Nettle Root
Nettle Root and Women's Hormonal Health
Most people that have spent time in the forests and woods are familiar with the bite of Stinging Nettle, and many women are already familiar with the therapeutic uses and health benefits of the above-ground parts of the leaf (from the common Stinging Nettle, Urtica dioica).
In Western herbalism, the use of Nettle, whether you call it Nettle, Stinging Nettle, or just a nuisance while you’re out hiking, dates back over 2000 years, and has a long use as a top spring tonic (alongside dandelion leaf and root). Stinging Nettle is an important—and powerful—herb that has proven its position in the Western herbal pharmacopeia.
Nettle leaves are known to be deeply nutritive as a food (a good source of vitamin A and calcium) and as a tea, able to improve skin, hair, and nail health. Once dried or cooked (even lightly steamed) Nettle loses its ability to sting as the trichomes (the tiny hair responsible for its sting) become deactivated.
In Chinese herbalism, Nettle Seed contains tonifying qualities, nurturing Yang energy and strengthening Yuan Qi—which is commonly known as Jing and as Kidney Yang or Kidney Yin.
While Nettle Leaf is relatively commonplace within herbalism here in the US, few know of the health benefits of Stinging Nettle Root, which we harvest in fall before the ground freezes and transitions to a blustery winter. Nettle Root—just as the leaf—is a gift to women’s hormonal health.
Women and the Health Benefits of Nettle Root
Susan Weed, the longtime herbalist and author, Susan Weed, writes of Nettle Root, "Use Nettle Root as a hair and scalp tonic, a urinary strengthener and stimulant, an immune system/lymphatic strengthener and a bit of first aid."
For women, the health benefits of Nettle Root and its actions on the body are similar to those of men: Optimizing and regulating the endocrine (hormone) system.
Through its unique actions on Sex Hormone Binding Globulin (SHBG), Nettle Root has the unique ability to seemingly add sex hormones where they are needed and delete them where they are not. Additionally, through Nettle Root’s action on the enzyme aromatase, it goes one step forward: Not only can Nettle Root add and delete, it can prevent the conversion (the aromatization) of estradiol, an estrogen metabolite which can cause damage.
In women, just as in men, the enzyme aromatase converts (a processed called aromatization) testosterone to estradiol (e2). While certain levels of estradiol are healthy in the body, high levels of the hormone are rampant and are implicated in many conditions, syndromes, and diseases—including some forms of breast cancer.
The active compound ß-Sitosterol (Beta-Sitosterol) in Nettle Root can decrease the activity of aromatase, thereby decreasing loss of testosterone to estradiol and subsequently decreasing levels of estradiol. For this specific reason, Nettle Root is included in the prestigious German Pharmacopoeia (DAB).
Nettle Root, Aromatase, and Estradiol
As mentioned above, for women and for men, Nettle Root is able to minimize harmful estrogen metabolites in the body. Sex hormones undergo a process called aromatization where the end products are implicated as primary causative factors in several types of cancer, including hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer and uterine cancer. Decreasing levels of these estrogen metabolites have shown beneficial both in assisting prevention of cancer as well as an adjunct therapy.
Conventional medicine has identified the importance of blocking the process of aromatization by blocking the enzyme aromatase—the same enzyme and the same process that Nettle Root blocks. Three of the most common breast cancer drugs all work to lower estradiol (e2) levels by blocking aromatase (Arimidex (anastrozole), Aromasin (exemestane), and Femara (letrozole). The method of action (MoA) of this class of medication works similarly to Nettle Root, as the ß-Sitosterol present in Nettle Root is blocking the aromatization process.
Nettle Root and Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome
In the clinic, and for the audience at large, and increasing body of herbalists are integrating and using Nettle Root in the treatment and management of polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), commonly referred to as polycystic ovarian disorder (PCOD).
Linda Crockett, author of Healing Our Hormones, Healing Our Lives, includes Nettle Root in her formulas for treating PCOS, and many Naturopathic doctors and herbalists are currently working with Nettle Root in treating PCOS.
Polycystic ovarian syndrome is one of the most common endocrine disorders plaguing women, and it seems that more and more women are suffering from PCOS. The effects of PCOS are severe, and affect many areas of a woman's life and do so in a multitude of ways. Polycystic ovarian syndrome causes a lack of ovulation, known as anovulation (the prefix of a or an = without). Anovulation results in irregular and absent menstruation (amenorrhea). PCOS also causes ovulation-related infertility, and polycystic ovaries. PCOS leads to an excess of androgenic hormones (the male sex hormones), which often results in acne and excessive hairiness (hirsutism). PCOS also contributes to insulin resistance leading to obesity, type 2 diabetes, and high cholesterol.
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