnais, Mayan, Menomini, Mescalero Apache, Malecite,
Meswaki, Michigan, Mohawk, Mohegan, Natchez, Navajo, Nebraska, Oglala
Sioux, Ojibwa, Omaka, Pawnee, Penobscot, Ponca, Potawatomi, Quileute,
Rappahannock, San Carlos Apache, Seminole, Sioux, White Mountain Apache,
Ute, Winnebago, Yuma, and Zuni. Moerman's database (Moerman, 1982) lists
more than 2,000 species of Native American Indian medicinal plants, and
Duke (1986) lists more than 700 eastern ones.
These sources--the NAPRALERT database, USDA laboratory research, the Bensky
and Gamble book, and the Native American Indian herbal medicinal books--are
the foundation on which the U.S. Government, particularly the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), can begin substantial research into herbal
medicines.
Much unwritten knowledge resides in the hands of healers in many societies
where oral transmission of information is the rule. Unfortunately, in
many regions this information is endangered because there are no young
apprentices to whom elderly healers can pass on their unwritten wisdom;
the knowledge that has been refined over thousands of years of experimentation
with herbal medicine is being lost. A major research opportunity in this
area would be to catalog information on herbal medicines from thousands
of traditional healers in cultures where these skills are normally transmitted
through an apprentice system. Some organizations have recently increased
their efforts to catalog endangered herbal knowledge from traditional
medical systems in Latin America, such as those practiced in the rain
forests of Belize (Arvigo and Balick, 1993) and Peru (Duke and Martinez,
in press).
Basic Research Priorities
Basic research into characterizing these plant products and compounds
in terms of standardized content and potential toxicity is needed to allow
safe and replicable research to document clinical efficacy. Basic science
research should be conducted to evaluate research on the biochemical effects
of traditional herbal prescriptions from Western, Ayurvedic, oriental,
and other traditions (see the "Alternative Systems of Medical Practice"
chapter).
Clinical Research Priorities
Research in phytomedicines in the United States could follow on the results
of existing high-quality European and Asian research on plant medicines
and should focus on replicating results of key studies or addressing weaknesses
in those studies. Reviews of foreign literature and translations of non-English
literature would be helpful. Current widespread use of herbal medications
as "food supplements" in the United States provides a ready
base of users, producers, and practitioners for clinical research in traditional
and modern applications of botanical medicine.
Key Research Issues
Before a comprehensive research agenda is developed, several key issues
must be addressed, including the following: the impending loss of knowledge
about traditional healing in many societies; the impending loss of large
numbers of plant species of potential medicinal value; impediments to
the use of herbal remedies outside the cultures in which they originated;
and determination of the conditions under which herbal medicines are most
appropriate, safe, and effective. Additionally, several regulatory issues
hamper research into herbal medicines.
Loss of Knowledge
The knowledge of traditional healers in remote Amazonian or Central American
regions may have the potential to make a significant contribution to Western
society. But few, if any, practitioners of these lesser known medical
systems practice outside their native range, and those who still practice
within these regions are elderly and often have not found younger disciples.
Loss of Plant Species of Potential Medicinal
Value
This loss of knowledge from traditional healers comes at a time when
native flora in many areas, especially tropical regions, are being destroyed
at an alarming pace. In the United States alone, an estimated 10 percent
of all species of flowering plants will be extinct by the year 2000, including
an estimated 16 species of medicinally useful plants (Farnsworth et al.,
1985).
One hopeful sign is that the U.S. Government recently formed a cooperative
biodiversity group including representatives from NIH, the National Institute
of Mental Health, the National Science Foundation (NSF), and the U.S.
Agency for International Development. This group intends to fund research
to locate and catalog medicinally active substances that can be analyzed
and used for new pharmaceutical drug development, while working to preserve
biological diversity in developing countries.
Use in Practice
Basic to the use of medicinal herbs in many societies is the practice
of using whole, unrefined plant material. The material may be leaves,
buds, flowers, bark, or roots, separately or in combination. In some cases
an herbal remedy is a complex mixture of many plants. There is an age-old
belief that whole-plant medicines have fewer dangerous side effects and
provide a more balanced physiological action than plant-derived pharmaceutical
drugs whose single ingredient has been isolated, concentrated, and packaged
as a pill or liquid.
Herbs and herbal preparations generally are self-administered. Often they
are purchased through native herbalists who prescribe one or more herbs
or preparations on the basis of medical and health approaches that often
include concepts of attaining balance in the client's body, psychology,
and spirit (see the "Community-Based Medical Practices" section
of the "Alternative Systems of Medical Practice" chapter). Consequently,
it is often difficult to assess the relative value of herbal remedies
versus prescription drugs on a one-to-one basis.
Indeed, herbal remedies of all types, including those from China, are
composed of a multitude of ingredients whose interactions with the body
are exceedingly complex. A high level of sophistication of research methodology
is necessary to describe the interaction between the human body and substances
as complex as those contained in many herbal remedies. Only recently has
such a rigorous methodology begun to be developed. For example, the Chinese
herb Herba hedyotidis diffusae (bai hua she she cao) has been shown clinically
effective in the prevention and treatment of a variety of infectious diseases.
However, it has not been demonstrated to have a significant inhibitory
effect in vitro against any major pathogen. Only as techniques became
available to test the immunological system did it become apparent that
at least part of the herb's effect was due to its enhancement of the body's
immune response (Bensky and Gamble, 1993).
Another complicating factor in researching traditional Chinese herbal
medicine is the fact that Chinese medicine characteristically tries to
treat the whole body to alleviate disease stemming from one body organ.
Therefore, it rarely relies on a single herb to treat an illness. Instead,
formulas usually contain 4 to 12 different herbs (Duke and Ayensu, 1985).
Beyond the problem of trying to test herbal preparations that may contain
many active ingredients is the question of whether the research eventually
will lead to the isolation of single active ingredients that can be packaged
and sold separately. Intense debate surrounds the issue of how to conduct
clinical trials of herbal medicines according to Western pharmaceutical
clinical standards. Critics say there is an inherent problem with the
single-active-ingredient approach preferred by pharmaceutical companies
that are actively involved in herbal medicine research. The problem, they
say, is that isolating a single compound may not be the most appropriate
approach in situations where a plant's activity decreases on further fractionation
(separation of active ingredients by using solvents) or where the plant
contains two or three active ingredients that must be taken together to
produce the full effect (Chaudhury, 1992). Beckstrom-Sternberg and Duke
(1994) have documented several cases where synergy has been lost by using
the single-ingredient approach to developing drugs from plants.
A good example of this single-active-ingredient versus whole-plant debate
is illustrated by intense interest among pharmaceutical companies in the
compound called genistein. Genistein is part of a class of compounds called
flavonoids that occur naturally in plants such as kudzu, licorice, and
red clover. Soybeans contain high concentrations of genistein, and lima
beans reportedly are even higher in genistein than soybeans (Duke, 1993).
There is increasing evidence that genistein may inhibit the growth of
cancers of the stomach (Yanagihara et al., 1993), pancreas (Ura et al.,
1993), liver (Mousavi and Adlercreutz, 1993), and prostate (Peterson and
Barnes, 1993). Genistein is believed to inhibit the growth of cancers
because of its antiangiogenetic properties (i.e., it prevents the growth
of new blood vessels--a process known as angiogenesis--to tumors).
Genistein is being intensely studied as a possible preventive or treatment
for breast cancer, which kills an estimated 44,000 women in the United
States each year (Duke, 1993). Studies indicate a correlation between
a high intake of foods containing genistein (soy products) and a low incidence
of hormone-dependent cancers such as breast cancer (Hirayama, 1986) and
prostate cancer (Baker, 1992). The growth of certain cancers, especially
breast cancers, has been shown to depend on the female sex hormone estrogen.
Genistein exhibits estrogenlike activity in plants and is often called
a phytoestrogen. In humans it binds to estrogen receptors (Baker, 1992).
It has been suggested that these phytoestrogens may compete with endogenous
estrogen on the cellular level, further reducing the cellular proliferation
and the potentially carcinogenic effects of estrogen (Tang and Adams,
1981). Thus, it may prevent the growth of estrogen-dependent cancer by
competing for estrogen sites on the tumor cells.
If genistein is developed as an isolated pharmaceutical drug, it may have
some action against cancer, but the purified compound may not be as potent
as genistein in its natural state, and trials may give misleading results.
The reason is that all plant species containing genistein also contain
other flavonoid compounds, which may have synergistic effects when ingested
with genistein. Formononetin--a precursor of equol, which also occurs
with genistein--is said to be more active estrogenically than genistein
(Spanu et al., 1993). Although genistein clearly inhibits angiogenesis,
several other compounds are pseudoestrogens. With this in mind, the question
arises: Is a mixture of genistein, formononetin, and other flavonoids,
as occurs in many plants, more estrogenic (and antiangiogenic) than an
equivalent quantity of any one of these components? If so, the herbal
or dietary approach may make more sense than a genistein "silver
bullet" approach.
Safety, Efficacy, and Appropriateness
Opinions about the safety, efficacy, and appropriateness of medicinal
herbs vary widely among medical and health professionals in countries
where herbal remedies are used. Some countries' professionals accept historical,
empirical evidence as the only necessary criterion for herbal medicine's
efficacy. Others would ban all herbal remedies as dangerous or of questionable
value.
The problem is further complicated by the fact that many "patent
medicines" available in world trade often are sold as herbal medicinal
preparations when they include nonherbal substances. These nonherbal additives
often include toxic metals (cinnabar, i.e., mercury) (Kang-Yum and Oransky,
1992), poisonous substances (powdered scorpion), or refined prescription
drugs (Catlin et al., 1993). Usually labeled "Chinese herbal medicine,"
many of these products are manufactured in Thailand, Taiwan, or Hong Kong
and exported to the United States, where they are sold in retail outlets.
The California Department of Health Services, in conjunction with the
Oriental Herbal Association, r
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