Showing posts with label Herbal Supplements. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Herbal Supplements. Show all posts

Monday, September 1, 2014

TOO MANY SUPPLEMENTS? PART 2


The Huntress, Pen, Ink, & Colored Pencil. © by Ruth Zachary
My last post was an abridged version of an article By Tom Philpott, food and ag. correspondent for Mother Jones (July 23, 2014) I liked the fact that several contributors were credited with parts of the general challenge to conventional beliefs about plant and human biochemistry, including possible ill effects from supplements. The way plant and human biochemistry interact is very complicated.
All the studies are carefully worded with disclaimers, such as “may,” “might be wildly wrong” and so on. The last word on the subject has clearly not been concluded.
All the same, it is well worth keeping our eye on the latest information if we can get it and if we can trust it. It is still not clear if people are better off getting their phytochemicals from real food sources than from supplements and vitamins.
I personally suspect that it is better to get it from real foods, but there is a problem with our modern world in that the full values from our foods is diminished by growing less nutritious foods than our ancestors ate, when and if they could eat well, given seasonal variations and weather cycles. Distribution of our current diet diminishes the value in even the best fruits and vegetables.
A Sixty Minutes feature yesterday (Sunday, Aug 31) discussed a study of supplements and other factors believed to be influential for longevity. Factors that seemed to contribute were a healthy social life, a daily glass of wine and regular exercise out of doors.
No one questioned whether people who lived shorter lives also exercised, drank wine and had active social lives.
Supplements and vitamins taken by this long living group of seniors, were not always the same, and was assumed not to be a factor. The conclusion about vitamins was that they did not contribute to long lives.
Whether short -lived people also took vitamins and supplements was not documented. Whether supplements resulted in better health for people taking them might be a future issue of study.
Whether supplements and vitamins affected quality of life of those living shorter times or long lives was not a matter of comment and should have been.
Exercise does seem to be a factor in long life, as well in quality life according to the Sixty Minutes documentary. Everything I have read would support this conclusion.
Our ancestors were first, hunters and gatherers, and then they were agricultural. Human heredity supports adjustment to a wide variety of food sources and those life styles demanded exercise. Our ancestors often fasted, of necessity. They were aware of beneficial herbs, medicines and spices in their locale. Stresses from various causes may also be built into our chemistry, so that we may benefit or even need them.
Allergic reactions and adverse immune responses to certain foods and also to supplements may be built into our nature, because in primitive society, humans did not eat the same foods for months upon end.
People who benefit from certain supplements, vitamins and medicines might do even better by discontinuing these substances for intervals of time, with their physician’s council, of course.

Comments, Writing and Art Work are the Copyright © of Ruth Zachary








Saturday, June 7, 2014

THE AMAZING ELDERBERRY

Elderberry, a Traditional Medicine for Colds and Flu.

ELDERBERRY (Sambucus canadensis)

Probably everyone has heard of Elderberry Wine. I heard of it, too, but even when I once made wine for a hobby, I could not identify the plant well enough to feel secure about using it to make wine, jams, jellies, teas etc.

I next heard of it as a great remedy for colds, from Dr. Nida (unsure of the spelling) who appeared on one of the Denver TV stations. That was about six years ago, and I soon became a believer. Sambucol, the liquid version  of Elderberry was available at the drug store.

At the first indication of a cold, I would take Sambucol, frequently, and the symptoms would lessen, or go away entirely, and in the first years while taking it, the misery of a cold was much reduced. I have been subject to colds, sore throats and all the symptoms that follow, all of my life, and the last two years I have made it through without having a cold. After the beginning, I found a capsule form of Elderberry, and always keep it on hand.

When I developed Rheumatoid arthritis in both hands last autumn, 2013,  I  noticed also, that in addition to interrupting a cold, taking Elderberry seemed to reduce the inflammation. Wanting evidence, I wasn’t sure that this wasn’t just a coincidence.

Elderberry varieties grow all over the world, and Native Americans used it as a medicine in this country. Elder trees were part of the folklore in European cultures.

Dr. Robert A Schulman, MD. in his book Solve it with Supplements, says that Elderberry counters the flu as well as sinus infections, bronchitis, sore throats, coughs and more. Some recent studies show that cocktail remedies containing Elderberry may help treat forms of herpes.

Schulman says Elderberry flowers and berries contain flavonoids, notably, Quercetin. The flowers have anti-inflammatory properties as well. Not only that, but Schulman says (pg 110) that Elderberry stimulates the immune system and inhibits the growth of viruses.

So probably I did not just imagine that Elderberry helped my inflamed hands when I took it.

Use of the (white) flowers for making tea, and the extract from black and blue Elderberries are the usual ways of using it, but specific procedures for cooking the berries are required, and as long as syrups, capsules and teas are available commercially, this is probably the most prudent source to use. Red Elderberries, are not effective. Raw and or green forms of the plant can make one very sick.

Nature’s Way is one Store brand that has several forms of Elderberry products. An on- line order company that has herbal formulas of Elderberry and hundreds of other herbal remedies is Swanson Health Products. (I do not recommend any products or companies I have not found reliable, and am not paid for my endorsement.)

"Herbal Supplements" is a new label on this blog, and I hope to review other supplements on an intermittent basis in the future.


Writing and Images are the Copyright © of Ruth Zachary.