Health
Potential health benefits of tarragon, including improved digestion, according to expert
Tarragon is a herb generally used for culinary purposes but can also be used in herbal remedies.
There are several potential health benefits that could come from incorporating tarragon into your diet, such as aiding digestion and balancing the immune system, Jenna Volpe, a Texas-based registered dietitian and herbalist, told Fox News Digital in a phone call.
The herb makes for an easy addition to your diet with a large array of dishes it could be incorporated into, including a chicken or fish meal. It can also be used as an ingredient in dressing and can even be incorporated into an herbal tea.
JASMINE HERBS’ SURPRISING BENEFITS WHEN ADDED TO HEALTH ROUTINES IN THE FORM OF OIL, IN TEA AND MORE
Learn more about the potential health benefits of tarragon below.
- Could help stimulate digestion
- Can help with immune system balance
- Can be used against fungal infection
1. Could help stimulate digestion
Adding tarragon to your food can help to stimulate digestion in the body.
“Most of the benefits are anti-inflammatory,” Volpe said of tarragon.
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“I would say it stimulates digestion because it’s bitter, and it’s aromatic, and so it has a lot of those essential oils,” Volpe said.
“Anything bitter tends to stimulate digestive secretion.”
2. Can help with immune system balance
Tarragon can also stimulate immune balancing activity, which is called “immunomodulating activity,” according to Volpe.
In 2017, a study done on mice was published that tested tarragon’s potential connection to immune system balance.
In the study, mice were given tarragon extract for 21 consecutive days.
The conclusion was that tarragon could be used to adjust the immune system because of its ability to “inhibit pro-inflammatory cytokines and induce anti-inflammatory macrophages,” according to the study published in Avicenna Journal of Phytomedicine.
3. Can be used against fungal infection
There are millions of types of fungi, but only a few hundred of those cause sickness in humans, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The fungi range in severity for humans.
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There are more than 1 billion people on a worldwide scale who get fungal infections every year, according to the source.
Tarragon is one of many herbs that contains properties that could help fight against fungal infection.
“[It’s] antibacterial, antifungal, antiprotozoal, which is anti-worms,” Volpe told Fox News Digital.
Many Artemisia herbs share antiparasitic properties, Volpe said.
“A lot of the Artemisia types of herbs that come from the Artemisia species tend to be antiparasitic, which is really interesting,” said Volpe.
Health
'I'm a pharmacist, and I wouldn't take these 3 vitamin supplements'
There is a variety of guidance about which vitamins and supplements people should take for better health — especially on social media.
Amina Khan, a pharmacist in the U.K. and founder of The Pharmacist Beauty, addressed her nearly 300,000 followers on TikTok about the three supplements she’d never take.
“I think you’re going to be surprised at most of these,” she said in the video, which has nearly one million views.
DAILY MULTIVITAMINS MIGHT NOT HELP YOU LIVE LONGER, STUDY FINDS: ‘NO DIFFERENCES IN MORTALITY’
Read on to find out the three she pinpointed.
1. Gummy vitamins
While gummy vitamins can taste delicious, Khan considers them “basically just a sugar pill,” she said.
“You might as well go have a sweet,” she said. “They are packed with sugar and filler ingredients, and I know so many of you [are] bingeing these.”
Khan warned that gummy supplements can be “very easily over-consumed” and can lead to mineral toxicity.
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“Some of these gummies don’t even have enough nutrients in them to have an effect on you,” she added.
2. General multivitamins
A multivitamin is often recommended by general practitioners as a good way to get the daily recommended dose of essential nutrients.
But since multivitamins have a “bit of everything” in them, Khan noted that some of the doses of each vitamin are “so low they hardly have an effect on you.”
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Khan added that people most likely don’t need all the vitamins contained in a multivitamin.
3. Vitamins for hair, skin and nails
These types of vitamins have grown in popularity to aid with hair and nail growth, as well as clear skin.
Grouping all three into one pill is “not solution-focused,” according to Khan.
“The most important vitamins in these are often too low to even have an effect on you,” she noted.
Anyone who has questions about taking a vitamin or supplement should consult with a doctor for individualized recommendations.
Health
Dr. Mindy Pelz’s Holiday Intermittent Fasting Tips—Lose Weight on Break!
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Health
New Study Reveals Why It’s So Hard to Keep Weight Off After Losing It
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