HealthWorld Online
 
healthy.net
 
Wellness Inventory Whole Person Assessment & Lifestyle Program
Aromatherapy Materia Medica
home alternative medicine health conditions healthy shopping contact us
Tell A Friend  Tell A Friend
 
 
enter keyword-click
 
 
Health Conditions
 
Key Health Centers
 
Aromatherapy
Aromatherapy
more titles by
Kathi Keville

 
Alter. Therapies
 
Product Categories
 
 
Hot Tubs & Spas
Achieve all-around mental, physical,and emotional well-being.
Circulation, sleep enhancement, arthritis,
and back pain relief.
Dimension One Hot Tubs and Spas

 
Teeccino Caffeine Free Herbal Coffee

 
Clove Bud
A Complete Guide To The Healing Art
© 1995 Kathi Keville, Mindy Green
 (Excerpted from Aromatherapy, Crossing Press)


Clove was the tree that Pierre Poivre risked his life to steal from the Dutch colonies. Today's supply comes mostly from trees planted on islands off Africa by the British. Once established, the trees bear their woody buds for at least a century. To discourage Indonesians from chewing betel nuts, the Dutch introduced cigarettes spiced with cloves, which were even more harmful than tobacco by itself. A popular 16th-century Italian cologne combined clove with lavender, musk and ambergris. The 19th-century "Guard's Bouquet" was a similar formula, dabbed on handkerchiefs. Simply inhaling the fragrance was once said to improve eyesight and keep away the plague-European doctors wore leather beaks filled with cloves and other aromatics to stave off infection. Envoys to the Chinese Han court held cloves in their mouths during audiences with the emperor to sweeten their breath. Europeans, East Indians and Chinese still freshen their breath and eliminate toothache with clove. Its constituent, eugenol, kills germs and pain.

Family: Myrtaceae
Extraction: Distilled from the immature flower bud, or steam distilled from the leaf or stem. The scent is powerful, spicy and hot. Concrete, absolute, oleoresin comes from buds. The leaf is highest in eugenol.
Medicinal Action: Clove relieves toothaches, flu, sore muscles, arthritis, colds and bronchial congestion. It destroys intestinal parasites and is a good addition to a heating liniment.
Cosmetic/Skin Use: An antiseptic and antifungal, diluted clove oil may be dabbed on scabies or athlete's foot.
Emotional Attribute: Small doses are stimulating, helping to overcome nervousness, mental fatigue or poor memory.
Considerations: The oil is irritating to skin and mucous membranes, so use it in 1-percent dilution or less.

Associated Oil:
Clove Bark (Dicypellium caryophyllatum) --A small Amazon tree called Brazil clove, sometimes used as a clove substitute.


Copyright © 1995



     More...

    Aromatherapy Materia Medica
Kathi Keville has studied herbs since 1969. Her attraction to fragrant plants led to an involvement in aromatherapy. Her other books include Herbs for Health and Healing; The Illustrated Encyclopedia of ...more

From Our Sponsors
 


 
     enter email-click go 
Take the
Breathing Quiz

 
Health News
 
 
Key Services
 
Health News
e-Newsletter
Find a Practitioner
Global Calendar
Wellness Inventory
Expert Columns
Healthy Recipes
Emergency/1st Aid
Health Bookstore
Healthy Shopping
Speakers Network
MEDLINE/PubMed
Document Delivery
Welcome Center
 
 
Disclaimer: The information provided on HealthWorld Online is for educational purposes only and IS NOT intended as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek professional medical advice from your physician or other qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

 
 
 
home alternative medicine health conditions healthy shopping about us site search contact us