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About Ginseng (Siberian)
(please
read this important notice concerning supplement medical claims)
Adaptogenic
Although Siberian ginseng is not a true ginseng species, like ginseng it increases tolerance to various stressors (e.g. mental, physical, environmental). This herb helps normalise the way in which the body responds to stress triggers and acts to regulate the manufacture and secretion of adrenal hormones. It also strengthens the adrenal glands themselves, which is especially important to those suffering from chronic stress.
Central Nervous System strengthening effect
Its adaptogenic activity provides non-specific support for the central nervous system, which may help restore proper neurological function after long term stress.
Immune Tonic
Studies show that Siberian ginseng enhances white blood cell activity, thus providing support to a compromised immune system. In addition, as stress suppresses immune function, the adaptogenic properties of this herb would even further promote resistance to infection.
About
Solgar
Quality is a keyword with
Solgar. All their suppliers of nutrition products must provide a certificate of analysis with every delivery and
Solgar ensure that their own team of chemists and microbiologists checks each batch of raw materials prior to manufacture
of health and nutrition products to ensure potency, purity and authenticity.
Solgar employ a rigorous system of quality control to ensure that their Gold Standard for purity and potency is met at every stage. Solgar's VM75 is the no.1 multivitamin and mineral formula in America.
Herbs
For thousands of years, herbs have been used to help maintain many aspects of
health and wellness. Today, research and technology are bringing herbalism into
the modern age – with improved extraction, standardization, and farming methods.
Clinical studies are beginning to validate herbal therapies, so even some in the
medical community are starting to accept them.
Many of today’s
medicines were originally derived from botanicals. Aspirin once came from the
white willow tree, quinine from the bark of the cinchona tree, and digitalis
from foxglove. Herbs are still the basis for Chinese medicine and are important
constituents of many European natural remedies. As Hippocrates said, “Let they
food by thy medicine, thy medicine be thy food”.
Some of the herbs
available on this site are wild-crafted – grown in the wild – while others are
meticulously cultivated on herb farms.
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