Polypharmacy - the Philosophy Behind The Basis Of Herbal Medicineby Mary Boughton Polypharmacy is the use of more than one ingredient in a medicine. Modern medicine does not in the main use polypharmacy as most drugs contain a single active ingredient. Herbalists will maintain that it is this single element philosophy which is responsible for many of the side effects and adverse reactions common in modern medicine. Polypharmacy by contrast is the very essence of herbal medicine philosophy where combinations of plants are used, each having different compounds as well as individual properties. It is this combination of complex compounds within each plant which complement and balance the effects of another. Herbal medicine throughout the world has, almost without exception, meant the combining of two or more herbs, with some formulations containing more than a dozen different plants. However, even single plant medicines are considered by herbalists to be polypharmacy. The basis for this is that a single plant may contain hundreds of different chemical compounds, no plant or other living thing could survive if it were composed of a single chemical entity. Modern medicine by contrast, is either produced by development of a synthetic chemical ingredient or by identifying and extracting a specific active compound from a plant and then producing it synthetically to obtain a 'pure' form of the entity which has the desired pharmacological effect. In herbal medicine it is accepted that, even if a specific compound is identified and its action understood, it is the effect of the other supporting or modifying compounds present in the whole plant which complement the therapeutic action and minimise side effects and adverse reactions in herbal medicines. Therefore an isolated chemical compound would never be considered herbal medicine. |