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Herbal Remedy For Healing Bone Fractures: Comfrey

Built by Evelyn Lim on Sunday, July 15th, 2007

For centuries, comfrey has been used for help in healing fractures. Comfrey is also known as knit bone, which shows how often the plant was considered in treating broken bones. Modern research has found that the comfrey plant offers a strong healing prosperities. Comfrey has the substance allantoin in it, which has been found to encourage growth in bones, cartilage, and muscles.

To use comfrey, you most commonly crush the herb and then apply it to the injured area topically. The herbalists believe that the allantoin is absorbed through the skin to help encourage the healing of bones, cartilage, and muscle. During the Middle Ages, it was very common to take a bath in comfrey. These baths were used often with women before marriage to help repair the hymen and then restore their virginity.



Comfrey is known for being a cool, slightly sweet, and moist herb by most herbalists. It contains many different chemicals, including vitamin B-12, insulin, tannins, proteins, mucilage, allantoin, pyrrolizidine, tannins, and steroidal saponins. In herbal medicine, the aerial parts and the root parts of the comfrey plant are most commonly used, but the other parts are used as well. The

leaves are rich sources of allantoin and they are used mostly for external uses. Ointments and infused oils are often used that contain comfrey to treat and relieve the symptoms of sprained joints, arthritis pain, and other physical injuries.

During the early summer, the flowering parts of the flower should be harvested. The comfrey plant’s roots are often used in a great deal of herbal preparations. The root has many of the same properties as the flowers, but they are more nourishing and cool in how they act. Varicose ulcers are one ailment that is commonly treated by the comfrey plant root. Harvesting the root of the comfrey plant should be done in the spring and in the fall when the allantoin levels are higher.

Preparing comfrey can be done in many different ways. More traditional herbalists apply a pureed fresh comfrey leave poultice to minor fractures. These fractures are normally the same type that would need a cast, including hairline fractures, broken toes, or broken ribs. Creams can be made that include comfrey as well. This makes the comfrey easier to apply to your

injuries and your body. Arthritis and other muscle pains are easy to treat using a comfrey-based cream. An infused oil can be made from comfrey plant as well that can be used to treat arthritic pain and joints, bruises, sprains, and other traumatic injuries.

Gain access to free tips on herbal home remedies here.

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