Ginger Attacks Nausea At Its Root
This underground stem, or rhizome, packs a real medicinal
wallop.
Ginger is a rhizome, an underground stem that looks like a
root. Many of you gardeners are familiar with rhizomes, especially if you are
fond of Irises. The ginger plant produces a gorgeous and fragrant flower, but
aside from its uses in Asian and other ethnic cooking, it has a real medicinal
wallop. As spicy and pungent as ginger is, it can be taken with ease thanks to
the vegetarian gelatin capsule. It's also a soothing and beneficial tea to
relieve nausea, gas, and cramping. It works wonders as a preventative for
motion sickness, and in 1982, The Lancet, the respected medical journal of
Great Britain, touted its power to quell this uncomfortable feeling—quite an
achievement for a natural remedy!
Got a nasty stomach flu? Try ginger as a tea or chew on a
small piece to allieviate vomiting and diarrhea. Chinese medicine has relied on
ginger to stop indigestion and gas for many centuries and it has also been used
to help with headaches, high cholesterol, rheumatoid arthritis, and stomach
ulcers. That's a lot of relief in one little rhizome. You can get goodly
amounts of ginger chopped up in your food or by drinking ginger ale, as long as
it's made with real ginger and not an artificial flavoring. Make tea from a bit
of grated ginger or try the powdered form. You should be able to taste it in
your mouth to know you've had enough to help you. Going boating or on a cruise?
Take along some Ginger capsules for quick relief.
Thirty-six nausea prone college students in Salt Lake City,
Utah were given powdered ginger or Dramamine before they were spun around in a
tilting, rotating chair (makes me dizzy to write it), and "surprise!"
the ginger group had less nausea and vertigo than the students who received the
Dramamine—and they didn't get drowsy.
Since nausea and vertigo originate in the brain as well as
the digestive tract, it appears that ginger works in both areas to
conquer those heaves. For pregnant women experiencing morning sickness (and I
know how awful that can be) a few caps upon arising can be taken with safety.
But please, expectant Moms, never take anything without asking your doctor's
advice first. And now for that Gingerbread!
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