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n. 3/2000
![]() Sergio Angeletti |
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“The
whole natural substances do well: for example the strychnine”. This way
a twenty years ago article issued by the “Corriere”, oriented to pour reasonably
oil on the troubled waters of the idolater neophytes followers of Messegué,
whose tisanes they smoked, every kind of herbs decocts, lumping everything
together. As much powerful in their benefits, if correctly used, as their
poisoning is powerful if administered too much “unconcernedly”, for mere
“alternative” recall.
Along
this same directive nowadays in Italy it's coming came out homeopathy,
turning into much more quite the work of the Antivenin Centres (for example
the “national” one of Niguarda near Milan). Because it does go on getting
there the battered people who mistook leaf, berry or root, but the 50%
interventions goes on concerning children that have ingurgitated complete
box of medicines left unguarded. But by now the medicine that is very popular
is the homeopathic one, so every thing ends with a big fright of relatives,
first convinced that it “does well” and than they are afraid it could “hurt”,
unconsciously mindful of having never met Paracelsus.
Since,
we must remind it, if Homeopathy is the art of dilution, instead when making
decoctions, infusions, tisanes etc. only active principles are extracted
from herbs and concentrated in the cup. That means: pay attention to not
concentrate inside oneself the action or better the interaction of herbs
among themselves and with medicines without coordination. The University
of California in Los Angeles hurried to spread a first list of such interactions,
that it's advisable to give strengthened divulgation. Let's talk about
Hypericum, with which the British Medical Journal dealt with lately, publishing
the results of a double-blind multi-centre randomised survey, proving that
the'” Saint John's wort” has the same function of the imipramine (and higher
than placebo) in putting under control both anxiety and light depression,
and overcomes both medicines in bettering the general physic condition.
Well. To confirm, it makes one to tell, about the Hypericum activity over
organism, that from Los Angeles arrive two warnings: A serotonin syndrome
is at risk if linked to serotonin-synergic; paired to tetracycline it powers
the photo-sensitisation. And
what about the gingko, already omnipresent even if with inverted genre
and writing? It
is worthy in geriatrics to support memory and legs circulation, but it
must not be linked to the FANS and other anticoagulants, neither with anti-depressants
MAO-inhibitors, even if it's beneficial to support the sexual functionality,
contrasted just by certain anti-depressant medicines. Keeping in the brain
zone, the Mirabilis jalapa (alias anagra) gives an “oil” that not only
lowers the hyper-blood cholesterol, but also the efficacy level of the
anti-epileptic and anti-psychotic medicines. The
ginseng goes on being the first protagonist on the scene of the herbal/exotic/alternative
“perking up. In Los Angeles they assert that its nervous and cardiac stimulation
action, perhaps moves away impotence, but brings closer hypertension, tachycardia
and hyperglycaemia: neither the ginseng is advisable for diabetics, in
which it potentiates these further risk factors, featured nevertheless
the action of anticoagulant medicines... Well
then. It's right to use herbs as medicines - resuming and going on from
where it started- but without forgetting that “pharmakon” meant first of
all “poison” and then “medicament”. And reminding exactly the whole sentence
of Teofrasto Bombast von Hohenheim called the Paracelsus (1493-1541), a
German graduated in medicine at Ferrara, and who carried out special studies
over the “population diseases”, and he was among the first to extract chemically
the active principles from herbs to maintain them the longest possible
as they were fresh and not drooped by dryness. So Paracelsus wrote: “Everything
is poison /and nothing is exempt of poisons/only dosage decides/ or not
/what is poison.” Remind it for Messegué, but let's forget it for
the “Art to recover” (1810) by Samuel Friederich C. Hahnemann: thank to
their submolecular dilutions his homeopathic products remind us how to
stimulate wealth, but even with the permission of the Antivenin Centres,
there' not enough to do bad: it's right to call them “medicaments” and
not “medicines”. Born in 1743, the Saxony German, the Father of Homeopathy
employed thoroughly the concept of his fellow countryman Father of pharmaceutics:
he reduced the dosis at an extent... Nevertheless
since so many centuries far accounts do not balance: the Paracelsus basis
insisted on medicine for populations, is the homeopathic medicine cheap? As
Messegué maybe? |
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