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Chapter List For:
The Green Pharmacy Herbal Handbook:
  1. Introduction to the Green Pharmacy
  2. Entering the Green Pharmacy
  3. Putting Safety First
  4. Shopping and Harvesting the Green Pharmacy
  5. Using the Green Pharmacy
  6. Aging
  7. Allergies
  8. Altitude Sickness
  9. Alzheimers Disease
  10. Amenorrhea
  11. Angina
  12. Ankylosing Spondylitis
  13. Arthritis
  14. Asthma
  15. Athletes Foot
  16. Backache
  17. Bad Breath
  18. Baldness
  19. Bladder Infections
  20. Body Odor
  21. Breast Enlargement
  22. Breastfeeding Problems
  23. Bronchitis
  24. Bruises
  25. Bunions
  26. Burns
  27. Bursitis and Tendinitis
  28. Cancer Prevention
  29. Canker Sores
  30. Cardiac Arrhythmia
  31. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
  32. Cataracts
  33. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
  34. Colds and Flu
  35. Constipation
  36. Corns
  37. Coughing
  38. Cuts Scrapes and Abscesses
  39. Dandruff
  40. Depression
  41. Diabetes
  42. Diarrhea
  43. Diverticulitis
  44. Dizziness
  45. Dry Mouth
  46. Earache
  47. Emphysema
  48. Endometriosis
  49. Erection Problems
  50. Fainting
  51. Fever
  52. Flatulence
  53. Fungal Infections
  54. Gallstones and Kidney Stones
  55. Genital Herpes and Cold Sores
  56. Gingivitis
  57. Glaucoma
  58. Gout
  59. Graves Disease
  60. Hangover
  61. Headache
  62. Heartburn
  63. Heart Disease
  64. Hemorrhoids
  65. High Blood Pressure
  66. High Cholesterol
  67. Hives
  68. Hiv Infection Aids
  69. Hypothyroidism
  70. Indigestion
  71. Infertility
  72. Inflammatory Bowel Disease
  73. Inhibited Sexual Desire in Women
  74. Insect Bites and Stings
  75. Insomnia
  76. Intermittent Claudication
  77. Intestinal Parasites
  78. Laryngitis
  79. Lice
  80. Liver Problems
  81. Lyme Disease
  82. Macular Degeneration
  83. Menopause
  84. Menstrual Cramps
  85. Morning Sickness
  86. Motion Sickness
  87. Multiple Sclerosis
  88. Nausea
  89. Osteoporosis
  90. Overweight
  91. Pain
  92. Parkinsons Disease
  93. Pneumonia
  94. Poison Ivy Oak and Sumac
  95. Pregnancy and Delivery
  96. Premenstrual Syndrome
  97. Prostate Enlargement
  98. Psoriasis
  99. Raynauds Disease
  100. Scabies
  101. Sciatica
  102. Shingles
  103. Sinusitis
  104. Skin Problems
  105. Smoking
  106. Sores
  107. Sore Throat
  108. Sties
  109. Stroke
  110. Sunburn
  111. Swelling
  112. Tinnitus
  113. Tonsillitus
  114. Toothache
  115. Tooth Decay
  116. Tuberculosis
  117. Ulcers
  118. Vaginitis
  119. Varicose Veins
  120. Viral Infections
  121. Warts
  122. Worms
  123. Wrinkles
  124. Yeast Infection
  125. Green Pharmacy Authors Postscript
From the Rodale book, The Green Pharmacy Herbal Handbook:
Edit id 2625

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome


Previous Chapter Cataracts
Next Chapter Bedsores


Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Fatigue used to be considered only a symptom, but in the last decade or so, chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) has become one of the nation's most controversial illnesses. Depending on whom you talk to, this disease either doesn't exist at all or it's an epidemic.

All sorts of things have been fingered as causes: allergies, food intolerances, drug reactions, yeast infection, psychological problems and chronic infection with the Epstein-Barr virus (the culprit that causes mononucleosis), just to name a few.

According to some estimates, 3 million Americans--90 million people worldwide--suffer from the well-defined group of symptoms that seem to be associated with CFS. These symptoms, doctors say, include profound lethargy not alleviated by sleep, plus depression, headache, fevers, malaise, memory loss, mental confusion, poor concentration, pain and weakness of the joints and muscles, recurring infections, severe exhaustion from minor activities, sore throat, stomach distress and swollen lymph glands. Oddly enough, even the people who have all of these symptoms do not appear to be sick--doctors find little, if anything, wrong during a physical exam, and laboratory tests frequently fail to find any abnormalities.

The National Institutes of Health estimates that the people who are most at risk for CFS are white, middle-class women.

I believe CFS is a very real condition. I also agree with many experts in the field that it's very confusing. Any number of infections, allergies, foods, drugs, nutritional deficiencies and other illnesses might contribute to it. Because CFS is so multifaceted, I shy away from anyone who claims to understand completely the cause or the cure.

I'd advise anyone with chronic fatigue to find a good physician who understands the condition and follow the doctor's advice to help explore all possible causes. To see what helps and what hurts you, by all means have your doctor test you for allergies, including food allergies.

One more note before we get to the herbs: Almost every CFS expert recommends trying a whole-food, vegetarian or near-vegetarian diet to see if it helps. Even if it doesn't cure your fatigue, it should reduce your risk of heart disease, cancer, obesity, high blood pressure and many other serious conditions. And any of these conditions will certainly contribute to chronic fatigue, even if they don't cause it.

Green Pharmacy for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

There are a number of herbs that may prove helpful.

PH_GP_2leaves Assorted antiviral herbs. Several herbalists I respect claim to relieve chronic fatigue successfully in a high percentage of people with combinations of antiviral herbs: echinacea, goldenseal, licorice, lemon balm (also known as melissa) and ginger. I think this approach is worth a try. You can make a blend of equal amounts of these herbs or use varying amounts, adjusting the blend to your personal taste. Make a tea using a teaspoon or two of your favorite blend and have a cup two or three times a day. Such herb teas can be energizing.

PH_GP_1leaf Asian ginseng (Panax ginseng) and Siberian ginseng (Eleutherococcus senticosus). Commission E, the group of scientists that advises the German government about herbs, endorses ginseng "as a tonic to combat feelings of lassitude and debility, lack of energy and ability to concentrate, and during convalescence." The suggested daily dose is about one teaspoon steeped in a cup of boiling water to make a tea.

Clinical studies indicate that ginseng improves athletic performance, although it takes up to a month of regular use to notice this herb's benefits. Ginseng also stimulates the immune system, an effect that's been repeatedly confirmed in experiments with animals.

Revered in Asia for thousands of years as an energy-boosting tonic, ginseng is used today by Russian cosmonauts and Asian Olympic athletes as an "adaptogen," an herb that increases general resistance to all types of stress. It does this in addition to reducing fatigue and improving alertness, coordination, memory and stress-coping abilities.

Some years ago, a co-worker asked if there were any caffeine in an "energy preparation" that he was taking to combat fatigue. The formula included damiana, ginseng, royal jelly and saw palmetto. He said it was really helping him, but he was afraid it was getting him up earlier in the morning. And when he woke up, he said, he had a tremendous urge to go to work.

Nope, I told him, no caffeine in there. But I added that ginseng can be quite a stimulant. I told him to keep taking it and to get up and work whenever the urge struck him. (Don't let that energy go to waste.)

2 ASIA

Asian Ginseng

A root primarily imported from China and Korea, this type of ginseng won mythic renown for increasing longevity.

PH_GP_1leaf Mate (Ilex paraguayensis). Commission E approves using one to two teaspoons a day in tea for banishing mental and physical fatigue. Most of mate's energy-boosting activity comes from its caffeine content. While it may be good as an occasional picker-upper, however, I wouldn't recommend taking it daily to treat CFS.

PH_GP_1leaf Purslane (Portulaca oleracea) and other foods containing magnesium. People who advocate juicing for health often stress the importance of getting magnesium from greens to boost stamina and energy. If you want to get more magnesium, try purslane, string beans, spinach, cowpeas, lettuce, stinging nettle, poppy seeds, licorice root and coriander.

You could just take a magnesium supplement (the Daily Value is 400 milligrams), but personally, I'd much rather eat a purslane/string bean/spinach salad with poppyseed dressing. With supplements, you get one mineral or a few plant chemicals (phytochemicals), but with whole herbs, you get every therapeutic phytochemical in the plant--possibly hundreds.

PH_GP_1leaf Spinach (Spinacia oleracea) and other foods containing folate. Although I prefer to recommend that you get your vitamins and minerals from foods rather than supplements, deficiencies of folate (the naturally occurring form of folic acid) are quite common, and you might need a folic acid supplement. The average American consumes only 61 percent of the Daily Value of 400 micrograms of folate. Whether or not you take a supplement, however, don't neglect good food sources such as spinach, pinto beans, asparagus, broccoli, okra and brussels sprouts.

PH_GP_1leaf Wheatgrass (Agropyron, various species) and other grasses. Juice advocates often recommend wheatgrass juice for fatigue. Personally, I think any juiced wholesome grass, including barley, oats, couchgrass or wheat, would be helpful.

Previous Chapter Cataracts
Next Chapter Bedsores

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