• Old wives' tales may be right

News & views

Old wives' tales may be right

Scientists have suggested there may be some wisdom in old wives' tales, as some remedies do work.

A collaboration between London's Kingston University and British beauty brand Neal's Yard Remedies found that some old treatments for illnesses and serious medical problems offer real potential health benefits.

The researchers found a number of naturally occurring substances have the ability to block the progression of inflammation, creating the potential for a range of new treatments.

White tea, witch hazel and roses were found to have particularly significant properties.

"For thousands of years people used natural remedies to try - and sometimes succeed - in curing their ailments," said Professor Declan Naughton, from the University's School of Life Sciences.

"Inflammation is a secret killer - helping arrest its development, or being able to stop it happening at all, would clearly be of benefit."

He added that inflammation is a key player in the initiation and development of cancer, diabetes and arthritis.

Posted by Fiona Griffiths


Digital Edition

Lab Asia 31.6 Dec 2024

December 2024

Chromatography Articles - Sustainable chromatography: Embracing software for greener methods Mass Spectrometry & Spectroscopy Articles - Solving industry challenges for phosphorus containi...

View all digital editions

Events

Smart Factory Expo 2025

Jan 22 2025 Tokyo, Japan

Instrumentation Live

Jan 22 2025 Birmingham, UK

SLAS 2025

Jan 25 2025 San Diego, CA, USA

Arab Health

Jan 27 2025 Dubai, UAE

Nano Tech 2025

Jan 29 2025 Tokyo, Japan

View all events