19-02-2015, 05:25
(19-02-2015, 05:01)Lotus Wrote: I looks like it's does raise blood pressure, possibly blood sugars from the beta-sisterols.
Saw palmetto may affect blood pressure. Caution is advised in people taking herbs or supplements that affect blood pressure.
Saw Palmetto
http://www.mayoclinic.org/drugs-suppleme...B-20059958
Saw palmetto with other herbs that can slow blood clotting might increase the risk of bleeding in some people. These other herbs include angelica, clove, danshen, garlic, ginger, ginkgo, Panax ginseng, red clover, turmeric, vitamin E, willow, and others.
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Saw palmetto seems to decrease estrogen levels in the body. Taking saw palmetto along with estrogen pills might decrease the effectiveness of estrogen pills.
Some estrogen pills include conjugated equine estrogens (Premarin), ethinyl estradiol, estradiol, and others.
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/drugi...l/971.html
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Saw palmetto
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saw_palmetto_extract
I like the part about a study from 1898 (yes 1898)
King's American Dispensatory (1898) says of the extract:
It is also an expectorant, and controls irritation of mucous tissues. It has proved useful in irritative cough, chronic bronchial coughs, whooping-cough, laryngitis, acute and chronic, acute catarrh, asthma, tubercular laryngitis, and in the cough of phthisis pulmonalis. Upon the digestive organs it acts kindly, improving the appetite, digestion, and assimilation. However, its most pronounced effects appear to be those exerted upon the urino-genital tracts of both male and female, and upon all the organs concerned in reproduction. It is said to enlarge wasted organs, as the breasts, ovaries, and testicles, while the paradoxical claim is also made that it reduces hypertrophy of the prostate. Possibly this may be explained by claiming that it tends toward the production of a normal condition, reducing parts when unhealthily enlarged, and increasing them when atrophied.[4]
Thanks lotus. IT seems Mayo clinic condemns it and wiki is objective. I'd be curious to see if Mayo clinic crucifys most if not all herbal supplementation...
Having read Mayo I don't wana touch the stuff but after wiki I can see the benefits I'd researched in the past. I guess it's one of those try it cautiously and see
Fyi I found my diabetic profile I had done a few months ago and it was 35 which seems to be a very healthy range. This reading was based on a period of a few weeks HBA1C test.
Maybe I can rule out blood sugar the. It woulday to note "in the past" I was often prone to *seeing stars * after I'd get up from sitting Down. That certainly hasn't happened for years though.
Thanks for your help x