Contents
The prickly thistles of this plant protect the many valuable medicinal uses of the milk thistle plant. Many people, however, dismiss these plants, thinking they are rough vegetables only fit for donkeys. Hence, this plant is named donkey thistle in many Latin countries despite its doubtless medicinal properties.
Indeed, donkeys eat thistles. But “intelligent” humans took many years to discover what those humble animals instinctively know. Many would be surprised to learn that a powerful substance against liver disorders is extracted from this thistle: silymarin, which is part of several pharmaceutical preparations.
According to legend, the white stains on the leaves of this thistle are drops of milk falling from the Virgin Mary’s breast when she hid her son from Herod’s persecution. On this basis, Middle Age physicians recommended milk thistle for increasing milk production in breastfeeding women.
Late scientific developments, which made it possible to know the chemical composition of many plants, allowed physicians to surrender many popular myths about plants. Hence, we can use medicinal herbs more effectively and steadily than before.
In the fruits of the milk thistle, there are substances with medicinal properties, the so-called flavonolignans. Dr. Coll (of the Pharmacognosis and pharmacodynamics Laboratory of Barcelona’s Pharmacy College) points out that these complex substances are formed by a flavonoid (taxifolin), and a phenolpropanic molecule (coniferilic alcohol) of flavonolignans is called silymarin.
SILYMARIN can stimulate the regeneration of hepatic cells damaged by toxic substances such as ethyl alcohol or carbon tetrachloride and phalloidine, a substance contained in the most poisonous mushrooms, Amanita phalloides. Silymarin stimulates protein synthesis in hepatic cells and has essential anti-inflammatory properties on the liver’s mesenchyme (supporting fiber tissue).
Hence, the milk thistle is highly recommended in the following cases:
In all these cases, silymarin stimulates the regeneration of damaged liver cells and restores their normal functions. However, this plant does not entirely heal cirrhosis, nor does any other treatment, up to now, if necrosis has already occurred (death or destruction of liver cells). Nonetheless, even in the most severe cases, an improvement is expected.
The FRUITS of the milk thistle, and in less proportion, its leaves and root, contain other active substances (biogenic amines, essential oil, albuminoid substances, and tannin), which could explain its balancing action on the autonomic nervous system that controls the tone of blood vessels. Therefore, the plant is successfully used in the cases of:
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