Guest guest Posted March 17, 2006 Report Share Posted March 17, 2006 "JoAnn Guest" Fri Mar 17, 2006 2:29 am Green Pharmacy for High Blood Pressure Green Pharmacy for High Blood Pressure Mar 16, 2006 12:52 PST Hypertension or High Blood Pressure is generally defined as a blood pressure greater than 140/90. The first number (systolic) is the force that blood exerts on the artery walls when the heart is pumping. The second number (diastolic) is the residual force that remains when the heart relaxes between beats. Any blood pressure reading below a borderline 138/88 is safer, but you should still try getting it down closer to what's considered normal 120/80. The problem in my opinion is that doctors are too quick to treat this condition with "synthetic drugs". About half the people diagnosed have "mildly" high blood pressure. There's plenty of "evidence" that for them, diet and lifestyle changes, including exercise, stress management and self-monitoring with a home blood pressure device, work just as well as drugs, and with no "side effects". Diet and lifestyle modifications all tend to provide a sense of control that in itself may be beneficial. But don't expect the pharmaceutical industry to encourage the natural way. It would cut into their $2.5 billion-a-year for "antihypertensive medication". ==================================================================== Green Pharmacy for High Blood Pressure: ==================================================================== Eating hearty organic vegetable soups on a regular basis can do more than help normalize blood pressure and prevent heart disease. It can also help prevent cancer, obesity, diabetes and constipation. Vegetable soup is so good for health that I don't even call it minestrone anymore, but rather Medistrone. What would you put in your Medistrone Soup? You can use just about any vegetables, especially the ones mentioned in this chapter. There are also any number of herbs that can help control blood pressure, but you don't have to put those in a soup. They make rather nice teas. CELERY: Celery has long been recommended in traditional for lowering high blood pressure, and experimental evidence bears this out. In one study, injecting laboratory animals with celery extract significantly lowered their blood pressure. In humans, eating as few as four celery stalks has done the same. GARLIC: This wonder herb not only helps normalize blood pressure, it also "reduces cholesterol". In a scientifically rigorous study, people with high blood pressure were given about one clove of garlic a day for 12 weeks. Afterward they exhibited significantly lower diastolic blood pressure and cholesterol levels. "We now know that garlic can reduce hypertension, even in quantities as small as a half-ounce per week," says Varro Tyler, Ph.D., dean and professor emeritus of pharmacognosy, (natural product pharmacy) at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana. If you cook with garlic and use it in your salads, getting that much should be a snap! If you haven't yet developed a taste for it, take it in capsule form. With so many health benefits associated with this herb, I'd recommend finding many ways to enjoy it in your food. HAWTHORN: Hawthorn berry extract can widen (dilate) blood vessels, especially the coronary arteries, according to a report published in the Lawrence Review of Natural Products, a respected newsletter. Hawthorne has been used as a "heart tonic" for centuries. If you'd like to try it, make a tea with one teaspoon of dried herb per cup of boiling water and drink up to two cups a day. SAFFRON: This expensive herb contains a blood pressure lowering chemical called "crocetin". Some authorities even speculate that the low incidence of heart disease in Spain is due to that nation's high saffron 'consumption'. You can use saffron in your cooking or make a tea with it. VALERIAN: Earlier in this chapter I mentioned that gamma-amino butyric acid helps control blood pressure. Well, this herb valerian contains a chemical called "valerenic acid" that inhibits an enzyme that breaks down GABA. So ingesting something containing valerenic acid would, in effect, ensure higher levels of GABA and lower blood pressure. Valerian is also a tranquilizer/sedative, which also helps reduce blood pressure. BROCCOLI: This vegetable has at least six chemicals that reduce blood pressure. CARROT: According to my database, carrots contain eight compounds that lower blood pressure. ONION: (Allium cepa). In one study, two to three tablespoons of onion essential oil a day lowered blood pressure in 67 percent of people with hypertension. Their systolic levels fell an average of 25 points and their diastolic readings fell 15 points. The bad news is that you can't get this oil, and you wouldn't be able to eat enough onions to get this much of an effect. In my case, I'd have to ingest three times my body weight in onions. But I do think that onions have enough going for them that you should definitely add more of them to your diet to help lower blood pressure. PURSLANE: and other foods containing magnesium. Magnesium deficiency has been implicated in high blood pressure. Many Americans are deficient in this mineral and don't know it. A 1994 Gallup poll showed that about 72 percent of those surveyed reported inadequate magnesium intake. To get magnesium, turn to leafy greens, legumes and whole grains. Purslane, poppy seeds, and string beans are the best dietary sources, according to my database. Nutritionists suggest that a daily supplement of 400 mgs of magnesium twice daily may help. ORGANIC TOMATOES: These fruits are genetically engineered so please make it a point to purchase non-gmo varieties! A typical minestrone has a tomato base. That's also perfect for Medistrone Soup, because tomatoes are high in gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA), a compound that can help bring down blood pressure. According to my database, tomatoes also contain six other compounds that do the same thing. KUDZU: Chinese studies suggest that this vine helps normalize blood pressure. In one study, a tea containing about eight teaspoons of kudzu root was given daily to 52 people for two to eight weeks. In 17 people, blood pressure declined markedly. Thirty others showed some benefit. Kudzu contains a chemical (puerarin) that has decreased blood pressure by 15 percent in laboratory animals. With 100 times the antioxidant activity of vitamin E, puerarin also helps prevent heart disease and cancer. (Antioxidants are substances that neutralize cell-damaging oxygen molecules known as free radicals.) ASSORTED SPICES: As for spices that you can add to your Medistrone, fennel contains at least ten compounds that lower blood pressure, oregano has seven, and black pepper, basil and tarragon each have six. James A. Dukes, Ph.D. Former Head Botanist with the Botanical Division of the USDA Author of, "The Green Pharmacy" =================================================================== Post subject: Pascal's Ribs www.alternative-medicine-message-boards.info - Pascal's Ribs JoAnn Guest Aug 12, 2002 11:44 PDT Celery is a member of the umbelliferous family—along with carrots, parsley and fennel—and is valued for its distinctive flavor and crisp texture. Served in salads, as a relish, with meats and fish, a flavoring or vegetable in soups stews and stuffings, celery is exceptionally low in calories. Originally from the Mediterranean, celery was cultivated from an indigenous wild celery. A bunch of celery is known as a stalk, and the stalk is made up of individual ribs. Four ribs of celery is about 94 percent water and high in both potassium and sodium. According to James Duke (Handbook of Medicinal Herbs), "clinically, celery juice has proven 'hypotensive' in those taking 40 milliliters orally three times a day." Dr. William Elliot (St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago) has investigated a component of celery oil (3-n-butyl phthalide) which may be responsible for lowering systolic blood pressure. In a 1992 abstract (clinical research) Elliot concluded that "phthalide" directly "relaxed" vascular smooth muscle through a mechanism which decreased circulating catecholamines (amines that stimulate the nervous system). In an earlier paper (1991), Elliot discussed how phthalide lowered systolic blood pressure and its related effects on 'serum cholesterol' and high density lipoprotein cholesterol. Celery contains other compounds which are said to "enhance" the activity of certain white blood cells. A Minneapolis study suggested that the class of bioactive natural products occurring in edible umbelliferous plants may be effective as chemo- preventive agents. The best celery is light green in color. Dark green celery has more nutrients but can be stringy. Limp celery should be avoided. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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