Guest guest Posted November 7, 1999 Report Share Posted November 7, 1999 Hi Eric You wrote: < Can anyone explain a little bit of the chemistry in essential oils. I cannot seem to understand it. There's all this esters, ethers, terpenes, pheonols. What does all this mean? I am not at all good in chemistry so I would need an elementary explanation.> I think an understanding of essential oil chemistry helps us to understand how and why the eos work as they do. People (myself included) tend to have an innate fear of the very word chemistry and shy away from it because they hated it at school. But if you can put that aside, and accept that a basic understanding will help you, it is not too difficult to master. Particularly as we need a *basic* knowledge; we do not need to become rocket scientists here. You can get information on how and why the plant makes its essence from any good book on aromatherapy (my personal favourites being Shirley & Len Price's 'Aromatherapy for Health Professionals' or 'Essential Oil Safety' by Tisserand and Balacs, both published by Churchill Livingstone). Then you need to understand what each of these chemical components do - ie apply the knowledge; what effect they have when the eo is used. Eg: monoterpenes are highly volatile (being unsaturated molecules) and anti-viral (amongst other things) so any eo containing a lot of monoterpenes (like citrus essences) will have a short shelf-life and will be helpful in combatting illness like colds and flu (think of lemon). Another example would be aldehydes which are sedative, hypotensive and analgesic (amongst other things), so eos high in aldehydes (eg lemongrass, melissa, geranium etc) would help when you need these effects. A useful learning tool is a Venn diagram or spidergram. Learning the chemical components of eos will also help you to recognise potential dangers, eg eos high in ketones like the pulegone in pennyroyal should be avoided in aromatherapy, but some are useful to vaporise in cases of coughs and colds because there are immuno-stimulant. It also helps me to choose, for instance, which basil to buy. If it's an exotic basil high in methyl chavicol, I'll avoid it and rather buy a sweet European basil with less of this phenol. And a lavender grown at sea level will probably contain 1,8 cineol (an oxide) which makes it more useful for sinus infections; whereas a high-altitude lavender might not have any, having more alcohols and esters and making it more sedative. I hope this makes some sense and answers your 'why?'. I feel some books go into too much detail, compounding the issue. We do need to know, but I'm an aromatherapist not a botanist. Good luck! Helen in Cape Town Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 7, 1999 Report Share Posted November 7, 1999 In a message dated 11/07/1999 1:00:20 PM Eastern Standard Time, hranger writes: << I hope this makes some sense and answers your 'why?'. I feel some books go into too much detail, compounding the issue. We do need to know, but I'm an aromatherapist not a botanist. Good luck! Helen in Cape Town >> What a gem you are, Helen, thanks for the refresher course Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 7, 1999 Report Share Posted November 7, 1999 Helen and Frank-- Great explanations on the chemistry part of it. I always wondered about how all this came together... Now I have to go buy " Aromatherapy for Dummies " , which, by the way, can be checked out at http://www.dummies.com/cgi/fill_out_template.pl?book:0-7645-5171-X:book-Dummies+\ Press::u15078 with a sample chapter available there. (I have no connection with this book, other than seeing it mentioned several times here, and I thought others would be interested in checking it out too.) Thanks for all the great info! Nancy M > < Can anyone explain a little > bit of the chemistry in essential oils. >Then you need to understand what > each of these chemical components do - ie apply the knowledge; what effect they > have when the eo is used. Eg: monoterpenes are highly volatile (being unsaturated molecules).... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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