Having painful PMS symptoms sometimes can be unmanageably hard to deal with. In many cases we simply take pain relief medicines to reduce the pain but side effects we get from these medicines also can be very irritating. Fortunately last few years there is many natural supplements and PMS herbal remedies vastly available for us to help with our PMS pain. Some of these herbals been used centuries throughout the world. One of the well-known herbal is called white willow bark.
White Willow bark is nature’s all-natural pain reliever, the original source of aspirin. The history use of white willow bark medicinally goes far back, maybe far back 400 BC can you believe it. 400 years before the birth of Christ, ancient Greek physician Hippocrates let he’s patients to chew on the bark to reduce their fever and inflammation. The white willow bark contains active ingredient called salicin, which the body converts into salicylic acid. White Willow bark is the original source of aspirin. Probably you may hear about acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) that is chemically synthesized by drug companies. It reduces aches and soreness, has analgesic, anti-fever, and antiseptic properties.
As expert at creating and using herbal medicines Native Americans and Chinese herbalists are commonly used white willow bark for to treat menstrual cramps, back and neck pain, muscle aches and arthritis, headaches. It works by lowering the body’s levels of prostaglandins – hormone-like compounds that regulate many activities in the body. Therefore using the right PMS herbal remedies delivers the results you want and less painful period.
Sure we can go to the any supermarket and buy medicines that mask symptoms of PMS but all they going to do is just mask the symptoms. However, none of these drugs worked to treat the core nutritional deficiency and supply the key nutrients that we lost during our monthly period to boost our overall body’s strength, allowing it to be ready and prepared for the next cycle. Natural PMS Remedies works well with your Immune system.
Source by Uka Tumur