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Arnica montana: Natural Magic

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Arnica montana: Natural Magic

By Nancy Allison

© 2004 Steven Foster

 

" Noch mal!” says Herr Gehring, pouring more beer. “Have another!” My husband and

I don’t protest. When in Germany, where we recently spent nearly a year, we do

as the Germans do.

Is it the beer, or a trick of the Black Forest light? Glinting among the

kohlrabi and rhubarb of the Gehrings’ garden we see a magical sight: a bottle of

what looks like liquid sunshine.

 

Zauberpflanzen (magic plants) is German for certain plants known for centuries

to have seemingly miraculous properties. As Frau Gehring puts another wurst on

the grill, she explains that the bottle that so entrances me shines with the

blossoms of one of

 

Germany’s best known Zauberpflanzen: Arnica montana.

 

As with many herbs that entered the realm of folk medicine, arnica was used

first in pagan times to curry favor with spirits. The blossoms were thought to

be especially potent on the summer solstice. Bunches were gathered and set on

the corners of fields to spread the power of the corn spirit and to ensure a

good harvest.

 

While Germans don’t believe in garnishing their fields with arnica these days,

its power as a folk medicine has persisted.

 

Arnica: An Inside Look

 

While we were in Germany, I found arnica gel, cream and tincture sold in every

drugstore. I wanted to find out more about this fascinating herb, so I contacted

medical doctor and professor of pharmacy Irmgard Merfort, of Freiburg

University.

 

In an e-mail interview, Dr. Merfort discussed the benefits and risks of Arnica

montana and how best to use it.

 

Nancy Allison: My friend Frau Gehring puts arnica blooms in a bottle and then

fills it with schnapps. She says this must stay in the sun for three weeks and

then can be used on bruises and muscle strains.

 

Dr. Irmgard Merfort: Your friend is partly right in preparing an alcoholic

extract of the blooms. However, the following preparation is recommended:

1 part arnica flowers and 10 parts 96 percent alcohol should be put together in

a bottle and left for a week, during which the bottle should be shaken.

Then the flowers can be removed. It is important that this alcoholic solution

must be diluted with water from three to ten fold when it is used, e.g. for

compresses.

 

There are a lot of experiences with this way of preparation in contrast to that

one your friend uses. If the schnapps with arnica blooms is staying in the sun,

then a lot of reactions probably occur that alter the ingredients of arnica

blooms. Up to now, there are no studies available on this.

 

N.A.: Can you describe how arnica acts on blood vessels?

 

I.M.: The main active compounds in arnica are sesquiterpene lactones.

 

Additionally, flavonoids and the essential oil are also important.

 

Sesquiterpene lactones influence a lot of inflammatory pathways resulting in the

" decrease " of the 'inflammatory process'.

 

Our group has found that sesquiterpene lactones " inhibit " the 'release' of

" inflammatory mediators "

because they " inhibit " the transcription factor NF-kB,

which is a central mediator in the immune system.

 

N.A.: Is it true that arnica might be used for rheumatic problems such as

arthritis?

 

Would this be in homeopathic or topical form?

 

I.M.: Alcoholic preparations are recommended for external treatment of bruises,

sprains and inflammations caused by insect bites; gingivitis and aphthous ulcers

(canker sores); symptomatic treatment of rheumatic complaints; and for surface

phlebitis.

 

A clinical study exists that shows arnica is effective for the treatment of

rheumatic arthritis, and another study suggests that it has positive effects in

phlebitis, in each instance when arnica preparations were used externally.

 

 

About Arnica

A. montana is a perennial flower from the Asteraceae family, native to the

mountains of Europe, as its name (montana) suggests.

 

The yellow, daisy-like flower, seen from May to August in elevations of 3,500 to

10,000 feet, was mentioned first by Matthiolus, an Italian physician, in 1626.

 

Folk remedies using arnica as a tea or tincture for wounds, bruises, rheumatic

pains, heart weakness and even asthma, prevailed for centuries before that.

 

In Germany, Arnica is known commonly as wundkraut (wound herb), bruchkraut

(fracture herb) and fallkraut (fall herb).

 

In the mountains, where the steep paths make falling quite common, it was

well-known that an application of fallkraut would help to heal any swelling or

bruising to the body.

 

Referred to in mountain dialect as “stand up and go home” (Stoh up un goh hen),

arnica’s common names attest to its fast-healing properties.

 

Arnica’s Effectiveness

Arnica is now an ingredient in more than 100 herbal preparations in Germany,

where plant-based medications are well-researched, highly respected and

government-regulated.

 

Germany’s Commission E, an expert committee on herbal drugs and preparations

from medicinal plants, cites arnica as a treatment for various post-traumatic

conditions,

including bruises, sprains, contusions and rheumatic ailments.

 

Because arnica can cause adverse effects when taken internally (it is listed as

a poisonous plant in the United States, where it has been cultivated since it

was imported from Europe), home-brewed teas made from fresh preparations are not

recommended by the Commission.

 

It recommends tinctures for external use at a 3:1 to 10:1 dilution, and that

salves contain a maximum of 20 to 25 percent tincture or 15 percent arnica oil.

 

Homeopathic preparations, which are very small dosages in pill or drop form, are

considered safe when prescribed by professional practitioners.

 

British studies have shown that postoperative swelling, pain and bruising are

reduced significantly if homeopathic arnica is taken prior to surgery.

 

The Aspirin of Homeopathy

 

In the Department of Plastic Surgery of Queen Victoria Hospital in West Sussex,

England, 37 patients undergoing surgery for carpal tunnel syndrome participated

in a double-blind study.

 

The researchers administered homeopathic arnica tablets and herbal arnica

ointment to patients,

and concluded that there was a significant reduction in pain in the

arnica-treated group.

 

Anecdotal evidence for arnica’s effectiveness abounds.

 

A friend of mine who underwent hip surgery in England took homeopathic arnica

for six weeks prior to her operation on the advice of her doctor.

 

She experienced no postoperative bruising and very little inflammation.

 

Best of all, the pain was not nearly as acute as she had expected after such

major surgery.

 

Homeopathic use of arnica as a sports medicine has been praised by U.S. experts,

as well.

 

Steven Subotnick, D.P.M., N.D., D.C., author of Sports and Exercise Injuries:

Conventional, Homeopathic and Alternative Treatments (North Atlantic, 1991),

finds that among his patients with acute injuries and afflictions from overuse,

homeopathic arnica decreases pain and speeds healing.

 

Subotnick is so impressed with its results that he has referred to arnica as

“the aspirin of homeopathy.”

 

Dr. Irmgard Merfort of Freiburg University in Germany knows that arnica works —

but has discovered that it does so in a very different way from aspirin.

 

Merfort’s studies confirm that it is the sesquiterpene lactones (ester

derivatives of helenalin and dihydrohelenalin) that are considered to be the

active compounds in arnica.

 

These natural products work together to stop inflammation of the blood vessels.

 

But the difference is that they work on a molecular level — by " inhibiting the

messages " that tell the gene to 'encode' for inflammation.

 

“They use a unique mechanism of NF-kappaB [a central mediator in the immune

system] inactivation, which is quite different from that of other

anti-inflammatory agents,” Merfort says.

 

“Based on our results, " sesquiterpene lactones " could serve as lead compounds

for the development of novel, potent anti-inflammatory drugs for the treatment

of inflammatory disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis or inflammatory bowel

diseases.

These drugs also could be important in the treatment or prevention of adult

respiratory distress syndrome or systemic immune response syndrome.”

 

A Long History of Use

Frau Gehring, who is 70, doesn’t concern herself with studies. Sure of its

potency already, she has been making arnica tincture each summer for the past 50

years, as her mother and grandmother did before her.

 

Although she does not pick the arnica these days because it’s a protected plant

in Germany (she now buys dried flower heads at the local pharmacy), she still

likes to “cure” the Zauberpflanzen in the summer garden, as she always has done.

 

Once it’s ready, Frau Gehring uses her arnica tincture to treat everything from

her granddaughter Josefa’s bruised knees to her husband’s gardener’s shoulder.

 

It seems Herr Gehring must have applied some arnica this morning.

He certainly doesn’t have any trouble lifting his beer-pouring arm.

 

“Noch mal!” he says, pointing the bottle toward my glass. “Ja, Danke schoen!” I

reply, and take a long drink.

 

All in the interest of science, of course.

 

 

N.A.: Are there health risks associated with arnica use?

 

I.M.: Yes, there are. Some people can develop contact dermatitis; then they must

prevent any contact with arnica and also with flowers that contain sesquiterpene

lactones, e.g. Achillea species.

 

Therefore, it is essential that arnica preparations be used as recommended and

the tincture not in an undiluted form. People who have a contact allergy against

arnica should not use arnica preparations.

 

The number of users who have developed contact dermatities is low.

 

Garden- and beer-lover Nancy Allison travels regularly to Europe to gather

stories about plants. She thanks her husband Aleqx for making sure she gets on

(and off!) the right trains, and for translating interviews and texts from

German to English.

 

To view the reference list for this article, please click here

 

http://www.herbsforhealth.com/index.php?page=article & story=15

 

 

Germany’s best known Zauberpflanzen: Arnica montana.

 

 

A clinical study exists that shows arnica is effective for the treatment of

rheumatic arthritis, and another study suggests that it has positive effects in

phlebitis, in each instance when arnica preparations were used externally.

 

 

About Arnica

 

The yellow, daisy-like flower, seen from May to August in elevations of 3,500 to

10,000 feet,

was mentioned first by

Matthiolus, an Italian physician, in 1626.

 

Folk remedies using arnica as a tea or tincture for wounds, bruises, rheumatic

pains, heart weakness and even asthma, prevailed for centuries before that.

 

In Germany, Arnica is known commonly as wundkraut (wound herb), bruchkraut

(fracture herb) and fallkraut (fall herb).

 

British studies have shown that postoperative swelling, pain and bruising are

reduced significantly if homeopathic arnica is taken prior to surgery.

 

The Aspirin of Homeopathy

 

Subotnick is so impressed with its results that he has referred to arnica as

“the aspirin of homeopathy.”

 

Dr. Irmgard Merfort of Freiburg University in Germany knows that arnica works —

but has discovered that it does so in a very different way from aspirin.

 

Merfort’s studies confirm that it is the sesquiterpene lactones (ester

derivatives of helenalin and dihydrohelenalin) that are considered to be the

active compounds in arnica.

 

These natural products work together to stop inflammation of the blood vessels.

 

But the difference is that they work on a molecular level — by " inhibiting the

messages " that tell the gene to 'encode' for inflammation.

 

“They use a unique mechanism of NF-kappaB [a central mediator in the immune

system] inactivation, which is quite different from that of other

anti-inflammatory agents,” Merfort says.

 

“Based on our results, " sesquiterpene lactones " could serve as lead compounds

for the development of novel, potent anti-inflammatory drugs for the treatment

of inflammatory disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis or inflammatory bowel

diseases.

These drugs also could be important in the treatment or prevention of adult

respiratory distress syndrome or systemic immune response syndrome.”

 

 

 

To view the reference list for this article, please click here

 

http://www.herbsforhealth.com/index.php?page=article & story=15

 

 

JoAnn Guest

mrsjoguest

DietaryTipsForHBP

www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Genes

 

 

 

 

 

AIM Barleygreen

" Wisdom of the Past, Food of the Future "

 

http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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