Herbs and Natural Supplements, Volume 2: An Evidence-Based Guide, Volume 2Herbs and Natural Supplements, 4th Edition: An evidence-based guide is an authoritative, evidence-based reference. This two-volume resource is essential to the safe and effective use of herbal, nutritional and food supplements. The second volume provides current, evidence-based monographs on the 132 most popular herbs, nutrients and food supplements. Organised alphabetically, each monograph includes daily intake, main actions and indications, adverse reactions, contraindications and precautions, safety in pregnancy and more. - Recommended by the Pharmacy Board of Australia as an evidence-based reference works (print) that pharmacists are meant to have access to when dispensing - Contributed content from naturopaths, GPs, pharmacists, and herbalists - Useful in a clinical setting as well as a reference book. - It provides up-to-date evidence on the latest research impacting on herbal and natural medicine by top leaders in Australia within the fields of Pharmacy, Herbal Medicine and Natural Medicine |
Common terms and phrases
activity aloe Aloe vera Andrographis anti-inflammatory antioxidant apoptosis Astragalus baical baicalein baicalin beta-carotene biloba black cohosh blood calcium Calendula cancer cells cardiovascular carnitine chitosan chocolate cholesterol chondroitin chromium chronic Clin Nutr clinical trials cocoa coenzyme Q10 cognitive compared controlled trial cranberry daily decreased demonstrated dietary disease dose double-blind drug Echinacea effects essential oil evidence extract fatty acids fenugreek feverfew fish oil flavonoids flaxseed folate folic acid Food function garlic ginger ginkgo glucose Health herb herbal human hypertension improved increased induced infection inflammatory inhibit insulin intake interaction L-carnitine levels lipid medicine meta-analysis metabolism mg/day mice muscle Nutrition oral oxidative stress parthenolide patients Pharmacol placebo placebo-controlled plasma potential pregnancy prevention protein randomised randomized rats receptor reduced reported risk serum significant significantly suggest Suppl symptoms syndrome systematic review therapy tion treatment type 2 diabetes vitamin vitamin D Vitex vitro vivo weeks women
