In France and Japan, medical aromatherapy is an established field that treats medical conditions such as diabetes and seizure disorders. In the United States, aromatherapy is much less evolved and is mainly associated with the spa and beauty industries.
An increasing amount of research is delving into the questions of whether aromatherapy can improve sleep, ease pain and anxiety, reduce the respiratory congestion of colds and flu, relieve constipation, reduce post-operative nausea and even help grow hair. In most cases, further investigation will be needed before doctors here are convinced that aromatherapy works, but there is already good evidence that certain scents can help induce relaxation and improve sleep.
For example, a 1994 study at New York's Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center found that the vanilla-like aroma of heliotropin significantly reduced anxiety in patients undergoing MRI scans. In England in 2002, researchers found that applying lemon balm oil to the faces and arms of patients with severe dementia reduced their agitation by 35 percent. The study was published in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. At Wesleyan University in Connecticut, researchers found that the scent of lavender increased deep, restful sleep for both men and women; a Korean study published this year (2006) came to the same conclusion (but included only women). Another intriguing study, in Scotland, showed that a combination of cedarwood, lavender, rosemary, and thyme oils promoted hair growth among patients with alopecia areata, an autoimmune disorder that causes hair to fall out. The study was published in the November, 1998, issue of the Archives of Dermatology.
We may get a better fix on aromatherapy benefits after completion of a study sponsored by the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine examining the effect of specific odors on immune, endocrine and autonomic system responses. Janice Kiecolt-Glaser, Ph.D., a widely-respected researcher at the Ohio State University Institute for Biobehavioral Medicine Research, is testing three odors, one selected for its reported sedating or relaxing effects, one for its activating or stimulant effects and one neutral control odor. This study is enrolling 60 volunteers and is expected to end in August of 2007.
If aromatherapy makes you feel better, by all means indulge. I would only caution against buying into dubious claims that it can treat everything from acne to yeast infections. And do make sure that your aromatherapist is qualified; in the United States, anyone can get a piece of paper attesting to "certification."
Aromatherapy is generally safe but improperly used oils can cause burns, allergic reactions, headaches and nausea, and some are toxic if ingested. Check with local certified massage therapists (their certification does mean something) who may be able to recommend a good aromatherapist.
Some of the materials employed include:
- Essential oils: Fragrant oils extracted from plants chiefly through steam distillation (e.g. eucalyptus oil) or expression (grapefruit oil). However, the term is also occasionally used to describe fragrant oils extracted from plant material by any solvent extraction.
- Absolutes: Fragrant oils extracted primarily from flowers or delicate plant tissues through solvent or supercritical fluid extraction (e.g. rose absolute). The term is also used to describe oils extracted from fragrant butters, concretes, and enfleurage pommades using ethanol.
- Phytoncides: Various volatile organic compounds from plants that kill microbes. Many terpene-based fragrant oils and sulfuric compounds from plants in the genus "Allium" are phytoncides, though the latter are likely less commonly used in aromatherapy due to their disagreeable odors.
- Herbal distillates or hydrosols: The aqueous by-products of the distillation process (e.g. rosewater). There are many herbs that make herbal distillates and they have culinary uses, medicinal uses and skin care uses. Common herbal distillates are rose, lemon balm and chamomile.
- Infusions: Aqueous extracts of various plant material (e.g. infusion of chamomile)
- Carrier oils: Typically (wikipedia)
Author : Andrew Weil, M.D.
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