Aphrodisiacs for Men: Herbs, Drugs, and Concentrated Virilizing Foods

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

Aphrodisiacs for Men: Herbs, Drugs, and Concentrated Virilizing Foods

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Women’s Herbs: Women’s Health

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Product Description
The beauty of herbal remedies is that they encourage the body to heal itself, causing the least amount of interference to the body’s natural rhythm. This invaluable sourcebook of knowledge will help women discover t… More >>

Women’s Herbs: Women’s Health

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Cancer: Herbs in Holistic Health Care

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Cancer: Herbs in Holistic Health Care

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Encyclopedia of Herbal Medicine: The Definitive Home Reference Guide to 550 Key Herbs with all their Uses as Remedies for Common Ailments

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

Product Description
Fully updated and authoritative, this revised edition of DK’s Encyclopedia of Herbal Medicine makes this classic, completely illustrated reference guide even bigger and better than the original. Featuring more than 550 m… More >>

Encyclopedia of Herbal Medicine: The Definitive Home Reference Guide to 550 Key Herbs with all their Uses as Remedies for Common Ailments

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Industry slams herb-drug interaction study

Monday, February 15th, 2010

Pamela Bond recently reported on the natural products industry criticism of a new research review published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (02-01-2010) that warned of dangerous herb-drug interactions that some herbal supplements can cause in heart disease patients taking prescription drugs.

“The errors and problems in this paper are too numerous to list completely at this time,” said Mark Blumenthal, founder and executive director of the Austin, Texas-based American Botanical Council. “While there are potential and actual interactions that various herbs can have with drugs used by patients with cardiovascular diseases, this paper will do little to improve professional awareness and skill in this area.”

In a press release, the American Botanical Council specified several errors in the published study:

  • Latin names for herbs are missing. For example, the authors don’t clarify the species of ginseng discussed. Many ginseng species “cause varying pharmacological effects,” noted Blumenthal in the release.
  • Some herbs labeled in the study as “commonly used” are not generally available in the U.S. dietary supplement market.
  • Capsicum is listed as being used for shingles, trigeminal, and diabetic neuralgia. But the over-the-counter and prescription drug capsaicin, a compound derived from chili peppers (Capsicum spp.), actually is used for those purposes.
  • “There are more [flaws],” said Blumenthal, adding that the study “should not have been published in its present form without serious additional edits, revisions and deletions, and the Journal of the American College of Cardiology would be advised to retract it.”

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