The Benefits of Sumac

In order to control tissue that is prolapsed or collapsed and leaking fluids we need a reliable astringent.


Sumac (Staghorn Sumac) is the best medicine for stopping the outflow of fluids via the kidneys, skin, colon, lungs, and other channels of elimination. Sumac (R. coriara) has a long history of use in Greek and Arabic medicine. The name comes from the Greek rhu for “flux.” It is one of the great remedies for fluid loss from any outlet. Sumac is not native to Europe and was not much used in European medicine. It is widely used as a condiment in Middle Eastern cooking. It makes rice taste delicious, but it primarily used (with basil) to increase the digestion of fats in meat. North America has many species and here either the Indian people taught the European settlers its use, or they discovered it themselves. The various sumacs had important economic uses, especially in the dye industry, and country people were much familiar with them. Fragrant sumac (R. aromatica) and smooth sumac (R. glabra) were officinal in nineteenth century America. Staghorn sumac (R. typhina) was used in folk medicine. The indications seem to be relatively interchangeable Rhus glabra received a homeopathic proving, so I have rendered a separate account of it based on this history. All of these species are nontoxic, unlike their unfriendly cousins, poison ivy (R. toxicodendron) and California poison oak (R. venata).

Sumac (Rhus spp.) is the superlative remedy for stopping excessive flux from any channel of elimination – skin, kidneys, colon, lungs, or menses. It is indicated when there are debilitating fluid losses. It especially strengthens the functions of the kidney, helping it to retain water in both diabetes mellitus type II and diabetes insipidus. It was for this that sumac was introduced into nineteenth century American medicine. Subsequently it was used for dribbling and lack of retention of urine in the young and the old. And finally, as herbalist Phyllis Light informs us, it is indicated in ‘kidney anemia,’ when the kidneys do not signal the bone marrow to produce enough red blood cells.

Sumac not only helps the kidneys retain water in sugar diabetes, but helps the cells pick up blood sugar, reducing problems with eyesight and neuropathy and making blood sugar levels more manageable and less extreme. It evidently acts on vasopressin, the anti diuretic hormone secreted by the posterior pituitary, for it also has a profound influence on high blood pressure in some cases – evidently those which trace to insufficient action of vasopressin. I have seen some dramatic cases where it brought down high blood pressure.

Moving into the respiratory sphere, sumac is indicated in runny secretion resulting in sneezy head colds, irritable coughing from excessive salivation over stimulating the cough reflexes, watery discharges from the lungs. It is one of Phyllis Light’s first selections in influenza and it is indicated when mucus is specked with blood, according to Australian herbalist Glenda Croft. The cough reflex needs a little bit of fluid to keep it happy; both lack and excess of fluids cause an irritable cough that sounds similar in either instance. Sumac is indicated when excessive saliva stimulates a ‘drippy cough’ (cf. red clover, white hoar hound). This can cause choking/coughing episodes at night, when the saliva or nasal drip runs down, yet there is no ripened mucus.

In the gastrointestinal sphere sumac is indicated in excessive secretion, from the mouth (saliva) to the colon, resulting in diarrhea. The latter can be putrescent – this is particularly well documented in association with Rhus glabra, both in the nineteenth century usage and in the homeopathic proving. I had a case where high blood pressure would accompany expansion of a rectal fissure. There was a history of heart disease in the family. Rhus typhina controlled both symptoms remarkably.

Sumac also acts on the menses. It is indicated when the menstrual blood is accompanied by a thin, watery discharge, according to Phyllis Light. She also recommends it when other fluids are not being retained, hence in nocturnal emissions, clear vaginal discharge, excessive blood loss from the kidneys, uterus, bowels, stomach, or lungs, excessive expectoration. Yarrow, shepherd’s purse, and sumac are Glenda Croft’s basic threesome for the treatment of excessive menstrual discharge. She uses it in menopausal women with constant bleeding, the menses are profuse, thin (not clotted), constant, and dark, like the color of sumac berries. The burgundy red color of the berries is also a signature for blood-building (cf. rehmannia root, beet root, yellow dock seeds).

The skin is also affected, and a capital indication is ‘excessive sweating and peeing.’ In other cases the skin or lungs or digestive tract is dried out, yet the kidneys or some channel are losing fluids. It is indicated when there is a leak somewhere in the system that dries out the tissues elsewhere. The tongue is often dry in the center and wet on the edges, indicating that the core is drying out as fluids are being lost.

Glenda Croft uses Rhus coriara, because it is available in Middle Eastern markets as a culinary spice. She lived in the Middle East at one time and noted that the Bedouin chew the stalks as a strengthening tonic. Later, as an herbalist in Australia she took up its use. Both she and I noticed that sumac is indicated when there is blue and grey complexion around the veins.

Sumac is considered to be a deer or elk medicine in American Indian wood lore. The branches of these small trees look like deer or elk antlers. Deer like to browse at the edges of fields, where this plant grows – a colonist from the forest. That way they can eat the rich offerings of the field, but dash away into the forest. According to my friend Paul Red Elk, the Indian people noticed that the female deer would eat sumac then lick her vagina after giving birth, from which it was deduced that she was cleaning herself. Thus, sumac is used, not only to check the loss of fluids during menstruation, but to bring on a flow of fluids – many herbs have such dual actions. From an Iroquois woman I learned a related use: after menopause sumac is used to induce a watery discharge to cleanse the womb.

Sumac is sometimes indicated for nervousness, anxiety, fear, or even desperation. See the proving of Rhus glabra listed below. Herbalist Erica Evans, formerly of La Crosse, Wisconsin, had a case in which a woman had extreme anxiety and fear. Nothing really helped until it came out that she panicked after having profuse urination. Rhus typhina helped both the physical and the psychological symptoms become manageable. Glenda Croft made similar observations about the “very anxious” and “desperate” character of the emotions in some people needing sumac.

Sumac (Rhus spp.) is also beneficial in joint pain. Samuel Henry (1814, 109) gives the following case history. “For rheumatic complaints observe the following cure, discovered in a dream by a very pious Baptist elderly lady whom I visited, laboring under violent rheumatic complaints, which caused her to use crutches: take four ounces of the fresh milky roots of upland sumac cut small, boil them in three pints of rum over the coals for one hour, then strain and apply flannels wet with this decoction over the hips, knees, or back, every hour until well. This proved effectual, according to the old lady’s dream, in curing her in a dream days. I applied a strengthening plaster warm over the part affected.”

The dried inner bark contains a gummy emollient. “The inner bark powdered, or scraped, and stewed soft, forms an excellent emollient poultice. If there is matter [pus], it will bring it to a head; if not, it will allay the swelling” (Child, 1837, 124). A poultice of “white sumac” bark is “good for all kinds of swelling. Soothing, cooling” (Ralph Russell, 1911, 327).

 

Skin Care:

Organic certified Sumac Extract is a natural products for skin care, used for is anti oxidant and anti aging properties

in skin care products. As a natural component of organic skin care, anti wrinkle, natural anti aging, miracle lift.

Also sometime found as a fragrance material in organic and natural skin care.

Taste: (bark) astringent, gummy

 

(berries) sour • cooling • astringent

Tissue State: (bark) relaxation
(berries) relaxation, excitation

 

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