January 28, 2019

HISTORY AND USES OF YARRO PLANT

THE MILLEFEUILLE 
IS A PLANT ORIGIN FROM EUROPE whose healing properties have been known for a long time. Yesterday, the yarrow was used to stop the bleeding caused by war wounds. Active against the hay 
fever, it also treats the common cold and the flu, it is also used in case of problems related to menstruation and circulatory disorders.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PLANT

Yarrow is a perennial plant of the family Asteraceae growing in temperate zones of several continents (Europe, Asia, South America). A plant with a little branched stem, it is usually 60 to 80 cm. some specimens can grow up to two meters, stems are covered with woolly, whitish hairs, elongated leaves of yarrow are dark green, petiolate at base, flowering occurs between June and September: flower heads yarrow are white, pink or purple and have white-yellow to yellow florets in their hearts.

CURATIVE ACTION

INTERNAL USE

Antispasmodic and decongestant: yarrow helps relieve digestive disorders, but also menstrual pain.
Peptic: it helps digestion and heals dyspepsia. 
Emmenagogue: the plant stimulates blood flow to the pelvic region and the uterus.

EXTERNAL USE

Healing and coagulation: Applied as a compress, yarrow helps stop bleeding and helps to heal wounds. Anti-inflammatory: the plant relieves skin inflammation. 
Antispasmodic: used in sits bath, it relieves menstrual pain. 
Antiseptic: Yarrow helps to prevent infections.

USES

To treat loss of appetite, digestive disorders and menstrual pain, yarrow is consumed as an infusion, at a rate of one to two teaspoons in 150 ml of water, to be taken three times per day. day between meals, liquid extract (1 to 2 ml three times a day) or mother tincture (5 ml in a little water or fruit juice three times a day) can also be used. 


In external use, yarrow is used in three different ways: compresses from an infusion of one to two teaspoons in 250 ml of water, essential oil diluted in a little oil vegetable, in sitz bath for menstrual pain, with 100 g of dried plants infused in a liter of water that is then diluted in twenty liters of hot water.

More simply, a fresh yarrow leaf placed in the nostrils will stop nosebleeds, while chewed poultice leaves are an excellent anticoagulant.

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