How To Make Lavender Lemonade To Get Rid Of Headaches & Anxiety



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Headaches affect all people once in a while, and anxiety is, unfortunately, the third most common mental health issue around the world.

Doctors usually prescribe various medications to treat headaches and anxiety, but they often cause adverse effects. On the other hand, there are natural ways to combat them.

The lavender lemonade is one of the most delicious ways to do so.

Lavender is a powerful relaxing herb with a soothing aroma, and its flowers and oil offer numerous health benefits. The pure lavender essential oil is gentle but has potent healing qualities.

Its chemically complex structure contains more than 150 active constituents, which is responsible for its multiple medicinal properties. Apparently, this oil has powerful antiseptic, anti-inflammatory, antibacterial, antifungal, sedative, antidepressant, antimicrobial, antispasmodic, analgesic, detoxifying, and hypotensive properties.

To review them, these are the powerful qualities of lavender essential oil:

Antispasmodic
Hypotensive
Antibacterial
Cleansing
Antimicrobial
Antiseptic
Sedative properties
Anti-fungal
Anti-inflammatory
Anti-fungal
Analgesic
Antidepressant

According to a study conducted in Florida, this oil reduced anxiety and lowered pulse rates in nursing students who had to take stressful tests during the study. Moreover, in hospital settings, lavender aromatherapy reduced pre-surgery distress and proved to be even more relaxing than massage or merely resting.

This oil was also found to reduce depression, improve insomnia, treat sinus congestion, ease labor pains, soothes headaches, eases hangovers, and relieves pain.

“Much prior research on lavender has focused on the administration of lavender via an olfactory route. The anxiolytic activity of lavender olfaction has been demonstrated in several small and medium-sized clinical trials.

(2-9) The efficacy of aromatherapy of lavender is thought to be due to the psychological effects of the fragrance combined with physiological effects of volatile oils in the limbic system.”

This explains the traditional use of lavender oil. Additionally, researchers found that lavender oil olfaction decreases anxiety, as measured by the Hamilton Rating scale, and might improve mood.

Clinical Trials on Lavender Aromatherapy

The following examples are extracted from findings of clinical trials that analyzed the effects of lavender aromatherapy:

o “Dunn and colleagues demonstrated anxiolytic activity of lavender oil aromatherapy in patients in intensive care units. Subjects received at least 1 session of aromatherapy with 1% lavender essential oil. Significant anxiolytic effects were noted in the 1st treatment, though 2nd and 3rd treatments did not appear to be as effective.

o Alaoui-Ismaili and colleagues found that the aroma of lavender is considered by subjects to be very pleasant and is correlated with changes in the autonomic nervous system.

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