Thanks to the University of North Carolina School of Pharmacy
Christy Walker, Amy Bigus, and Deanna Massengill
Common Names
-
"Empress of the Herbs"
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"Sovereign herb for women"
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"The Female Ginseng"
General description
-
biennial and perennial plants
-
hollow fluted purple stems rising 3 to 7 feet tall
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greenish-white flowers bloom from May to August
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leaves resemble those of carrots, celery or parsley
-
root is harvested for medicinal effects when 1 year old
Chemical Composition
-
Composed of various coumarins and flavonoids which are
responsible for medicinal
actions
Essential oil contains:
-
n-butylphthalide
-
linoleic acid
-
cadinene
-
palmitic acid
-
carvacrol
-
safrole
-
n-dodecanal
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sequiterpene
-
isosafrol
-
n-tetradecanol
History and Folk Use
-
Regarded as a "female" remedy
-
dysmenorrhea
-
anemia
-
amenorrhea
-
arthritis
-
metrorrhagia
-
migraine headache
-
menopausal symptoms
-
assure healthy pregnancy and easy delivery
-
abdominal pain
-
injuries
Pharmacology
-
Relates to high coumarin content.
Phytoestrogen activity
-
contains highly active phytoestrogens (lower in activity
than animal estrogens)
-
used in conditions of high and low estrogens
-
demonstrate an alterative effect by competing with estrogen
for binding sites
-
exert some estrogenic activity when estrogens are low
-
reduce overall estrogenic activity by occupying estrogen
receptor sites when
estrogen levels are high
-
basis of use in amenorrhea & menopause
-
Japanese angelica (thought to be very similar to Chinese
angelica) has uterine
tonic activity: causes an initial increase in uterine
contraction followed
by relaxation
Cardiovascular effects
-
not used historically for these purposes
-
significant hypotensive action due to vasodilator activity
-
dihydropyranocoumarins and dihydrofuranocoumarins possess
coronary vasodilatory,
spasmolytic, and cyclic-AMP-phosphodiesterase inhibitory
properties
-
result of calcium channel antagonism
-
also may have negative inotropic & antiarrhythmic
action
Smooth muscle relaxing activity
-
Calcium channel blocking compounds are capable of relaxing
smooth muscle
of visceral organs like the intestines and the uterus
(essential oil)
-
The water extract produces an initial contraction and then
a prolonged relaxation
Analgesic activity
-
Pain relieving and mild tranquilizing effects
-
Analgesic action was found to be 1.7 times that of aspirin
-
Analgesic activity combined with smooth muscle relaxing
activity support
use in uterine cramps, trauma, headaches & arthritis
Anti-allergy and Immuno-modulating activity
-
Used in prevention and treatment of allergic symptoms
-
Inhibits production of IgE in a selective manner
-
Coumarin compounds demonstrate immune-enhancing activity in
healthy and cancer
patients
-
Coumarins stimulate macrophages & phagocytosis
offers protection
against metastasis and growth of tumor cells
-
May possess mitogenic activity to B-lymphocytes,
interferon-producing activity,
anti-tumor activity, & complement-activiating activity
to support historical
anti-cancer effects and use as adjunct to current cancer
therapy
Antibacterial activity
-
Possess activity against both gram negative and gram
positive bacteria
-
Other herbs, however, have much greater antimicrobial
activity
Clinical Applications
-
treatment of disorders of menstruation
-
menopause (especially hot flashes)
-
atopic conditions
-
smooth muscle spasms
-
(uterine cramps, migraines, abdominal spasm)
-
possibly as an immunostimulatory adjunct in cancer therapy
-
the head staunches bleeding
-
the body preserves the internal organs and nourished
the blood
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the tail moves the blood
-
As a whole, the root "harmonizes" the blood.
-
Eliminate discomforts of PMS
-
Help women resume normal menstruation after going off "the
pill"
-
May prevent anemia due to richness in vitamins & minerals
(A, B12, &
E)
Drug and Disease Interactions
-
Should not be used during pregnancy or mestruation
-
Should not be taken with blood thinning agents
Dosage
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Standard dose for dried root or rhizosome:
-
1-2 gram orally or by infusion TID
Toxicity
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Extremely low toxicity
-
Contains many photoreactive substances that may induce
photosensitivity
Recipe:
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1 oz Dong Quai
-
1/2 cup black beans
-
1 pint water
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1 clove garlic, diced
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2 slices of licorice root
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Seasonings to taste
Soak the beans overnight. Discard water. Combine beans & Dong
Quai and
cook for 2 hours, skimming surface foam periodically. In last 15
minutes
of cooking, remove Dong Quai, which is bitter and add licorice
slices. Makes
4 servings.
References
-
Murray MT. The Healing Power of Herbs. Rocklin, CA:
Prima Publishing,
1996, pp. 43-49.
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Pizzorno JE and MT Murray. "Angelica species," A Textbook
of Natural
Medicine. Bothell, WA: Bastyr University Publications,
Vol. 1, 1996.
Internet sites:
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http://www.frontierherb.com/herbs/notes/herbs.notes.no5.html
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