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Herbal Blood Cleaners
By CoreyPine Shane
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sidebar: Alternative
Herbs Quick List
All traditional medicine is holistic in nature,
putting as much emphasis on maintaining health as on defeating
illness. In the western herbal tradition, one of the cornerstones
of maintaining health is the idea of removing toxicity by cleansing
the blood, using good diet and a category of herbs known as “alteratives,”
which alter the body’s environment for the better,
gently cleansing the blood and therefore the body in subtle ways.
How do you know when someone’s toxic if they’re not
sick right now? Toxins can first show up as fatigue, mental dullness,
and even a hangover kind of feeling. There is less ability to
adapt to environmental stresses, and improper foods or environmental
irritants more easily aggravate a person. Eventually, this can
manifest as migraine headaches, allergies, poor immune system
functioning, and skin disease. With a lifetime of toxic blood,
toxins can create an environment for arthritis, heart disease,
and cancer.
Some cleansing herbs work in obvious ways, for example, bitter
herbs that stimulate liver function, or herbs that increase urine
production in the kidneys, or diaphoretic herbs that cause sweating,
kind of an herbal sauna. Alteratives work in subtle ways, perhaps
including stimulation of the liver, kidneys, or sweat glands,
but most directly they work on the lymph system. Although some
herbalists separate out lymphatic herbs from alteratives, there’s
enough overlap that we’ll consider them as one category
here.
The lymph system is one area to which herbalists pay more attention
to than mainstream medicine practioners; herbalists have a much
greater appreciation of subtlety, since herbal diagnostics are
more based on pre-clinical conditions, and the remedies are gentler
with a broader effect.
The lymph vessels parallel the blood vessels and are the overflow
storm drain of the body fluids. When blood reaches the smallest
blood vessels, fluids get pushed out of the capillaries into the
tissues where they exchange nutrition and oxygen for carbon dioxide
and waste products. But only about ninety percent of that fluid
actually returns to the veins. The lymph system sucks up the other
ten percent or so, where it stops at lymph node way stations to
get picked through on its way back to primary circulation.
These nodes and lymph glands are major players in the immune system,
because this is where an antibody response to an infection first
gets mounted. This is most obvious when you think about catching
a cold where the lymph glands under your jaw and around your throat
start getting enlarged. But you can also see swellings in your
armpits or groin because lymph nodes there protect the trunk of
the body from infection. Lymph problems also undermine many female
breast diseases from fibrocystic breasts to breast cancer. It’s
also worth working with alteratives for arthritis, skin disease,
and autoimmune conditions. Many of them make great daily tonics!
Some of the best alterative herbs to clear the lymph system are
red root, cleavers, mullein, calendula, burdock, stinging nettles,
sassafras, and red clover, although the list could go on. These
are all herbs that grow locally and abundantly and are relatively
easy to find and harvest yourself, or are available on the shelf
if you’d rather not.
Red root (Ceanothus americanus) is one of my personal favorites.
Also known as New Jersey Tea, the roots of this plant are a rich
blood red and even taste a bit like sassafras. Red root is most
useful for throat swellings such as tonsillitis, pharyngitis,
and sore throat, but it should also be part of any formula for
fibrocystic breasts (in addition to quitting all caffeine, including
chocolate). One of its key uses is for when the lymph system is
slow moving and boggy—red root tightens up the junctions
and gets the lymph moving.
For acute illnesses, red root can be combined with echinacea or
baptisia, where it also exerts a mild expectorant effect. For
chronic conditions, combine it with some of the gentler alteratives
such as burdock, cleavers, or violet to clear out stuck conditions.
It has a historical use for enlarged spleen (a mass of lymphatic
tissue), prostate conditions, and cough. One specific indication
might be someone with a sallow, doughy complexion.
Stinging nettles (Urtica dioica) is probably the all-time favorite
herb of many herbalists, and is a neat alterative because it gets
you at both ends—both providing nutrition and assisting
with elimination of waste products. It is one of the basic nourishing
herbs of modern herbalism, with good amounts of iron, calcium,
magnesium, zinc, vitamin C, vitamin A, and more. At the same time,
it can help with allergies by drying and strengthening the mucous
membrane of the respiratory system. As an alterative, nettles
are also used for arthritis, kidney conditions, acne, and as a
general cleansing tonic.
To make a proper nettles preparation, put a handful in a canning
jar, fill the jar with just-boiled water, cap it and let it set
for four or more hours. The result is a rich broth-like tea that
you could almost chew it’s so full of nutrition.
Burdock root (Arctium lappa) is a wonderful and under-appreciated
medicine. So gentle it can be eaten as food (as can red clover,
cleavers, and cooked nettles), Burdock moistens the body and can
be used for dry skin conditions such as eczema, it balances blood
sugar, and it also makes a great tonic for both the liver and
kidneys.
Cleavers (Galium aparine) is an alterative that affects both the
lymph and the kidneys, helping to clear out extra water waste
by stimulating the kidneys to excrete more waste products in the
urine. Red clover is an alterative with a specific affinity for
the chest area, including both the lungs and the breasts. Calendula
is a warming alterative that is also anti-viral and anti-fungal.
All of these herbs can help us maintain our health, and with a
little knowledge and intuition, we can figure out which one is
best for our own constitution. And always remember that herbs
don’t act in a vacuum apart from the rest of our lives-if
we really want to cleanse, we need to begin at home with what
we eat, what we clean with and how we live. Otherwise the best
herbs will be for naught!
CoreyPine Shane is a Holistic Clinical Herbalist, Director
of the Blue Ridge School of Herbal Medicine, and environmental
activist. In his practice he combines the philosophies of Chinese
and Western Medicine, using primarily local herbs. His website
is www.blueridgeschool.org.
He can be contacted at 828-275-6221
sidebar:
Alternative Herbs Quick List
Burdock (Arcticum lappa)
Part Used: Root or seeds
Finding & Harvesting: Common weed in meadows and fields with
very large leaves and a long tap root
Uses: Cleanses the blood primarily through its action on
the liver and kidneys
Contraindications: None known
Calendula (Calendula officinalis)
Part Used: Flowers
Finding & Harvesting: Grown frequently in gardens
Uses: Stimulates lymph & is anti-fungal and anti-viral
Contraindications: Occasional minor digestive upset
Cleavers (Galium aparine)
Part Used: Whole herb
Finding & Harvesting: A common mat-forming plant of wood edges,
easily identified by its whorl of leaves and prickly hairs
Uses: Stimulates lymph movement throughout the body, especially
in the lower half and kidneys
Contraindications: May be synergistic with
pharmaceutical diuretics
Nettles (Urtica dioica)
Part Used: Leaves
Finding & Harvesting: Usually found in disturbed wet areas
in towns. Grows in stands and looks mint like with opposite toothed
leaves.
Uses: Both Nourishing and cleansing. Helps alkanize the blood
and balance minerals.
Contraindications: None known
Red Clover (Trifolium pretense)
Part Used: Flowers
Finding & Harvesting: Common purple flower of yards and meadows
with set of three leaflets, each with a “delta” on
it
Uses: Useful for skin & lymphatic conditions, gently nourishing
and has a special affinity for the lungs & breasts.
Contraindications: Not to be used while taking
an anti-estrogenic
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