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The Heart Herbs: Hawthorn and Garlic

Crataegus oxyacantha

Joseph has high blood pressure and elevated cholesterol levels–no symptoms yet, but he’s concerned because his dad died of a heart attack at 52. At 48, he is more fit than his dad was and more conscious about his diet. He eats more whole grains and vegetables, more fish and chicken–red meat only occasionally, and he doesn’t smoke. His downfall, if he were to admit it,
is his job. He has a family, his wife has her own carrier, but with a mortgage
and 2 kids in the big city, he has to work hard to make everything come
out right at the end of the month. He oversees a department with 2 other
co-workers, and sales are down. He tries not to worry, he even listens to
ocean tapes and has taken a meditation class, but for the last 2 years he
has watched his tests come back progressively worse the last 6 months.

What to do? The doctor talked about putting him on medications, and that’s
when he decided to read up on heart disease and get a second opinion. This
is what he learned.

In reading a number of books about natural-health approaches to preventing
high blood pressure and heart disease, Joseph discovered that recent research
supported the use of 400-800 I.U. of vitamin E and other antioxidants along
with a high-fiber, low-fat and low-sugar diet. He also discovered the two
best-documented herbs for the prevention of heart disease, garlic and hawthorn.

Garlic: the Most-Studied Herbal Food for the Cardiovascular System

Garlic may be the world’s most respected medicinal plant–not only does
it have thousands of years of historical medicinal usage, but it has also
been the subject of numerous research studies published in 1100 scientific
articles, of which there have also been about 258 research studies on the
cardiovascular effects of garlic, which represents a major amount of research.
These studies show:

While garlic’s contribution to the health of the heart and cardiovascular
system is significant, many people don’t like to eat garlic because of the
smell it imparts to their breath. Garlic odors can even exude from the pores
of some people when eaten regularly. It seems many people would rather die
of heart disease than loneliness. For this reason, and also because of convenience,
many people like to get their daily clove or two from garlic capsules or
tablets. Because of the controversy about what form of product is best (fresh-dried,
alicin-rich, or aged), it is good to know that just about any quality garlic
product, whether dried or oil-based, has some beneficial activity on the
cardiovascular system. While allicin-rich products are more anti-bacterial
and possibly anti-viral, breakdown products such as ajoene, methyl ally
trisulphide,and dimethyl trisulphide created during drying and cooking of
garlic, can also have beneficial effects on the heart and circulation.

The best advice about taking garlic seems to be–eat it raw, cook with it,
take it as a supplement–but do use it everyday.

Hawthorn, The Gentle Heart Herb

The best-known herb for the heart in western herbalism is Hawthorn, which
is a small tree or shrub that grows throughout the northern hemisphere.
The fruits, flowers, and leaves are processed into tinctures and other kinds
of extracts available in capsules or tablets in the U.S. and other parts
of the world.

The current use of hawthorn for heart conditions dates back to the 17th
century, according to the French doctor, Leclerc, though in 1733, Alleyne
in his English Dispensatory writes only of its use as a diuretic and “powerful
expeller of the stone and gravel.” He states further that the flowers
were the main ingredient in the famous “nephritic water,” a remedy
to benefit the kidneys. Green, an Irish doctor, is known to have used it
extensively for heart ailments and after his death in 1894, it is said to
have become a famous remedy for this purpose. In Europe, both homeopathic
and allopathic doctors used the herb for various heart and cardiovascular
ailments from late 19th through the early 20th centuries–and with great
clinical success. Hawthorn had entered American clinical practice by 1896–only
to fade from use in the 1930s.

Today, hawthorn is an official drug in the Pharmacopoeias of Brazil, China,
Czechoslovakia, France, Germany, Hungary, Russia, and Switzerland. As a
measure of its incredible popularity, it is an ingredient of 213 commercial
European herbal formulas, mostly for the cardiovascular system.

I have a special affection for this herb, because it helped my father strengthen
his heart and significantly increase the quality of his circulation. Twenty-five
years ago he had a heart attack,and has since been taking hawthorn in extract
form for over 15 years with excellent results.

The extract of hawthorn can increase blood flow to the heart muscle itself,
helping to counteract one of the most common modern causes of death in industrial
countries–heart attack due to lack of blood flow to the heart. In pharmacological
tests on both animals and humans, hawthorn has been shown to improve the
contractility of the heart muscle (which can lead to a stronger pumping
action of the heart), increase cardiac performance and output, lower the
peripheral vascular resistance (reducing the workload of the heart), steady
the heartbeat (antiarrhythmic effect), as well as increasing the heart’s
tolerance to oxygen deficiency, such as might happen during stress or excitement,
or in diseases where the arteries are partially blocked.

In Europe, thousands of doctors prescribe hawthorn to prevent cardiovascular
disease or to help alleviate symptoms of mild to moderate problems. It is
considered so safe that it is sometimes prescribed concurrently with heart
medications such as digitalis. Hawthorn is also considered a mildly calming
herb to the nervous system–an appropriate bonus considering that stress
and nervousness often accompany cardiovascular problems.

In my own experience, it is the first herb, besides garlic, that should
be added to one’s daily dietary regimen when there is any suspicion of problems
of cardiovascular disease. If one has a family member who has heart or vascular
problems, or for people eating a diet that includes moderate to high levels
of fat (especially from dairy products or red meat), or are stressing or
using stimulants (such as coffee), hawthorn is an excellent protector.

The extract can be taken long-term, is very safe, and will not interfere
with any medications, according to the official European Community monograph
(ESCOP) on hawthorn. The daily dose is 2-4 dropperfuls of the tincture,
or 1-2 tablets of the standardized extract, morning and evening.

In this modern age with its times of stress and anxiety, it is reassuring
that nature has provided such gentle yet effective cardiovascular protectors
as hawthorn and garlic.

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