According to Sheila Humphrey's "The Nursing Mother's Herbal," arnica
montana, can be readily taken internally as a homeopathic remedy (p. 182).
Her plant appendix lists it as a toxic plant if taken internally (p. 275),
but there, she is discussing ingestion of infusion oil, or plant parts --
not the teeny tiny amounts in a homeopathic pill.
Arnica is one of my all-time favorites, and the surgeon recommending its
homeopathic use before and after a procedure gets a real thumbs up in my
book. I gave it to my 13 y.o. daughter who got four teeth pulled -- no
swelling or bruising, although she did have pain that first day that
required acetaminophen. A friend used it before her own major oral surgery
-- at her two-day post-op check, the dentist marvelled at a mouth that
looked like it had been on the mend for seven days, not two.
I used to carry a tube of arnica gel in my diaper bag -- it is homeopathic
in strength, but comes in a colorless, odorless gel. Perfect for all those
toddler bumps and bruises. It will prevent or reduce a black eye, too. My
15 y.o. son got a horrid concussion -- raised a literal goose egg on his
forehead within seconds. I made him rub arnica gel on it as we sped to the
emergency room. He had a lump for several days, but never did get a bruise.
(Frankly, I think he would have preferred the attention a black eye would
have brought.)
P.S. Do not apply arnica gel to broken or bleeding skin -- just those ouchy
bumps.
Liz Brooks, JD, IBCLC
Wyndmoor, PA, USA
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