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Vervain

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Specifically for Colic

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Why it works for Colic:

Traditional actions that could matter for colic

Vervain is a bitter, “nervine” herb with iridoid glycosides (e.g., verbenalin, hastatoside) and phenylpropanoid glycosides (e.g., verbascoside). These may have smooth-muscle and calming effects that could, in theory, reduce gas/cramping. Thieme

Preclinical GI effects (not in babies):

Extracts of V. officinalis showed antidiarrheal and antispasmodic activity in animal models—mechanisms that are relevant to gut spasm/crying, but these are not infant trials. SAGE Journals

Context from broader colic research:

Across infant-colic studies, benefits tend to show up for fennel, chamomile, and lemon balm—sometimes in combinations that also contained vervain—so if there’s an effect, it’s more clearly attributable to those other herbs. MDPI

How to use for Colic:

Randomized controlled trial (RCT) herbal tea

Ingredients: German chamomile, vervain, licorice, fennel, and lemon balm.

Dose: Up to 150 mL per colic episode, ≤3×/day for 7 days (given to 2–8-week-old infants). In this study, 57% of tea-treated infants had resolution vs 26% with placebo. Because multiple herbs were used, we cannot attribute benefit to vervain specifically. Journal of Pediatrics

What that means in practice

If you were considering a tea like this, it should be pediatrician-supervised. Giving significant volumes of tea to young infants can displace feeds and isn’t routinely recommended outside a clinician’s advice. AAFP’s review notes the same tea reduced crying when used ≤3×/day (150 mL/dose), again as a mixture. American Academy of Family Physicians

Scientific Evidence for Colic:

Weizman et al., J Pediatr 1993 (double-blind RCT) – Herbal tea (chamomile, vervain, licorice, fennel, balm mint) vs placebo in 68 colicky infants; 57% resolution with tea vs 26% placebo after 7 days. (Attribution to a single herb is not possible.) Journal of Pediatrics

Systematic and narrative overviews

Reviews and later analyses repeatedly cite the 1993 trial as combination-herb evidence, not vervain-alone evidence. BMJ

Related herbal evidence (without vervain):

RCTs/meta-analyses for fennel/chamomile/lemon balm combinations show reduced crying, strengthening the idea that if the tea helped, it was likely these components. Cochrane

Mechanistic/preclinical for V. officinalis

Antispasmodic/antisecretory animal data; and phytochemistry confirming iridoids like verbenalin/hastatoside (biologically active but not clinical colic trials). SAGE Journals

Specific Warnings for Colic:
  • Pregnancy: Avoid. Multiple references warn of uterine-stimulating activity; vervain has even been investigated historically for pregnancy termination—so it’s contraindicated in pregnancy. Thieme
  • Breastfeeding: Data are limited; Drugs.com notes vervain is a purported galactagogue with no sound clinical evidence for that use and limited safety data. Discuss with a clinician before use. Drugs.com
  • Infants: No established dosing for vervain alone; caution with tea volumes (risk of feed displacement). Prefer clinician-directed strategies with stronger evidence (e.g., certain probiotics for breast-fed babies), and rule out red flags. BMJ Open
  • General adverse effects/interactions: Authoritative consumer monographs list possible GI upset/allergic reactions and advise caution with potential drug interactions (liver-metabolized meds, sedatives); evidence here is low-quality but warrants prudence. WebMD

General Information (All Ailments)

Note: You are viewing ailment-specific information above. This section shows the general remedy information for all conditions.

What It Is

Vervain is a perennial herb native to Europe and Asia, traditionally used in Western herbalism. The aerial parts (leaf and flowering tops) are harvested to make teas, tinctures, capsules, and extracts. It is not the same as blue vervain (Verbena hastata), though uses overlap. In herbal traditions, vervain has been positioned as a nervine (acts on the nervous system), bitter (stimulates digestion), mild antispasmodic, and anti-inflammatory adjunct.

How It Works

Its action is multifactorial and relatively mild rather than pharmacologically strong:

Nervine effects — Constituents such as iridoid glycosides (e.g., verbenalin) are thought to modulate CNS activity and help normalize over-arousal. This is why it is used for tension-linked headaches, anxious agitation, and sleep with “wired-but-tired” physiology.

Bitter/digestive stimulation — Its very bitter flavor increases gastric secretion and vagal tone, enhancing appetite regulation, stomach acid output, and peristalsis, which can indirectly improve nutrient absorption and post-prandial discomfort.

Anti-spasmodic and anti-inflammatory effects — Mild smooth-muscle relaxation and downregulation of inflammatory mediators may explain traditional use in tension headaches, menstrual cramping, and irritable gut states.

Adaptation of stress systems — Historically used for “nerve weakness” or burnout states, suggesting an effect on HPA axis tone, although this is supported more by tradition than high-quality clinical data.

Why It’s Important

Vervain occupies an ecological niche among herbs that are not sedatives but de-escalators — useful when the nervous system is on high idling. For many people, modern burden is not deficiency of energy but over-activation; vervain is important precisely because it softens excessive tone without blunt sedation. It is also useful when symptoms express along the gut-brain axis, where emotional tension shows up as digestive spasm or poor appetite. Because it works as a bitter, it fits into integrative care that seeks to correct upstream physiology rather than mask downstream symptoms.

Considerations

Quality and species — Ensure botanical identity (Verbena officinalis) and a reputable supplier; adulteration and mis-labeling are not rare in commodity herbs.

Not a fast-acting symptomatic drug — Benefits are often subtle and cumulative; it is best suited for patterns rather than acute emergencies.

Palatability — It is distinctly bitter; capsules or tincture diluted in warm water may improve compliance.

Contra-cautions — Avoid or use with guidance in pregnancy (historical emmenagogue reputation), gallbladder obstruction (bitters stimulate bile), severe GERD (bitters may aggravate), and autoimmunity or polypharmacy until evaluated by a clinician.

Drug interactions — Possible additive effects with sedatives, antihypertensives, or drugs affected by changes in gastric pH/absorption. Clinical evidence is sparse but caution is warranted.

Evidence base — The majority of claims are supported by tradition, animal/in-vitro work, and extrapolated mechanisms rather than large controlled human trials; that does not imply inefficacy, only that certainty is limited.

Helps with these conditions

Vervain is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

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Colic

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Traditional actions that could matter for colicVervain is a bitter, “nervine” herb with iridoid glycosides (e.g., verbenalin, hastatoside) and phenylp...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 4 studies cited

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