Horseradish

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Brassicaceae

Horseradish

Armoracia rusticana
✓ Generally Safe Caution in Pregnancy
Native to: Southeastern Europe, Western Asia
Also known as: Common Horseradish, Red Horseradish, Horse Radish
Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

🌱 Parts Used

Root

💊 Therapeutic Uses

Sinusitis, respiratory infections (decongesting expectorant — Commission E approved), UTIs (urinary antiseptic), digestive stimulant. Allyl isothiocyanate potent antimicrobial released on grating/chewing.


Herbal Actions

Antimicrobial, diuretic, expectorant, circulatory stimulant, antifungal, antioxidant

🔬 Active Constituents

Glucosinolates (sinigrin — hydrolyzed to allyl isothiocyanate on damage), peroxidase enzymes, vitamin C, coumarins, flavonoids

⚗️ Preparation Methods

🏺 Tincture💊 Capsule☕ Herbal Tea

📐 Traditional Preparation Notes

Herbal Tea1 tsp freshly grated root steeped 10 min in 250ml honey water, 3x daily
Tincture2–4 ml (1:5, 45% ethanol), 3x daily
NotesFresh root most potent — allyl isothiocyanate volatile and lost in dried root. Sinus opening: sniff freshly grated root or eat 1 tsp. Combine with nasturtium (Imupret formula) for respiratory and urinary infections — clinically validated.

⚠️ Safety Information

Safety Rating ✓ Generally Safe
Pregnancy Caution in Pregnancy
Drug Interactions Possible — consult doctor

Contraindications: Avoid in kidney inflammation, peptic ulcers, hypothyroidism. Large doses in pregnancy — avoid. Caution with thyroid medications.

Side Effects: Strong mucous membrane irritation (intended decongestant). GI irritation at high doses. Hypothyroidism risk with long-term high use (glucosinolates). Skin irritation topically.

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