POLYPHARMACY - THE PHILOSOPHY BEHIND THE BASIS OF HERBAL MEDICINE
by Mary Boughton of Dorwest Herbs
Member of the British Herbal Medicine Association's Veterinary Committee
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.
The British Herbal Pharmacopeia contains monographs of medicinal herbs in modern
use in medicines today and we can see that many of these have similar pharmacological
effects, indications and uses, so why is it necessary to include several in one
product ? Polypharmacy again is the answer - although several plants will have
similar therapeutic effects the chemical compounds in each one will be different
and it is this diversity that is the very strength of herbal medicine. In simple
terms, one compound has an effect and another, either within the same or a different
plant, will have a supporting effect which might for example balance any side
effects or increase absorbtion into the system.
There is of course a correlation between polypharmacy and food. Every food that
is consumed consists of many and complex chemical compounds and no-on would put
forward a sound argument in support of foods being taken as single chemical entities.
Complex foods are nutritious, health giving and totally beneficial. Nutritionists
advocate a varied balanced diet for good health both in animals and people. A
comparable situation exists with herbal medicine and it is this very use of combination
products which are not at variance with nature that explains why herbal medicines
maintain all round health and are effective safe treatment for many problems.
This comparison with food is very relevant as the other important factor in herbal
medicines is that like foods they are based on organic plant materials, which
are more readily assimilated into the system than inorganic compounds. It is for
this reason that although the individual quantities of elements, such as minerals,
in an organically based product may be very small, they are more readily absorbed
and able to be used by the body than a much larger quantity of the same mineral
that has been derived inorganically. An example of this is calcium - nearly all
of the calcium obtained from milk or cheese is able to be used by the body whereas
only a fraction of an inorganic calcium, such as the commonly available calcium
carbonate
is absorbed with the remainder being excreted. Calcium is also only absorbed efficiently
when Vitamin D is present which is the reason for most supplements having this
added to the product. Thus it is irrelevant to make a direct correlation between
the quantities of any particular ingredient in an inorganic form and the quantity
occuring naturally from an organic base. It is the amount that is able to be used
that is important.
Polypharmacy is therefore
the basis of herbal medicine philosophy and explains why this form of medicine
depends on complex chemical compounds that naturally occur and perhaps why it
is this very combination that makes it a safe form of treatment for animals and
people alike.