Black Cohosh and menopause: your questions answered.
Black cohosh (Cimicifuga racemosa), a member of the buttercup family, is a perennial plant that is native to North America. Other common names include black snakeroot, bugbane, bugwort, rattle root, rattle top, rattle weed, and macrotys. Insects avoid it, which accounts for some of these common names.
Black cohosh was used in North American Indian medicine for malaise, gynaecological disorders, kidney disorders, malaria, rheumatism, and sore throat. It was also used for colds, cough, constipation, hives, and backache and to induce lactation for breast feeding. In 19th-century America, black cohosh was a home remedy used for rheumatism and fever, as a diuretic, and to bring on menstruation. It was extremely popular among a group of alternative practitioners who called black cohosh “macrotys” and prescribed it for rheumatism, lung conditions, neurological conditions, and conditions that affected women’s reproductive organs (including menstrual problems, inflammation of the womb or ovaries, infertility, threatened miscarriage, and relief of labour pains)
Today black cohosh is known primarily as an herbal treatment for hot flushes and …
To read the rest of this article and for more information on ‘Natural News for Women’ please click hereÂ