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"Herbal Remedies: A Comprehensive Guide to Herbal Remedies Used as Natural Antibiotics and Antivirals" by Iren Soulevar. The book that will allow you to enhance health but also prevent illness and cure diseases thanks to the power of leaves, seeds and plant roots! As one of the most ancient practices that exist, Herbal Remedies became common in every community all around the world. People use herbal remedies to help prevent or cure disease but also use them to get relief from symptoms, boost energy, relax, or lose weight. Some herbals can really make you feel better and help keep you healthy in a very effective way. But you need to be a smart consumer because the word "natural" doesn't always mean "safe". That's why "Herbal Remedies" was created by Iren Soulevar. Here's what you'll find inside: modern Herbal Medicine and Herbal Medicine in history traditional African medicine and its relationships with modern medicine challenges associated with monitoring safety of Herbal Medicines how to use Herbal Remedies safely Herbal Remedy recipes ...and much more! To start choosing and using herbals in a safe way, you only have to learn it with "Herbal Remedies" by Iren Soulevar. Add it to cart now!
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Herbal Remedies
A Comprehensive Guide to
Herbal Remedies Used as
Natural Antibiotics and
Antivirals
Copyright by Iren Soulevar All rights reserved.
This eBook is provided with the sole purpose of providing relevant information on a specific topic for which every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that it is both accurate and reasonable. Nevertheless, by purchasing this eBook, you consent to the fact that the author, as well as the publisher, are in no way experts on the topics contained herein, regardless of any claims as such that may be made within. As such, any suggestions or recommendations that are made within are done so purely for entertainment value.
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Herbal medicine is part and parcel of mainstream African treatment, and also associated with it. A form of medicine that uses plant roots, branches, leaves, flowers or seeds to enhance health, prevent illness and cure disease. It is currently the oldest and also the most commonly employed medication method in the country.
It is common to all civilizations and is used in all communities.
Herbal medicinal products, also known as botanical medicinal products, vegetable medicinal products or phytomedicinal products as specified by the World Health Organization (WHO), apply to herbs, herbal materials, herbal preparations and finished herbal products comprising entire plants, sections of plants or other plant materials like leaves, bark, berries, flowers
and roots and/or their extracts as active ingredients intended for use in herbal medicinal products.
Herbal medicine is a specific and popular type of conventional medicine, in which the local healer, known as the herbalist in this case, specializes in the use of herbs to cure different ailments. Our function is so extraordinary because it stems from a detailed knowledge of the medicinal properties of indigenous plants and the pharmaceutical steps needed to transform these plants into drugs such as collection, compounding, dose, effectiveness and toxicity.
In various societies the usage of herbal remedies appears to be common. The plants used for the same ailments and the treatment methods can differ from place to location, however. In general, plants used for medicinal purposes are referred to as medicinal plants, i.e., any plant in which one or all of its organs
/ parts produce compounds that can be used for therapeutic purposes, or in an all recent definition, the constituents may be used as precursors for drug synthesis.
For starters, a variety of plants have been utilized for several years without research evidence in conventional medicine to back up their efficacy. In this situation, any or portions of such plants which have therapeutic properties are referred to as human or biologically derived synthetic medicines. They can also be known as "ordered drugs" if these medications come
from plant sections with cellular frameworks such as leaves, bark, stems, etc., and "unorganized medications," whether they are obtained from acellular portions of plants such as gums, balsams, gels, oils, and exudates.
Herbal medication is widely accessible relative to western allopathic medicine, which can be readily obtained for all. As a consequence, consultation with traditional healers is minimal, as there is a relatively good knowledge of popular curative herbs, particularly in rural areas except for chronic disease care.
Except where consultation is performed, conventional healers neglect coherence about the preparation procedures and proper dose of herbal medicines. However, according to WHO, at least 80 per cent of people in Africa still depend for their health care on medicinal plants.
Herbal medication has started to build popularity in Nigeria, and indeed the whole of West Africa, with some of the advantages being low expense, sustainability, supply, acceptability and seemingly low toxicity.
Herbal pharmacy, or "phyto-medicine," implies the art of medical usage of plant content. Herbal medicine has a long history in non-conventional medicine use, documenting the first reports in human use through Neanderthal site excavations, such as the Shanidar Caves in northern Iraq. Most herbal
remedies have developed within a particular cultural framework, through conventional usage.
The traditional usage is recorded in written documents for certain societies, and for others the traditional information and its application is handed down orally from one generation to the next. Several herbal medicines have developed important modern medicinal agents such as aspirin (Salix spp L.), taxol (Taxus baccata L.), and alkaloids from Vinca (Catharanthus roseus (L.) G.Don). Herbal medicines also play a major and extremely essential part in global health care, where modern and developing sectors such as organic products and preventive medicines are being sought.
Wild extracted and grown products are the sources of supply for medicinal plants, and demands for a safe supply of quality commodity are growing. The global worldwide demand for medicinal goods exceeds 60 billion US dollars. The global demand for "real food" and nutritional supplements is increasing at a substantial rate and requires to expand the volumes of good quality herbal materials.
A list of the plant parts used in herbal remedies is as follows: Roots— i.e., medicinal are the fleshy or woody roots of many African plant species. Most of the active ingredients are typically sequestered in the root bark instead of the inner woody portion.
Bulbs — A bulb is an internal device composed of various fleshy scale seeds, e.g. Allium sativa (garlic), and Allium cepa (onions).
Rhizomes— Woody or fleshy underground plant that rises horizontally and exudes the leaves above the ground, e.g.
Zingiber officinale (ginger), which is used for respiratory problems; Imperata cylindrica (spear grass) for efficacy in men; and Curcuma longa (turmeric), an antibiotic, anti-inflammatory, and anticancer product.
Tubers— Swollen fleshy underground constructs formed from stems / roots, such as potatoes and yams for diabetes such as Dioscorea dumetorum (ona-(igbo)) and Gloriosa superba for cancer.
Bark-The tree stem or trunk's exterior barrier coat. This comprises extremely condensed phytochemicals with a strong medicinal quality. A variety of plants have medicinal-value barks.
Most plants do have beneficial seeds, roots, and bulbs.
There are also extremely active phytochemicals and mineral oils in the fruits and plants.
In the medicinal industry, gums, exudates, and nectars that are secreted by plants to discourage insects and graze livestock to close off wounds are very valuable.