The gentlebirth.org website is provided courtesy of
Ronnie Falcao, LM MS,
a homebirth midwife in Mountain View, CA
An interactive resource for moms on easy steps they can take to reduce exposure to chemical toxins during pregnancy. Other excellent resources about avoiding toxins during pregnancy These are easy to read and understand and are beautifully presented. |
This web page is a historical record of the blue cohosh controversy
from the early 2000s. The uptake is . . . the medical brouhaha was
unprofessional and in some cases intellectually dishonest. I personally
am still very comfortable using various formulas containing blue cohosh
in the last month of pregnancy, as preparation for labor and birth.
All the herbalists I've talked with are also still very comfortable using
blue cohosh at this time. I recommend that all pregnant women avoid
all herbs and pharmaceuticals in the first trimester.
I went to check my really conservative reference book, the Mosby's Handbook of Herbs & Natural Supplements.
They say a lot about how blue cohosh has been shown in mice studies to be an embryotoxic, meaning that it could cause birth defects in an embryo, which is defined as the developmental stage up to about 8 weeks embryological age, which is 10 weeks LMP or obstetric "gestational" age. Then they keep talking about how herbalists use it to induce labor. Well, who on earth is inducing labor anywhere near the embryological phase? Nobody that I know about.
Maybe the warning is for people who might be desperately driven to try to cause a miscarriage with herbs, and they should know that if the pregnancy continues, the baby may have birth defects. This is an important thing to know.
But there are lots and lots of things that are embryotoxic, including a variety of antibiotics, that are considered fine at term.
They also refer to a couple of case reports as "studies", which is a term generally used for a report of a study of a group larger than 1 person.
I don't see anything in their entry for blue cohosh that leads me to
be uncomfortable about using it during the last month of pregnancy in moderate
amounts and then in the last week in higher doses to start labor.
Here's the study that started the ruckus:
Profound neonatal
congestive heart failure caused by maternal consumption of blue cohosh
herbal medication.
Jones TK, Lawson BM.
J Pediatr. 1998 Mar;132(3 Pt 1):550-2.
"A newborn infant whose mother ingested an herbal medication, blue cohosh, to promote uterine contractions presented with acute myocardial infarction associated with profound congestive heart failure and shock. The infant remained critically ill for several weeks, although he eventually recovered. Other causes of myocardial infarction were carefully excluded. Blue cohosh, Caulophyllum thalictroides, contains vasoactive glycosides and an alkaloid known to produce toxic effects on the myocardium of laboratory animals. We believe this represents the first described case of deleterious human fetal effects from maternal consumption of blue cohosh."
Note the language of bias in the title, asserting that a problem was "caused by" an herb simply because the mother had taken some during late pregnancy. And then they assert, "Other causes of myocardial infarction were carefully excluded." Oh, my goodness! Do these authors actually call themselves scientists?!? Can you imagine seeing this language with something like pitocin or vitamin K or eye ointment, which are routinely administered to babies? I'm sure there are lots and lots of babies who have problems for which no immediate cause is found. And most of these babies were exposed to a variety of medical interventions, including ultrasound, pharmaceutical agents during labor (anesthesia, analgesia, pitocin), and the routine pharmaceutical interventions applied to almost all hospital-born babies such as vitamin K and erythromycin eye ointment.
No, I'm not implying that ultrasound, vitamin K and eye ointment cause heart problems, even if the baby in question was exposed to these interventions.
I'm saying that a case report isn't the same as a study.
I'm guessing that about 5-10% of women take blue cohosh in one form or another during pregnancy, which translates into about a million women a year. If blue cohosh were so dangerous, we would be seeing a lot more problems. Honestly, blue cohosh is one of the oldest herbs used by pregnant women, historically called "squaw root" or "papoose root".
I am just amazed at the energy that the medical world has come up with to attack something that can help women avoid pitocin inductions (possibly associated with autism), and cesareans (associated with asthma and allergies). Yet they really don't seem to care all that much about breastfeeding, which would save the lives of an additional 400 or 500 babies every year if we had a universal breastfeeding.
Note to scientists . . . if you want to impress me with your research, try giving the blue cohosh to the lab animals during labor, and then let me know how that changes the occurrence of heart problems in the mice pups. Anything else is bad science, and you should be embarrassed to publish this kind of shoddy work, hoping to overwhelm birthing families or policy makers who don't have your science background. I am not impressed with anything showing problems in vitro or in embryos, as this is totally unrelated to use in the last month of pregnancy. Thank you!
There's another useful study at
They include the full text here:
It includes the standard concern about use early in pregnancy, "There
is one case report that blue cohosh possesses abortifacient properties.
There is in vitro evidence that blue cohosh may have teratogenic, embryotoxic
and oxytoxic effects." OK, again, I don't know any midwives who recommend
its use early in pregnancy, when the teratogenic and embryotoxic properties
could be a problem. And the oxytoxic effects are exactly what we
want in the last weeks of pregnancy, i.e. they cause uterine contractions.
I would really hate to think that the authors were being intellectually
dishonest by using the word "oxytoxic" instead of "oxytocic". They
are roughly equivalent, but using a word that ends in "toxic" has semantic
overtones which can't be co-incidental. In fact, when I check my
medical dictionary, it says that oxytoxic isn't even a word and suggests
oxytocic instead. This article is from a Canadian journal, and perhaps
this is just a matter of a regionalism. Oh, oh, when I do a Google
search on the journal title, "The Canadian journal of clinical pharmacology"
with the words oxytoxic and oxytocic, it turns out that this article about
blue cohosh is the only article that uses the word oxytoxic, but there
are 823 references to the word "oxytocic".
Here, you can see for yourself: Search
with "oxytoxic" and search
with "oxytocic"
I'm sorry, but I really expected the Canadian journals to have a higher
standard of intellectual honesty than what we're seeing here. Am
I the only one who's bothered by this?
Oh, I know I shouldn't have started reading this article. Believe
it or not, the article goes on to allege that blue cohosh may produce "cocaine
metabolites", based on what was found in the baby's meconium, even though
the baby was born by cesarean section, which tends to involve anesthetics
of some kind, very possibly including some that have "cocaine metabolites".
The article then cites some experts who say that it's not possible for
blue cohosh to produce "cocaine metabolites". OK, so why include
the previous paragraphs that imply this?
My gosh, again, I find myself wondering if these people are really scientists?
And, please, do I really have to read stupid articles that scare people
by saying that the baby wasn't breathing at the time of birth? Any
person who actually attends births can reassure you that very, very few
babies are actually breathing at the time of birth. After all, they've
been getting their oxygen through the umbilical cord, and their lungs are
filled with special lung fluid so that they are not capable of "breathing".
Did they even think to have this article reviewed by someone who knows
something about birth? I'm embarrassed for them.
Oh, I didn't think this was possible, but it gets worse. This
is from the article:
"In their correspondence with the editor, the authors of this case appeared
to have ruled out cocaine use by the mother and adulteration of the blue
cohosh product used; rather, they attributed their findings to a laboratory
instrument or analysis error, which is being further investigated. Nonetheless,
blue cohosh remains a suspect as the causative factor in perinatal stroke."
What? Why? Because the point of the article is to impugn
the herb, and this fact isn't convenient?
Further on in the article, they characterize the quality of the evidence
in this article as being:
"VERY WEAK SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE
So, there you have it. It's an article with very weak "evidence",
yet they published it anyway. Sigh.
I would rather use blue cohosh to get labor going if it is relatively
safe and effective, than go transport for post dates, which I do at 42
weeks. We went through a whole thing on stripping membranes (which I consider
very invasive) a few weeks ago, and that is a great way to get things going,
and I think the potential is there for the labor enhancing herbs to be
a nice complement to that. There are many things we can do to get things
going, and I wonder should the old B&B tradition be scrapped for good
now cause of these two case reports?
I am just interested in why and how some are venomously opposed to the
use of blue cohosh. I just like to explore and get info. So far I hear
that it's ecological impact, as well as it's lack of efficacy are issues.
I guess it's good from the ecological standpoint if those that don't find
it effective stop using it! But what if the cardiac issues are not real,
and the lack of efficacy comes from our poor communication of dosages?
Before "Blue Cohosh is dangerous and should never be used" or even "Blue
Cohosh doesn't work" becomes gospel, I think it's worth a lively debate.
I liked that Tiera Low-Dog article on Blue Cohosh someone posted, that
was really helpful. I checked in with Aviva Romm, too, and she said she
is preparing a statement for midwives based on the same info given in that
article that recommends it no longer be used in pregnancy. I feel better
now about retiring my use of this herb. Still wonder if it's ok for missed
AB's. I am interested in learning about hearing other herbal induction
protocols that are considered safe...
About the cocaine metabolites, I checked around, and this is what I
got from the owners of Herb Pharm:
Here is some background on the Blue Cohosh controversy from the current
newsletter of the American Herbal Products Association (AHPA).
NOTABLE NEWS
I was interviewed regarding a very curious letter that appeared in the
New England Journal of Medicine on July 15, 2004 (Finkel RS, Zarlengo KM.
Blue cohosh and perinatal stroke). This case report concerned a baby who
had a stroke shortly after birth and tested positive for a metabolite of
cocaine, benzoylecgonine. The mother denied cocaine use and provided a
sample of a blue cohosh tea she had been taking to induce labor. This product
and a different blue cohosh commercial preparation both tested positive
for this compound!
It had originally been assumed that blue cohosh could produce a false
positive assay for cocaine because of its constituent alkaloid methylcystisine.
This newly resurfaced report now seems to argue against a false positive,
but that is inconsistent with the known chemistry of blue cohosh. (See
Betz JM et al. Gas chromatographic determination of toxic quinolizidine
alkaloids in blue cohosh Caulophyllum thalictroides (L.) Michx. Phytochem
Anal. 1998;9:232-236.) The authors were unable to find all of the original
analytical documentation, as the original Denver lab has since changed
hands. Aside from possible effects on a fetus, it is important to determine
if blue cohosh, or blue cohosh use, produces a positive drug test result
that could be mistaken for cocaine use. I have interested a forensic scientist
in this question, and we hope to have an answer soon.
NEW YORK — Many herbal preparations taken during pregnancy are innocuous,
but some are ineffective, and others are downright dangerous, Dr.Tieraona
Low Dog said at a meeting on botanical medicine sponsored by Columbia University
and the University of Arizona.
Blue cohosh used to stimulate labor, should be wholly avoided in pregnancy.
Blue cohosh is often combined with black cohosh and taken as a uterine
tonic or partus preparator during the last 6 weeks of pregnancy, according
to Dr. Low Dog of the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.
Blue cohosh was listed in the U.S.Pharmacopeia for labor induction at
the end of the 19th century. It is still widely prescribed by lay midwives,
and, in one survey, 90 of 174 (52%) certified nurse-midwives said they
recommended labor-stimulating preparations; of these, 64% used blue cohosh,
and 45% used black cohosh.
Complications, which were reported by 21% of respondents who used either
black or blue cohosh, included transient fetal tachycardia, meconium-stained
fluid, and nausea.
Blue cohosh contains compounds that exhibit cardiotoxic, vasoconstricting,
and uterine-stimulating activity, Dr. Low Dog said.
Cases involving stroke, cardiomegaly, and pulmonary edema have been
reported in infants of mothers who took blue cohosh during pregnancy. “Leave
this herb alone,” she said.
Probably the herb most commonly taken by pregnant women in the United
States and Europe is raspberry leaf, which is often prepared as a “pregnancy
tea.” It is believed to alleviate morning sickness, prevent miscarriage,
and aid in childbirth.
A randomized, controlled trial of 192 women found that those who used
raspberry tea from week 32 through delivery had no adverse effects. However,
the herb had no perceptible effect on the timing or length of labor or
on the need for analgesia, Dr. Low Dog noted during the meeting.
Raspberry leaf contains several vitamins and minerals and might have
provided nutritional benefits many years ago for women who had no other
way of getting those benefits.
“There's no reason not to take it,” she said.
Ginger is often taken to alleviate morning sickness, and three clinical
trials have confirmed some benefit in this regard, without finding evidence
of harmful effects to the mother or infant.
The German Commission E, which regulates the use of herbal remedies
in that country, has stated that ginger is contraindicated during pregnancy
but provided no data to support this contention.
In excessive doses, ginger may affect bleeding tendencies; one study
associated a significant reduction in agonist-induced platelet aggregation
with the ingestion of 10 g.
“To be on the safe side, women should limit ginger consumption to 1
g/day, Dr. Low Dog said.
Chamomile, which is often ingested in a tea made from its flowers, is
considered safe for consumption during pregnancy by the German Commission
E and by the British Herbal Medicine Association, and there have been no
reports of adverse effects.
Questions of teratogenicity have arisen, however, in connection with
animal studies using high doses of alpha-bisabolol, a volatile oil that
is found in chamomile. The concentrations used in the study, however, are
far in excess of what would be seen in human plasma under conditions of
normal use, Dr. Low Dog said.
Blue cohosh linked to newborn's stroke
WEDNESDAY, July 14 (HealthDayNews) — Just as expectant mothers needed
to be careful about what medications they take, they should also exercise
caution when taking herbal supplements.
That's the conclusion of a case study, which appears in a letter in
the July 15 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine. The letter details
the story of a baby who had a stroke, possibly because its mother drank
blue cohosh tea to induce labor.
"Blue cohosh has been known to stimulate uterine contractions, and was
a folk remedy used to initiate labor if a mother was past her due date,"
said Dr. Richard Finkel, one of the doctors who reported the case and an
associate clinical professor in pediatrics and neurology at Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia. When this happened, Finkel was a consulting pediatric
neurologist at Littleton Adventists Hospital in Littleton, Colorado.
Blue cohosh is from the plant Caulophyllum thallictroides, according
to Mark Blumenthal, executive director of the American Botanical Council.
"Blue cohosh is not a widely sold herbal dietary supplement in the U.S.,"
he said. "Blue cohosh contains teratogenic compounds and the herb has been
viewed as relatively toxic, thereby reducing its use in the general market
over the past five-plus years."
It should not be confused with the more commonly used herb known as
black cohosh, which is used to help control the symptoms of menopause.
According to the research letter, the woman was a healthy 24-year-old
in her 40th week of pregnancy. Her obstetrician recommended that she drink
a tea made with blue cohosh to hopefully stimulate contractions that would
begin her labor. She did so, and did go into labor, Finkel said.
He said the baby initially looked healthy, but then started having seizures.
Since a common cause of seizures in infants is stroke, a CT scan was ordered,
which confirmed that the infant had, in fact, had a stroke.
When an infant has a stroke, Finkel said there are routine tests doctors
run to try to figure out the cause of the stroke, and one of them is a
toxicology screen. The results of the toxicology screen on this baby showed
a metabolite of cocaine. The test, said Finkel, can't test for cocaine,
but instead checks for the compounds that cocaine breaks down into as the
body metabolizes it.
When he asked the mother how she thought the baby may have been exposed
to cocaine, he said she adamantly denied any drug use and said the only
substance she had taken was the blue cohosh tea.
They then tested her bottle of blue cohosh, and it tested positive for
cocaine metabolites. Then, Finkel said, the neonatalogist involved in the
case purchased a different brand of blue cohosh, and again they found cocaine
metabolites in the product.
Finkel said he contacted the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, but
because it was an herbal dietary supplement, not a medication, the federal
agency "didn't have the authority to follow up." He said if it had been
a medication, procedures are in place to report and follow-up on adverse
events.
In a search of the medical literature, Finkel said he found another
case where blue cohosh was implicated in a bad outcome for an infant. In
this case, the infant had a heart attack.
The doctors weren't able to find out if blue cohosh does break down
into cocaine metabolites, or if the product had been contaminated somehow
with cocaine.
"It remains important to determine if blue cohosh produces a positive
assay for cocaine use. Finding cocaine metabolites in the baby and in two
different blue cohosh products tends to rule out product adulteration and
strongly suggests that the assay results were falsely positive, as they
are inconsistent with the known chemistry of blue cohosh," said Steven
Dentali, vice president of scientific and technical affairs for the American
Herbal Products Association.
However, Dentali also noted that while most herbal dietary supplements
are safe, "there are known concerns regarding [blue cohosh's] use in pregnancy.
Not all herbs will be devoid of side effects. Pregnant women should be
taking safe, non-toxic herbal supplements."
While they weren't able to positively link blue cohosh to the baby's
stroke, Finkel said he suspects it played a role.
"Blue cohosh shouldn't be taken in pregnancy," he stressed. "If it's
being recommended to initiate labor, women should know that it may not
be entirely safe."
More information
To learn more about herbs and pregnancy, go to the American Pregnancy
Association.
-- Serena Gordon, HealthDayNews
What you can do
I heard that the baby that had some kind of catastrophic episode about
30 minutes after a precipitous birth was born to a mom who had take some
cohosh a few days earlier. The doctors couldn't find any other explanation,
so wrote it up as a fancy article, acting as if their theory was fact.
The "traditional" dosage would be to chew the root or sip the yucky
tasting tea given to you by your Algonquin midwife.
Anyone who has chewed a blue cohosh root can understand part of
why this use was effective.
I can just imagine primip women deciding to stop complaining and
surrender to get their babies out in order to avoid chewing that root again.
Blue cohosh is a critically endangered species which is difficult to
farm. Beyond that, it really doesn't work very well to get women into labor
or augment slow labors.
I've never seen a woman successfully induce labor with blue and
black cohosh and I personally know many who have tried.
Most of the midwives I've asked about this report similar lack
of results.
The few who insist that blue cohosh works well for inducing use
it in combination with castor oil or high, hot enemas and would most likely
get the same results without the herbs.
I must be out of the norm then, because the first midwife I ever apprenticed
with used it with great results, and I have used it successfully as well
as long as the woman's body is ripe enough.
I don't use it in combination with castor oil or enemas.
I have used blue and black together, and blue on it's own, and
as I said both with great results.
I'm not into inducing since I think nature knows what it's doing most
of the time, but if there is a situation where I think it's truly warranted,
I'll continue using blue cohosh.
It's safe, it's effective, and I've never had trouble finding
it.
I've watched far too many herbs be help up by the FDA as unsafe that
truly are not unsafe if you know how to use them.
And no one should be using herbs they don't know how to use.
I Aviva Jill Romm's protocol for inducing with Blue and Black,
and only after 41 1/2 weeks. I sometimes combine with nipple stim. I tell
the family to get ready to spend maybe three days working on it, and not
to get too tense and performance oriented. Then they do this:
Mix in a tincture bottle
Take 1 tsp of combo tincure every hour for four hours in am, then in
afternoon do every 1/2 hour for four hours. Stop at 8 hours. Do second
day, on third rest or do castor depending on local cliimate!
I used to feel sketchy about using B&B, as I had read a very official
case study in a journal about the cardiac concerns (This was in 1998 or
1999, was this Gretchen's Client?). The way I remember it, the woman had
been on PN-6 for several weeks before birth, and decided to double or triple
the dose with out telling her caregiver. They pulled on the PN-6 off the
shelves for a while to reformulate it without Blue Cohosh after that. I
don't know if the story as I recall it is correct, but that's how I remember
it, and I didn't keep the article. Still, I felt cautious about it, like
if there was a problem then I couldn't defend my use of it. I still think
about that aspect when I elect to us it.
So sometimes now, and what I used to do all the time was use homeopathic
B&B, caulophylum and cimicifugia instead. Homeos work good with some
types with real clean systems that can use energy medicine, but I think
they totally fail with more grounded types who resonate better with herbs
and don't respond to airy- fairy energy medicine sorts of things. So I
really wanted to have another option besides the homeos and just castor
oil.
So I hosted a workshop with midwife, herbalist, and mom of four Aviva
Jill Romm a year or two ago, and felt much more confident about using herbs
after that. I invited her to speak cause she is THE BEST resource as far
as I am concerned, for herbs and midwifery. Her book the "Natural Pregnancy
Book" is aimed at consumers of midwifery care, and is full of very good
recipes and herbal knowledge for midwives. It includes an herb tincture
recipe for first trimester Threatened AB that I think actually works. After
reading this book and wanting to use her suggestions in my practice, but
wanting to understand more before I did, I invited her here to teach.
She is very evidenced based, and is very active in and president of
the American Herbalist Guild. She has developed a credentialing system
for herbalists based on the CPM. She is always on top of what the buzz
is about any herb, and has great resources for determining fact from fiction.
She really knows her pharmacology, and what has been used over time in
what culture and what context. While she honors many herbal traditions
and incorporates them, she does so carefully, and opposes using something
just based on "traditional use". She next book is due
soon, and is an herb book for midwives and obstetricians. She is
working on going to medical school at the moment. She is a great scientific
wise-woman.
She is working on a course for midwives that will be available soon-
I will post two things in files, a nice long herb lesson from her, and
an intro to the study course she is offering to midwives that will be available
in Fall or Spring.
I bet this plan would work just as well with just the cotton
root, a great oxytocin synergist. In fact, I bet it might work just
as well without any of the herbs, because most women will go into labor
on their own in this timeframe.
I agree that Aviva is a wonderful herbalist and most of the AHG are
very evidence based when they can be. Unfortunately, the realm of
birth carries with it such enormous liability issues that we don't have
any evidence from the scientific model supporting the prenatal and intrapartum
use of blue cohosh. What we do have are two prominent journal reports
and another incident mentioned on this list citing suspicion of harm.
Granted the cases cited are isolated, anecdotal events, but shouldn't we
as midwives follow the precautionary principle that we pride ourselves
on?
I went to herb school for two years, have practiced herbalism for 10
years, and have taught at the National College of Botanical Medicine.
I love herbs and have devoted much of my life to plants. I also think
herbs in the birth place are over-rated.
I used to insist that all of my clients take a partis preparator tincture
to get the uterus ready for labor. I used to give squirts of blue
and black cohosh to all of my moms with slow progress or dilational plateaus.
I recommended the same herbs for labor induction. When I switched
to growing most of my own plants and using primarily herbs from my bioregion,
I quit using the cohoshes and other endangered species. What happened?
My transport rate dropped as I became a more seasoned midwife, my rate
of post-datism went down as well, and I noticed fewer "dysfunctional" labors.
I don't want to take anyone's herbs away from them. I want to
challenge all of the smart midwives on this list to question our routines
and assumptions. Just because we've always done something one way,
doesn't mean it's the best way. We are asking doctors to question
and, when appropriate, change their rituals and procedures around birth.
There may be places where it would benefit moms and babies for us to do
the same.
The problem with herbals, for me, is that there is such a wide variation
in dosage, and I imagine that there is also a wide variation in potency.
With pharmaceuticals, you know that you are getting 25mg or 50mg or whatever
of the active ingredient, and you know that you should take it once per
day or every four hours or whatever; and when these things are discussed
it is all very clearly spelled out.
I was taught that blue cohosh should be taken 10 drops, every 4 hours,
in juice, from breakfast time to dinner time. No potency given, I
guess it is assumed that all bottles are made the same, or that herbals
work the same as homeopathics, where the more dilute the active ingredient,
the better it works (am I the only one that doesn't "get" that?)
If I understand correctly, the below dosage is for 17 drops blue cohosh,
12 doses per day, for two days. That is 411 drops, about 1 1/6 ounces,
or about 7 teaspoons of blue cohosh over the course of two days.
(Not to mention twice that in cottonroot and half as much in black cohosh.)
And no potency is implied. Am I getting this right? (60 drops
per teaspoon, six teaspoons per ounce.)
I can imagine that there would be a difference in outcome from one midwife,
using 205 drops per day, to another, using 40-50 drops per day, plus all
the other things that would go into an induction coctail or induction routine.
Is this "safe"?
Herbals and homeopathics are incredibly different not only in preparation
but how they work in the body. Most people educated to the western
medical model of pharmaceuticals don't understand (not pointing fingers
here so no one flame me unnecessarily please) how a homeopathic can work.
Yes the more dilute it is, the better it works. Because it is the
vibrational imprint of the original material that is doing the work.
It works on the physical levels at the lower potencies, on the mental level,
emotional level, etheric level etc at higher potencies.
The basic premise is that illness or disorder of any kind doesn't manifest
first in the physical body, but trickles down through the etheric or vibrational
levels first, ending up in the body where symptoms are then seen.
So clear it out at the source, on the vibrational levels, and you get a
real cure not a suppression of symptoms like you get with most conventional
pharmaceuticals.
In response to another's post about pharmaceutical herbs... yes you
get a standardized amount and that's certainly helpful for knowing exactly
how much that person is getting. But you're using a chemically extracted
component of the herb, not generally the whole plant or the whole parts
of the plant that nature intends to be used. Using the plant whole,
whether leaves, roots, flowers or all at once depending on the herb, means
you get all the components together. That's why ephedra used properly
is so much safer than ephedrine. Ephedrine, even the natural and
not synthesized forms, cuts out components that your body needs in order
to assimilate and properly use that herb. You get rid of nature's
built in safety measures. And there are always going to be people
that can't take ephedra. I'm one of them. It's phenomenal when
it comes to bronchial congestion and asthma, but it races my heart so much
it feels like it's going to explode. So I use other herbs for congestion
in myself. You have to use common sense not only when taking herbs
but ESPECIALLY in recommending them to others.
Yes dosing is harder, yes potency is varied, which is why you find a
source with a potency you see working well and you stick with that source.
Getting your herbs in caps at walmart is ludicrous. You have no idea
of the source or the potency. I've personally seen a substandard,
old shipment of cut and sifted roots sent back to the supplier because
they had a greatly reduced potency.. these herbs were so old they had little
hope of doing anyone any good. When asked what the supplier was going
to do with the 50lb bag of herb we were sending back... they replied they'd
be sold to a health food store. I don't buy my herbs in bulk at health
food stores unless I know what company supplies them, and how often their
stock is rotated out. (standard rule is one drop per every ten lbs
of body weight for tinctures in case anyone is wondering, dosages on the
bottles are based on a 150lb person normally so you have to adjust accordingly
and you have to watch how that particular person responds to that herb
and that dose)
Every woman is different in their chemical makeup. Women respond
differently to different herbs. I had a woman bleeding that did not
respond to any of the herbs I normally carry for that.... I finally used
one my assistant happened to have on hand, that I had never used before...
and she quit instantly after taking it. Yeah maybe all the other
herbs finally kicked in at once and got her to quit, but my intuition and
instinct and years of herbal experience and study tell me that her
body was just sensitive to that last herb and that's the one that worked
for her. There are herbs I don't take because they don't seem to
do anything for me. Yet they work wonders with others. That
is just how it is and you flat out can't standardize that. Herbal
medicine is not an exact science any more than midwifery is. And
anyone that can't work with that and understand that, shouldn't be using
herbals to start with.
As for me, I'll take herbs any day over pharmaceuticals. I always
will. I'm radical in that way :) Give me the natural form or
don't give me anything. No one will ever convince me that chemicals
are better for the body than herbs and whole food. But, that's why
I became an herbalist, naturopathic doctor, and even a midwife, instead
of a medical doctor. :)
I ask every woman who decides to use this herb to let me know before
they begin using it. I have not been convinced of its safety in pregnancy,
though it is listed on our Vitamins and Herbs for Pregnant and Nursing
Mothers sheet. During initial exam I circle it on the sheet and inform
the ladies to tell me if they wish to use it.
http:
Evidence based on case reports.
4 INDIRECT SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE
Evidence based on scientific studies conducted on animals, insects
or microorganisms OR
laboratory studies on human cells.
5 THEORETICAL EVIDENCE
Evidence based on scientific theory OR expert opinion."
Blue Cohosh, Neonatal Stroke and . Cocaine?
The authors went on to state, "These toxicologic studies suggest that
either benzoylecgonine is a metabolite of both cocaine and blue cohosh
or the blue cohosh was contaminated with cocaine." While researching this
case, including a conversation with one of the authors, it turns out that
the case was originally reported ten years ago. In fact, Joseph Betz, formerly
with AHPA, now with the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, gave a lecture
on this case during his tenure with FDA.
Source: Richard Finkel, M.D., associate clinical professor, pediatrics
and neurology, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine, Philadelphia; Mark Blumenthal, executive director,
American Botanical Council, Austin, Texas; Steven Dentali, Ph.D., vice
president, Scientific and Technical Affairs, American Herbal Products Association,
Silver Spring, Md.; July 15, 2004, New England Journal of Medicine
Copyright © 1997-2004 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
2 parts Cottonroot
1 Part Blue Cohosh
1/2 part Black Cohosh
(so, in a 1 oz tincture bottle, 1/2 oz Cottonroot, 1/4 oz Blue Cohosh,
1/8 oz Black Cohosh)
Is this "midwifery model of care"?
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