Yarrow (U.S.)
The claims made about specific products throughout this website have not been evaluated by the United States Food and Drug Administration or Canada Health and are not approved by them to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent disease. The information on this site provides a historical perspective of herbal use. It is educational and not intended as a substitute for advice from your trusted health care professional or information contained on or in any product label or packaging. Your use of this information is by your own consent, for your own personal use and at your own risk.
Yarrow has been used as a vulnerary (healing), stimulant, tonic, diuretic, and for high blood sugar. The American Indian knew Yarrow as a swift remedy for the rundown feeling and indigestion. He further used Yarrow as a remedy for increasing the urinary flow from the kidneys. Although sweating has become socially unacceptable, it is essential to the health of the skin. For those able, sauna and exercise are recommended. Yarrow settles nerves and thus reduces high blood pressure. It relieves shortness of breath and wasting of spinal marrow. Its list of successes is legion. Beneficial results in this partial list confirm its revered status among herbalists: childhood diseases, including infant diarrhea, uterus problems, Bright's disease (egg white material in the urine), gas, piles, sore nipples, fistulas, flu and hair loss. Yarrow may be taken for involuntary loss of urine, bed wetting, spitting up of blood, as a nervine and as a remedy for common colds and high blood sugar.
The claims made about specific products throughout this website have not been evaluated by the United States Food and Drug Administration or Canada Health and are not approved by them to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent disease. The information on this site provides a historical perspective of herbal use. It is educational and not intended as a substitute for advice from your trusted health care professional or information contained on or in any product label or packaging. Your use of this information is by your own consent, for your own personal use and at your own risk.
Yarrow has been used as a vulnerary (healing), stimulant, tonic, diuretic, and for high blood sugar. The American Indian knew Yarrow as a swift remedy for the rundown feeling and indigestion. He further used Yarrow as a remedy for increasing the urinary flow from the kidneys. Although sweating has become socially unacceptable, it is essential to the health of the skin. For those able, sauna and exercise are recommended. Yarrow settles nerves and thus reduces high blood pressure. It relieves shortness of breath and wasting of spinal marrow. Its list of successes is legion. Beneficial results in this partial list confirm its revered status among herbalists: childhood diseases, including infant diarrhea, uterus problems, Bright's disease (egg white material in the urine), gas, piles, sore nipples, fistulas, flu and hair loss. Yarrow may be taken for involuntary loss of urine, bed wetting, spitting up of blood, as a nervine and as a remedy for common colds and high blood sugar.
The claims made about specific products throughout this website have not been evaluated by the United States Food and Drug Administration or Canada Health and are not approved by them to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent disease. The information on this site provides a historical perspective of herbal use. It is educational and not intended as a substitute for advice from your trusted health care professional or information contained on or in any product label or packaging. Your use of this information is by your own consent, for your own personal use and at your own risk.
Yarrow has been used as a vulnerary (healing), stimulant, tonic, diuretic, and for high blood sugar. The American Indian knew Yarrow as a swift remedy for the rundown feeling and indigestion. He further used Yarrow as a remedy for increasing the urinary flow from the kidneys. Although sweating has become socially unacceptable, it is essential to the health of the skin. For those able, sauna and exercise are recommended. Yarrow settles nerves and thus reduces high blood pressure. It relieves shortness of breath and wasting of spinal marrow. Its list of successes is legion. Beneficial results in this partial list confirm its revered status among herbalists: childhood diseases, including infant diarrhea, uterus problems, Bright's disease (egg white material in the urine), gas, piles, sore nipples, fistulas, flu and hair loss. Yarrow may be taken for involuntary loss of urine, bed wetting, spitting up of blood, as a nervine and as a remedy for common colds and high blood sugar.