First Aid Herbs (Emergency, Trauma) - Mathew Wood
First Aid Herbs (Emergency, Trauma) - Mathew Wood
First Aid Herbs (Emergency, Trauma) - Mathew Wood
Cuts, Lacerations
! In order to cure wounds quickly and effectively we need to
understand them. The main organ we are dealing with here is the
skin. It protects the body from the entry of impurities. Numerous
minute capillaries carry blood to the sub dermic layer – the third
layer down from the surface. Here the plasma seeps out of the
vessels, full of food and oxygen, which permiate into the second and
first layers of the skin. Waste products are carried away by the veins
and lymphatic vessels in the third layer. In the second layer we find
the connective tissue that provides a supportive platform for the
surface skin. Here the immune cells and particles congregate,
providing an immune barrier. If the surface layer of the skin is
broken an immune response will get to work on the impurities that
enter. Finally, we reach the first or surface layer of the skin, the lower
part of which is alive, generating new skin cells, the upper part of
which consists of old, dead skin cells providing a protective barrier to
the body. Nerve cells penetrate into the first layer, to provide the
ability to sense by touch. Secretions of watery sweat and oily sebum
lubricate, moisten, nourish, and keep the surface healthy.
! A break in the skin can be a clean, knifelike cut, a mangled,
jagged laceration, or a superficial abrasion (scrape). Blood and
lymph are released from cut vessels. Nerves will be damaged,
resulting in pain. The major needs of the moment are to stop the
bleeding, reduce shock, and keep the wound clean. The blood
contains coagulation factors that help form a scab. The lips of the
wound probably release compounds that help the lips seek each
other out and close the more quickly, in the same way broken bones
release factors that search for the other broken bone and bring them
together. Thus, there are herbs that ‘bring the lips of the wound
together’ quickly. To remove unclean substances and bacteria, the
process of inflammation (heat, redness, swelling, and pain) will set in.
If the bacteria grow and proliferate this process will be unnecessarily
extended and there will be a generation of pus from dead bacteria
and immune cells. This may exit externally through the wound or
internally through the lymph and veins draining the wound. As
inflammation subsides the skin will concentrate on regrowing
healthy tissue (granulation), forming minimum scar tissue, and
minimizing damage to nerves.
! Complications include excessive bleeding, dirt in the wound,
prolonged inflammation, bacterial infection, pus production, ‘dirty blood’ or
impurities that cause extended inflammation, poor granulation, excessive
granulation (proud-flesh), poor formation of scar tissue, excessive scar tissue
(keloids), poor lymphatic drainage, and chronic nerve injury and pain.
! Although doctors generally only consider the activity of the
coagulants in the blood when there is a need to stop bleeding the
body actually has developed other functions that assist stopping or
staunching blood flow. One of the most important of these is an
increase in the blood flow to the capillaries in the rest of the body to
keep excessive blood from flooding the area of the wound. The
capillaries of the skin have the ability to take up to twenty times more
blood than the skin needs in order to warm the surface to release heat
from inflammation or to take blood away from a wound. This is why
the old doctors gave ‘stimulants’ to stop bleeding. The Civil War
doctors used whiskey as a stimulant.
! Here is an example of incorrect and correct wound treatment
that demonstrates how important it is to understand how healing
works, rather than to simply throw herbs at a problem blindly. This
is a medicine story told by herbalist 7Song. A man came to see him
who had a deep cut on his finger that had been stitched up by a
doctor. Someone told him to put comfrey on the wound. After a few
days the wound got putrid, starting discharging pus and the finger
turned blackish. 7 Song removed the comfrey, put on yarrow and the
next day the end of finger had “pinked up.” What happened here
was that comfrey, which is well known for encouraging cellular
proliferation or growth, caused the cells in the end of the finger to
grow more quickly. Yet, they had no blood supply so they started to
die off, shown by the blackish color. The yarrow, on the other hand,
stimulated blood flow into the finger to nourish the tissues and out to
remove waste products. It is an excellent wound healer, so it started
the job of recovery correctly.
!
! Yarrow (Achillea millefolium). This is my favorite
wound-remedy and is well known to many herbalists, though it
is not advertised by the big companies and therefore is not as
well known as it should be.
! The Latin name Achillea comes from Achilles, the famous
warrior. Homer gives an example of yarrow being used to treat
an arrow wound. It was carried into battle by warriors for
generations and is also known as “carpenter’s weed.”
! Yarrow is specific for deep wounds that hemorrhage
freely. It is less effective for a puncture wound or when the
bleeding is not profuse. It almost seems like the more the
blood, the more it sprays, the more it bleeds, the better yarrow
works. It stops the bleeding quickly, brings the lips of the
wound together, prevents infection and excessive inflammation
and promotes healing with the minimum scar tissue. It doesn’t
stop acute bleeding just by promoting coagulation and
astringing the wound (laying down proteins that pucker the
tissue) but also by stimulating peripheral circulation so that the
blood is dispersed throughout the body and less of it is
available to surge out of the wound.
! Those who have used yarrow can attest that it helps the
veins soak up blood with renewed vigor. It is not unusual to
see a fresh bruise removed in a short time because the veins
pull in the pooled blood. There are coagulating factors that
help close the wound, yet the blood that needs to be removed
from the wound is kept moving. Yarrow is a stimulant and like
all stimulants, it increases circulation to the capillaries in
general. This takes the burden off a local area of congestion
and hemorrhage, decreasing bleeding. By decongesting the
capillaries yarrow is also cooling and sedating.
! Yarrow works on internal hemorrhages as well as
external. My friend Margi Flint, a community herbalist in
Marblehead, MA, was called by a patient in tears. Her teenage
son fell off his skateboard onto the board. He seemed to be o.k.
at first, but his kidney had been injured and the hospital could
not stop the bleeding. Could anything be done? “Of course,”
replied Margi. She administered yarrow and the bleeding was
stopped in short order. The doctors were amazed.
! The mother of one of my students was asked to help by
her neighbors, who didn’t have health insurance. The husband
had gouged out a chunk of flesh on the front side of the ankle
on a barb wire fence. The tendons were freely visible in the
wound. The couple went to the emergency room but when
they heard they were going to have to have a skin graft from
the other leg they asked their neighbor, who was a nurse, if she
would help. She agreed to change the bandages everyday and
called her daughter to find out what herbal medicine could be
given. She was advised to put on yarrow poultices. Feeling
very much as if she was committing a crime, and knowing that
her license might even be endangered, she helped change the
bandages and poultice the wound every day. In addition the
man took yarrow and comfrey tea. Several weeks later the
wound was completely healed with a barely visible scar. “I
kept expecting the wound to get infected, but it never did,” the
nurse commented to me. “That was almost more unbelievable
than the fact that the flesh filled in with barely a scar.”
! It was fortunate that the man did not put the comfrey on
the wound externally since, as we have noted, this herb tends to
cause a wound to grow back on the outside, rather than from
the inside out. This would have caused the wound to heal on
the outside but become rotten on the inside. However, comfrey
is very good for regenerating tissue and is especially beneficial
to the tendons, so the internal use was likely to be very helpful.
! Several years ago another herbalist told me about a young
girl in his neighborhood whose arm was badly mangled in an
accident with a lawnmower. The parents were advised to have
the arm amputated as the wound was so dirty and mangled.
The father talked to the herbalist, who advised poultices of
yarrow. The wound healed without serious infection.
!
! Calendula (Calendula officinalis). This is an old central
European folk remedy which was adopted by Samuel
Hahnemann and introduced into the homeopathic
pharmacopoeia. After having more or less died out as a folk
remedy it was reintroduced into herbalism from homeopathy.
! Calendula is suited to the treatment of cuts after the
bleeding has stopped. It keeps the inflammatory stage, which
follows the hemorrhagic stage, in check. It will keep a fresh cut
clean or cleanse out an old, infected or purulent (pus-
producing) wound. I always think of the archetypal calendula
wound as resembling an infected cat scratch: red, swollen,
tender, warm and possibly full of pus. Calendula does not
generally open up a vent for pus so much as cleanse it out
through the lymphatic ducts. In fact, this points to organ
affinity: calendula is a great lymphatic cleanser. If there is need
to open a vent for pus there is hardly a better remedy than the
following.
Burns, Sunburn
! When intense heat is applied to the skin the living cells are
destroyed. If only the outer layer of the skin is involved there will
just be red, rough, painful tissue. This is called a first degree burn. If
the damage extends deeper a blister raises up as the body floods in
water, between the dead and living layers of skin tissue, to lubricate
and protect what remains. This is considered a second degree burn.
If the burn kills tissue all the way through the skin an open sore or
wound, surrounded by red, rough, painful skin remnants will
appear. This is a third degree burn. Because it is open it is more
dangerous because it can get infected. If it is large and extensive so
much dead tissue breaks down in the blood and liver that the
kidneys are shut down by the excessive protein waste going through
the urinary channels. This is what used to cause death from burns in
the old days, before kidney dialysis was available. Another problem
with the third degree burn is that the matrix for making new skin has
been destroyed and only scar tissue can form – according to science.
However, in traditional American Indian medicine we are firmly
taught that there are remedies which can literally resurrect the ability
of the cells to make damaged tissue. This I have seen with my own
eyes.
Poisonous Bites
! There are various kinds of bites and quite a few remedies. If
one lives in an area where there are a lot of poisonous bugs, spiders
or snakes one should study this topic carefully and know the local
venomous creatures and antidotal flora. I myself live in the north,
where we have no poisonous snakes and few poisonous spiders, so I
am not as experienced with this problem. Yet, I have had to invent
remedies to save people for pain and suffering and perhaps even the
loss of limb.
Boils, Abscesses
! Boils can develop from another of different situations. A poorly
treated wound could turn into a boil or one may form from the
inside, to allow pus to come to the surface. In the latter case we know
that there are unclean processes in the body generating bacterial
infection, tissue breakdown, and pus-formation. If the pus were to
circulate through the bloodstream it would cause generalized
infection, exhaustion and even death. Instead the body tries to open
up a vent to discharge the pus.
! In the old days internal abscesses would form in the lungs, on
the liver or the intestines – appendicitis was considered to be an
‘abscess.’ Many times these were fatal. Modern antibiotics routinely
heads off internal infections before they get this bad, but there was a
time when traditional doctors had to rely on more primitive means.
During one of my classes I noticed a student so tired that walking
thirty feet, from the picnic table to the garden, was a great effort. I
asked what was going on and she said she had a boil on her ankle. It
had been bothering her off and on for more than two years, ever since
she had a broken ankle. At the time of the break the doctors put a
few pins in. One of them worked out and where it came out a boil
formed that wouldn’t go away. The doctors said there was no
connection with the broken bone or the pin (are these people for
real?) and gave her antibiotics. These proved to be useless and now
she just had to accept the debility.
! This was an excellent educational opportunity and the direction
of the class immediately shifted. We started to collect the ingredients
for a healing poultice. Pliny, the ancient Roman authority on
agriculture and natural history, recommended burdock leaf,
cinquefoil leaf, and plantain leaf as a salve for boils. These plants are
pretty easy to find in most places between Rome and Minnetrista. I
had often used plantain for boils, infected wounds and abscesses.
Clearly, this was a case where infected material had to be pulled out
of a wound where it was deeply entrenched. Plantain is a drawing
agent, so this seemed like a sure place to begin a formula. I knew the
reputation of burdock in treating boils, so this seemed agreeable. It is
something of an antiseptic for putridity and this wound clearly was
long-infected with putrid material. I hadn’t heard of cinquefoil being
used in modern times as a boil remedy, so I rounded out the formula
with elder leaf, which is used for boils. Three leaves seemed like a
good balance. We chopped them up, attached some with a cloth
bandage over the boil and went back to study. I sent our friend home
with some more of the herbs to store in the refrigerator, chop and
apply daily. In two weeks she was permanently healed. She was
much more energetic, both on and off her feet.
! We should always be prepared to work out a remedy for
injuries and acute problems as they arise. It is a great blessing to
know how to stop bleeding or treat a bad burn when one is out in the
country by oneself. In order to be effective, we cannot just apply
remedies to names, but must understand the process going on in the
injury and which remedy acts on that kind of process. For instance,
plantain is best known as a drawing agent which will pull pus and
infection outwards from boils while calendula will help drain them
away internally. Do we want the pus to come out or cleanse through
the interior? In this case, it seemed appropriate to draw out, open up,
and cleanse, while also adding remedies that were antiseptic
(burdock) and improved blood circulation (elder). Many other
variables could enter the picture. For instance, in this case I also
considered goldenrod, which is good for old, pus-producing
(purulent) wounds and tired feet. It is a cousin of burdock so it
seemed redundant to add with that medicine. Plantain by itself did
not seem appropriate because it is not stimulating and an old wound
need stimulation to bring in blood. For that, elder would be
appropriate. All these factors sifted through my mind quickly. It
would be difficult to say whether that was a bit of divine guidance or
just a picture forming in my brain due to rational thoughts about
what was needed for this particular injury. That is often how
herbalism works.
!
! Plantain (Plantago spp.) One area where we commonly
see abscesses and which can be treated with far greater success
holistically than surgically, is another the roots of teeth.
Abscessed teeth are very common and cause a great deal of
suffering and expense, yet they can easily be prevented or
cured with plantain.
Broken Bones
! A bone can be crushed, fractured, broken clean through or
shattered. The first step in healing a broken bone is putting it back in
place. People go to doctors to have this done, but even here the right
herb can assist the job.
! In order to be reset appropriately the muscles surrounding it
need to be relaxed so that the bone will slide back into place easily.
Not only tension in the muscles but a lack of lubrication (explained in
the chapter on the muscular and skeletal system) will prevent the
muscles and bones from sliding back into place.
Nerve Injuries
! When the nerves are injured we feel intense pain or numbness
because they have been so damaged that they can no longer function.
It should always be remembered that when there is numbness it does
not mean the nerves are dead. Rather, when nerves are damaged
they may stop working but sometimes they will still keep themselves
alive, even if they are no longer functioning. That is why there are
strange and unpredictable recoveries to spinal and head injuries.