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Balm, from the Plant Melissa
officinalis, is also called balm mint, bee balm, blue balm,
cure-all, dropsy plant, garden balm, lemon balm, melissa, and
sweet balm.
Bees love this lemon-scented herb, which is
what earned it the nicknames of 'lemon balm' and melissa
(from the Greek for "bee"). But its fragrance is
nothing compared with its many and varied medicinal properties,
earning it another nickname - "cure-all". Balm has the
ability to heal wounds, ease indigestion, relieve menstrual
cramps, fight cold sores, relax nerves, help prevent
sleeplessness - and even repel mosquitoes.
Modern research backs up many of balm's healing
powers. "Various small-scale laboratory studies in Germany
have demonstrated that its leaves contain compounds with
sedative, digestive and anti-spasmodic effects", says Varro
E. Tyler, Ph.D., Professor of Pharmacognosy at Purdue University
School of Pharmacy in West Lafayette, Indiana, and author of
"The Honest Herbal".
Although Balm has just recently made its mark
in American medicine, it's been highly valued by herbal
practitioners in Western Europe for some 2,000 years. Balm was
considered a must-have plant for Elizabethan herb gardens, and
over the centuries it's been a popular home remedy for a host of
common ailments.
Healing with Balm:
Safety Considerations:
Balm causes no documented safety problems,
although it has been shown to inhibit certain thyroid hormones. For
this reason, people with Graves' disease or other thyroid-related
problems should use Balm only with a doctor's approval.
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