A Complete Book On Herbal Remedies. A Directory
Canine liver disease is a problem. Help is at hand if you need an alternative remedy for canine liver disease. I will talk about the benefits of agrimony for the treatment of this disease, but if you need a more holistic approach to canine liver disease, try elsewhere. I will concentrate on the use of agrimony and liver disease, and all essential viewing for alternative cures for canine liver disease.
Agrimony has divers long leaves, some greater, some smaller, set upon a stalk, all of them dented about the edges, green above, and grayish underneath, and a little hairy all over. Among these there usually rises just one, round, hairy brown stalk, two or three feet high, with smaller leaves set here and there upon it and at the top of which grow many yellow flowers, one above another, in long spikes, after which come rough heads of seeds hanging downwards, which will cleave to and stick upon garments, or anything that rubs against them. The root is black, long, and rather woody, abiding many years, and shooting afresh every spring. The root, though small, has a pleasant smell.
It grows on banks, near the sides of hedges or rails. It flowers in June and August in the northern hemisphere, the seed being ripe shortly thereafter.
Agrimony, in its use for canine liver disease, is moderately hot and moist, according to the nature of Jupiter. It is under Jupiter and the sign of Cancer, and strengthens those parts under that planet or sign so check the sign of your dog for effective canine liver disease treatment. It removes diseases in them by sympathy; and those under Saturn, Mars, and Mercury, by antipathy, if they happen in any part of the body governed by Jupiter, or under the sign of Cancer, Sagittarius, or Pisces; and therefore must needs be good for gout, either used outwardly in an oil or ointment, or inwardly in an electuary or syrup, or concentrated juice.
It has, moreover, been recommended in dropsies and jaundice. Check this out for your dog's particular condition. Externally it has indeed its use: I have seen very bad sore legs cured by bathing and fomenting them with a decoction of this plant.
It is of a cleansing and cutting faculty, without any manifest heat, moderately drying and binding. It opens and cleanses the liver, helps jaundice, and is very beneficial to the bowels, healing all inward wounds, bruises, hurts, and other distempers. The decoction of the herb, made with wine, and drunk, is good against the biting and stinging of snakes, and helps them that have fouled, bloody or troubled water, and causes them to to make water clear and speedily. It also helps colic, cleanses the chest, and relieves coughing. A draught of the decoction, taken warm before a fit, first relieves, and in time removes, the tertian or quartan ague. Outwardly applied, being stamped with old swine's grease, it helps old sores, cancers and inveterate ulcers. It draws out thorns, splinters of wood, nails and the like from the flesh. It helps to strengthen members which are out of joint and being bruised and applied, or the juice dropped in, it helps foul and imposthumed ears.
Agrimony has been successfully used in the treatment of canine liver disease for well over 300 years and has increased in popularity since around 2003.
My dog liver disease blog:
http://alternativehealthguideadvice.blogspot.com/2008/02/alternative-remedy-for-canine-liver.htmlA Complete Book On Herbal Remedies. A Directory
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