Lemon balm: Difference between revisions
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| intro = ''Melissa officinalis'' L. -- lemon balm, balm, melissa -- is a perennial herb of the mint family whose Greek name means bee, a record of the insects that congregate on its small white flowers and make from them a honey prized in antiquity. It has been called "the elixir of life" by Paracelsus and "sovereign for the brain" by John Evelyn; its unbroken reputation across two thousand years of Western and Islamic medicine is for lifting the heart, clearing the head, and settling the gut. The same compounds responsible for its sharp lemon scent -- the polyphenolic fraction concentrated in its leaves -- have turned out to be active against herpes simplex virus in controlled trials, giving it a specific antiviral credential unlike any other common nervine herb. | | intro = ''Melissa officinalis'' L. -- lemon balm, balm, melissa -- is a perennial herb of the mint family whose Greek name means bee, a record of the insects that congregate on its small white flowers and make from them a honey prized in antiquity. It has been called "the elixir of life" by Paracelsus and "sovereign for the brain" by John Evelyn; its unbroken reputation across two thousand years of Western and Islamic medicine is for lifting the heart, clearing the head, and settling the gut. The same compounds responsible for its sharp lemon scent -- the polyphenolic fraction concentrated in its leaves -- have turned out to be active against herpes simplex virus in controlled trials, giving it a specific antiviral credential unlike any other common nervine herb. | ||
| history = The genus name carries the oldest story. In Greek myth, Melissa was a bee-priestess of the mountain goddess Cybele; she fed the infant Zeus on honey when his father Kronos sought to devour him, and was afterward transformed into a bee. Theophrastus in the fourth century BCE noted that beekeepers rubbed hive entrances with melissa leaves to keep their colonies from straying -- a practice that survives in modern beekeeping -- and the plant's association with bees, honey, and the sweetness of life runs through every tradition that has known it.{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: Theophrastus. Enquiry into Plants. Standard English translation: Hort AF. Cambridge: Harvard University Press (Loeb Classical Library), 1916. Topic: Theophrastus on melissa and beekeeping. Also: Grieve M. A Modern Herbal. London: Jonathan Cape, 1931. No PMID; classical primary source. Verify chapter at publish. --> | | history = The genus name carries the oldest story. In Greek myth, Melissa was a bee-priestess of the mountain goddess Cybele; she fed the infant Zeus on honey when his father Kronos sought to devour him, and was afterward transformed into a bee. Theophrastus in the fourth century BCE noted that beekeepers rubbed hive entrances with melissa leaves to keep their colonies from straying -- a practice that survives in modern beekeeping -- and the plant's association with bees, honey, and the sweetness of life runs through every tradition that has known it.{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: Theophrastus. Enquiry into Plants. Standard English translation: Hort AF. Cambridge: Harvard University Press (Loeb Classical Library), 1916. Topic: Theophrastus on melissa and beekeeping. Also: Grieve M. A Modern Herbal. London: Jonathan Cape, 1931. No PMID; classical primary source. Verify chapter at publish. --> | ||
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John Evelyn, the English diarist and gardener, wrote in the late seventeenth century: "Balm is sovereign for the brain, strengthening the memory and powerfully chasing away melancholy."{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: Evelyn J. Acetaria: A Discourse of Sallets. London: B. Tooke, 1699. Topic: Evelyn on balm/melissa; quote attribution. No PMID; early modern primary source. Verify quote text and source publication at publish. --> The modern dimension was added not by herbalists but by laboratory pharmacologists. In 1994, the German physician and researcher Rainer Wölbling published the first rigorously controlled clinical trial of a standardized lemon balm cream -- subsequently commercialized as Lomaherpan -- applied to cold sores caused by herpes simplex virus.<ref name="wolbling1994">Wolbling RH, Leonhardt K. "Local therapy of herpes simplex with dried extract from ''Melissa officinalis''." Phytomedicine. 1994;1(1):25-31. PMID 23195812.</ref> The trial demonstrated that what herbalists had used empirically for mouth sores for centuries worked through a specific mechanism -- rosmarinic acid and other polyphenols blocking herpes virus attachment to host cells -- that remains among the most mechanistically coherent antiviral findings in phytomedicine. | John Evelyn, the English diarist and gardener, wrote in the late seventeenth century: "Balm is sovereign for the brain, strengthening the memory and powerfully chasing away melancholy."{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: Evelyn J. Acetaria: A Discourse of Sallets. London: B. Tooke, 1699. Topic: Evelyn on balm/melissa; quote attribution. No PMID; early modern primary source. Verify quote text and source publication at publish. --> The modern dimension was added not by herbalists but by laboratory pharmacologists. In 1994, the German physician and researcher Rainer Wölbling published the first rigorously controlled clinical trial of a standardized lemon balm cream -- subsequently commercialized as Lomaherpan -- applied to cold sores caused by herpes simplex virus.<ref name="wolbling1994">Wolbling RH, Leonhardt K. "Local therapy of herpes simplex with dried extract from ''Melissa officinalis''." Phytomedicine. 1994;1(1):25-31. PMID 23195812.</ref> The trial demonstrated that what herbalists had used empirically for mouth sores for centuries worked through a specific mechanism -- rosmarinic acid and other polyphenols blocking herpes virus attachment to host cells -- that remains among the most mechanistically coherent antiviral findings in phytomedicine. | ||
| taxonomy = ''Melissa officinalis'' L. is placed in tribe Mentheae, family Lamiaceae, the sole widely used species in the genus Melissa. The genus name derives from the Greek melissa (bee); the species epithet officinalis (of the dispensary) is shared with hundreds of medicinal plants and indicates long-standing apothecary use. No infraspecific taxa carry commercial or medicinal significance. | | taxonomy = ''Melissa officinalis'' L. is placed in tribe Mentheae, family Lamiaceae, the sole widely used species in the genus Melissa. The genus name derives from the Greek melissa (bee); the species epithet officinalis (of the dispensary) is shared with hundreds of medicinal plants and indicates long-standing apothecary use. No infraspecific taxa carry commercial or medicinal significance. | ||
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The medicinal parts are the aerial parts -- leaves and flowering tops -- harvested just before full flowering when volatile oil content is highest. Post-flowering leaves are coarser in flavor and lower in volatile oil. The essential oil is produced commercially but is one of the most expensive in herbal commerce: approximately 3,000 to 5,000 kg of fresh leaf is required to produce 1 kg of oil, reflecting the low volatile oil yield (typically under 0.2 percent of fresh weight) and the labor-intensive harvest involved. The essential oil is rarely indicated in clinical practice and is used primarily in aromatherapy. | The medicinal parts are the aerial parts -- leaves and flowering tops -- harvested just before full flowering when volatile oil content is highest. Post-flowering leaves are coarser in flavor and lower in volatile oil. The essential oil is produced commercially but is one of the most expensive in herbal commerce: approximately 3,000 to 5,000 kg of fresh leaf is required to produce 1 kg of oil, reflecting the low volatile oil yield (typically under 0.2 percent of fresh weight) and the labor-intensive harvest involved. The essential oil is rarely indicated in clinical practice and is used primarily in aromatherapy. | ||
| traditional_uses = '''Western herbal medicine (primary centroid)''' | | traditional_uses = '''Western herbal medicine (primary centroid)''' | ||
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Lemon balm is not a primary plant of the classical Ayurvedic pharmacopoeia -- its native range does not extend to the Indian subcontinent -- but it has been incorporated into contemporary Ayurvedic and integrative practice in Europe and North America where it overlaps with herbs of similar action. It is occasionally classified by contemporary Ayurvedic practitioners as a tridoshic nervine suitable for vata-type anxiety and pitta-type irritability.{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: contemporary Ayurvedic integrative herbal texts. Topic: Melissa in contemporary Ayurvedic practice; doshic classification. Carry {{citation needed}} if no specific primary Ayurvedic source locatable at publish. --> | Lemon balm is not a primary plant of the classical Ayurvedic pharmacopoeia -- its native range does not extend to the Indian subcontinent -- but it has been incorporated into contemporary Ayurvedic and integrative practice in Europe and North America where it overlaps with herbs of similar action. It is occasionally classified by contemporary Ayurvedic practitioners as a tridoshic nervine suitable for vata-type anxiety and pitta-type irritability.{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: contemporary Ayurvedic integrative herbal texts. Topic: Melissa in contemporary Ayurvedic practice; doshic classification. Carry {{citation needed}} if no specific primary Ayurvedic source locatable at publish. --> | ||
| pharmacology = '''Volatile oil and polyphenolic constituents''' | | pharmacology = '''Volatile oil and polyphenolic constituents''' | ||
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The anti-thyroid mechanism is distinct from both of the above: aqueous extracts of ''Melissa officinalis'' inhibit binding of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and Graves' immunoglobulins to TSH receptors in vitro, reducing thyroid stimulation. The mechanism is thought to involve the polyphenolic fraction competitively occupying the TSH receptor or blocking immunoglobulin binding sites. | The anti-thyroid mechanism is distinct from both of the above: aqueous extracts of ''Melissa officinalis'' inhibit binding of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and Graves' immunoglobulins to TSH receptors in vitro, reducing thyroid stimulation. The mechanism is thought to involve the polyphenolic fraction competitively occupying the TSH receptor or blocking immunoglobulin binding sites. | ||
| clinical_evidence = '''Antiviral: herpes simplex (topical)''' | | clinical_evidence = '''Antiviral: herpes simplex (topical)''' | ||
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The use of lemon balm for sleep disturbance and nervousness in children is supported by tradition, basic safety data, and a limited clinical literature that includes combination preparations (valerian plus lemon balm).{{citation needed}}<!-- Q2 for home-claude: locate PMID for combined valerian + lemon balm pediatric RCT (search "Melissa ''Valeriana'' children restlessness" or "lemon balm valerian children sleep randomized"). If found, insert ref. Otherwise carry {{citation needed}}. --> No serious adverse effects attributable to lemon balm have been reported in pediatric use at traditional doses. | The use of lemon balm for sleep disturbance and nervousness in children is supported by tradition, basic safety data, and a limited clinical literature that includes combination preparations (valerian plus lemon balm).{{citation needed}}<!-- Q2 for home-claude: locate PMID for combined valerian + lemon balm pediatric RCT (search "Melissa ''Valeriana'' children restlessness" or "lemon balm valerian children sleep randomized"). If found, insert ref. Otherwise carry {{citation needed}}. --> No serious adverse effects attributable to lemon balm have been reported in pediatric use at traditional doses. | ||
| preparations = Infusion (tea): 2 to 4 g dried leaf and flowering tops per cup of hot water, covered while steeping (10 to 15 minutes) to retain the volatile oil fraction; the covering step is not cosmetic -- the volatile constituents are pharmacologically active and evaporate readily. Taken three times daily for daytime use or before sleep for insomnia. | | preparations = Infusion (tea): 2 to 4 g dried leaf and flowering tops per cup of hot water, covered while steeping (10 to 15 minutes) to retain the volatile oil fraction; the covering step is not cosmetic -- the volatile constituents are pharmacologically active and evaporate readily. Taken three times daily for daytime use or before sleep for insomnia. | ||
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Combination preparations: Melissa plus ''Valeriana officinalis'' (valerian) is the most common commercial combination, targeting sleep and mild anxiety; this combination has the best clinical evidence base (Kennedy 2006) for lemon balm's anxiolytic and sleep-promoting effects. | Combination preparations: Melissa plus ''Valeriana officinalis'' (valerian) is the most common commercial combination, targeting sleep and mild anxiety; this combination has the best clinical evidence base (Kennedy 2006) for lemon balm's anxiolytic and sleep-promoting effects. | ||
| dosing = '''Internal preparations''' | | dosing = '''Internal preparations''' | ||
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Lemon balm has no established recreational dose structure. Its sedative-anxiolytic effect at therapeutic doses is among the gentlest in the nervine class -- substantially milder than valerian, kava, or cannabis -- and dose escalation beyond the Kennedy effective range (300 to 600 mg standardized extract) produces diminishing benefit rather than progressive relaxation, as the 900 mg dose in Kennedy's studies reduced, rather than increased, calmness. No ethnobotanical or contemporary self-dosing literature documents recreational use of lemon balm in any form; the ceiling of effect at accessible doses is simply too low and too undramatic to attract recreational interest. No tiered dose ladder is warranted. | Lemon balm has no established recreational dose structure. Its sedative-anxiolytic effect at therapeutic doses is among the gentlest in the nervine class -- substantially milder than valerian, kava, or cannabis -- and dose escalation beyond the Kennedy effective range (300 to 600 mg standardized extract) produces diminishing benefit rather than progressive relaxation, as the 900 mg dose in Kennedy's studies reduced, rather than increased, calmness. No ethnobotanical or contemporary self-dosing literature documents recreational use of lemon balm in any form; the ceiling of effect at accessible doses is simply too low and too undramatic to attract recreational interest. No tiered dose ladder is warranted. | ||
| pharmacokinetics = The pharmacokinetics of lemon balm's active constituents have not been characterized to the same degree as those of pharmaceutical preparations. Rosmarinic acid, the principal polyphenolic constituent, is absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract and undergoes conjugation and hydroxylation by intestinal microbiota and hepatic enzymes; plasma levels peak approximately 30 to 60 minutes after ingestion.{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: Baba S, Osakabe N, Natsume M, Terao J. "Orally administered rosmarinic acid is present as the conjugated and/or methylated forms in plasma, and is degraded and metabolized to conjugated forms of caffeic acid, ferulic acid and m-coumaric acid." Life Sci. 2004. Topic: rosmarinic acid pharmacokinetics; plasma peak; metabolic pathway. Verify PMID via eutils "rosmarinic acid pharmacokinetics absorption plasma." --> The apigenin and luteolin flavonoids have been more extensively characterized in other botanical contexts and show oral bioavailability dependent on gut microbiome composition. | | pharmacokinetics = The pharmacokinetics of lemon balm's active constituents have not been characterized to the same degree as those of pharmaceutical preparations. Rosmarinic acid, the principal polyphenolic constituent, is absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract and undergoes conjugation and hydroxylation by intestinal microbiota and hepatic enzymes; plasma levels peak approximately 30 to 60 minutes after ingestion.{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: Baba S, Osakabe N, Natsume M, Terao J. "Orally administered rosmarinic acid is present as the conjugated and/or methylated forms in plasma, and is degraded and metabolized to conjugated forms of caffeic acid, ferulic acid and m-coumaric acid." Life Sci. 2004. Topic: rosmarinic acid pharmacokinetics; plasma peak; metabolic pathway. Verify PMID via eutils "rosmarinic acid pharmacokinetics absorption plasma." --> The apigenin and luteolin flavonoids have been more extensively characterized in other botanical contexts and show oral bioavailability dependent on gut microbiome composition. | ||
| interactions = Central nervous system depressants: additive effect expected with sedatives, anxiolytics, alcohol, and sedating herbal medicines (valerian, hops, passionflower, kava); lemon balm's own sedative effect is mild, but the interaction is pharmacologically consistent and clinically relevant when adding lemon balm to a regimen that includes prescription sedatives or anxiolytics. Therapeutic use with benzodiazepines should be mentioned to the prescriber. | | interactions = Central nervous system depressants: additive effect expected with sedatives, anxiolytics, alcohol, and sedating herbal medicines (valerian, hops, passionflower, kava); lemon balm's own sedative effect is mild, but the interaction is pharmacologically consistent and clinically relevant when adding lemon balm to a regimen that includes prescription sedatives or anxiolytics. Therapeutic use with benzodiazepines should be mentioned to the prescriber. | ||
Thyroid preparations: theoretical antagonism with levothyroxine and other thyroid hormone replacement if lemon balm's anti-TSH-receptor activity translates to clinical reduction of thyroid function; this is relevant primarily at high chronic doses in patients with hypothyroidism or those on replacement thyroid therapy. At standard infusion doses, the interaction is theoretical rather than documented; in practice, standard tea use is unlikely to produce clinically significant thyroid antagonism. | Thyroid preparations: theoretical antagonism with levothyroxine and other thyroid hormone replacement if lemon balm's anti-TSH-receptor activity translates to clinical reduction of thyroid function; this is relevant primarily at high chronic doses in patients with hypothyroidism or those on replacement thyroid therapy. At standard infusion doses, the interaction is theoretical rather than documented; in practice, standard tea use is unlikely to produce clinically significant thyroid antagonism. | ||
| interactionsummary = Additive CNS sedation with sedatives and anxiolytics. Theoretical thyroid hormone antagonism at high doses in hypothyroid patients. | | interactionsummary = Additive CNS sedation with sedatives and anxiolytics. Theoretical thyroid hormone antagonism at high doses in hypothyroid patients. | ||
| safety = Lemon balm has an outstanding safety record across two thousand years of use in children and adults. No serious adverse events have been reported in clinical trials, case reports, or systematic reviews at standard therapeutic doses. It is among the herbs most consistently identified as safe for children in the traditional and contemporary herbal literature. | | safety = Lemon balm has an outstanding safety record across two thousand years of use in children and adults. No serious adverse events have been reported in clinical trials, case reports, or systematic reviews at standard therapeutic doses. It is among the herbs most consistently identified as safe for children in the traditional and contemporary herbal literature. | ||
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Allergic reactions to lemon balm are rare; contact dermatitis has been reported with the essential oil and less commonly with topical fresh plant preparations. | Allergic reactions to lemon balm are rare; contact dermatitis has been reported with the essential oil and less commonly with topical fresh plant preparations. | ||
| monitoring = No routine monitoring required for standard-dose internal use in healthy adults. Patients with hypothyroidism or on thyroid hormone replacement using chronic lemon balm preparations: thyroid-stimulating hormone at baseline and after two to three months of regular use. Patients adding lemon balm to benzodiazepine or sedative regimens: monitor for excess sedation, particularly at treatment initiation. | | monitoring = No routine monitoring required for standard-dose internal use in healthy adults. Patients with hypothyroidism or on thyroid hormone replacement using chronic lemon balm preparations: thyroid-stimulating hormone at baseline and after two to three months of regular use. Patients adding lemon balm to benzodiazepine or sedative regimens: monitor for excess sedation, particularly at treatment initiation. | ||
| counseling = The distinction between oral and topical applications is important to convey clearly. Oral lemon balm (infusion, tincture, extract) is indicated for anxiety, nervous insomnia, palpitations, and nervous digestive symptoms; the clinical evidence for these indications is consistent but modest. Topical Lomaherpan-equivalent cream (1 percent standardized Melissa extract) is the form with the specific antiviral evidence for cold sores, applied at first sign of prodrome; oral lemon balm should not be presented as a substitute for the topical application in herpes management. | | counseling = The distinction between oral and topical applications is important to convey clearly. Oral lemon balm (infusion, tincture, extract) is indicated for anxiety, nervous insomnia, palpitations, and nervous digestive symptoms; the clinical evidence for these indications is consistent but modest. Topical Lomaherpan-equivalent cream (1 percent standardized Melissa extract) is the form with the specific antiviral evidence for cold sores, applied at first sign of prodrome; oral lemon balm should not be presented as a substitute for the topical application in herpes management. | ||
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Patients using lemon balm for anxiety who are not experiencing adequate response at standard infusion doses may benefit from a standardized extract at the 300 to 600 mg range, or from a Melissa plus valerian combination product (which has the best clinical evidence for the combined anxiolytic-sleep indication). If anxiety is more than mild to moderate, a clinical assessment for generalized anxiety disorder, for which Silexan (oral lavender oil) has substantially stronger evidence, is appropriate. | Patients using lemon balm for anxiety who are not experiencing adequate response at standard infusion doses may benefit from a standardized extract at the 300 to 600 mg range, or from a Melissa plus valerian combination product (which has the best clinical evidence for the combined anxiolytic-sleep indication). If anxiety is more than mild to moderate, a clinical assessment for generalized anxiety disorder, for which Silexan (oral lavender oil) has substantially stronger evidence, is appropriate. | ||
| regulatory = '''Germany and European Union''' | | regulatory = '''Germany and European Union''' | ||
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MHRA traditional herbal registration: ''Melissa officinalis'' preparations registered for traditional use for mild anxiety and sleep disturbance, and for topical application to cold sores; the topical Lomaherpan-equivalent preparations are registered separately. | MHRA traditional herbal registration: ''Melissa officinalis'' preparations registered for traditional use for mild anxiety and sleep disturbance, and for topical application to cold sores; the topical Lomaherpan-equivalent preparations are registered separately. | ||
| history = | | history = | ||
| effects = | | effects = | ||
| traditional_geography = | | traditional_geography = | ||
| anecdotes = | | anecdotes = | ||
| references = <references/> | |||
}} | }} | ||
[[Category:Plants]] | [[Category:Plants]] | ||
Latest revision as of 20:59, 26 May 2026
| Summary | |
|---|---|
| Binomial | Melissa officinalis |
| Family | Lamiaceae |
| Native range | Southern Europe, western Asia, and northern Africa; naturalized through temperate Europe, the Americas, and Australasia. Wild populations occur on roadsides, hedgerows, disturbed ground, and the margins of woodland, particularly on calcareous soils. Widely cultivated as a garden and medicinal herb throughout the temperate world. |
| Pharmacy | |
| Pharmacology | |
Melissa officinalis L. -- lemon balm, balm, melissa -- is a perennial herb of the mint family whose Greek name means bee, a record of the insects that congregate on its small white flowers and make from them a honey prized in antiquity. It has been called "the elixir of life" by Paracelsus and "sovereign for the brain" by John Evelyn; its unbroken reputation across two thousand years of Western and Islamic medicine is for lifting the heart, clearing the head, and settling the gut. The same compounds responsible for its sharp lemon scent -- the polyphenolic fraction concentrated in its leaves -- have turned out to be active against herpes simplex virus in controlled trials, giving it a specific antiviral credential unlike any other common nervine herb.
History and traditional use
Western herbal medicine (primary centroid)
Lemon balm belongs to the nervine class of Western herbal medicine -- herbs with a primary action on the nervous system -- and is distinguished within that class by its particular gentleness: it is among the most pediatric-appropriate nervines in the Western tradition, given to colicky infants, anxious children, and restless adolescents alongside adults, without dose adjustment anxieties. This record of safe pediatric use across centuries is itself a kind of pharmacovigilance.
The principal traditional indications map closely onto the modern clinical evidence: anxiety and nervous agitation, insomnia with a restless or worried mind, palpitations from nervous origin (the "racing heart" that has no structural cardiac cause), nervous indigestion, colic and flatulence with an anxiety or tension component, and headache related to tension or nervous overload. The Carmelite water tradition adds a specifically cardiac tonifying dimension -- the heart-gladdening claim -- that aligns with both the nervous-palpitation indication and the mood-lifting effects documented in Kennedy's controlled trials two centuries later.
Secondary traditional indications include the antiviral use -- cold sores, oral herpes, used as topical fresh leaf or strong infusion -- which predates any knowledge of herpesvirus and reflects accurate empirical observation, and a diaphoretic use in febrile illness that made lemon balm standard in European childhood fever management.
Islamic medicine (Unani)
Lemon balm appears in Islamic-Galenic medicine as Turunjan (ترنجان) and, in some North African traditions, as Badharuj -- though this Arabic identifier is also applied by some sources to sweet basil (Ocimum basilicum), creating a minor source-identification ambiguity.[citation needed] Ibn Sina's Canon of Medicine praises it in terms that no other classical herbalist surpassed: lemon balm "causeth the heart and mind to become merry, exhilarateth the mind, settleth digestion, and is good against melancholy and the spleen." The Canon identifies it as a warming, drying herb good for cold temperaments, for cardiac palpitations, and for the "sadness and grief" that Ibn Sina associated with obstruction of the vital spirit.[citation needed]
Ayurvedic medicine
Lemon balm is not a primary plant of the classical Ayurvedic pharmacopoeia -- its native range does not extend to the Indian subcontinent -- but it has been incorporated into contemporary Ayurvedic and integrative practice in Europe and North America where it overlaps with herbs of similar action. It is occasionally classified by contemporary Ayurvedic practitioners as a tridoshic nervine suitable for vata-type anxiety and pitta-type irritability.[citation needed]
Preparations
Infusion (tea): 2 to 4 g dried leaf and flowering tops per cup of hot water, covered while steeping (10 to 15 minutes) to retain the volatile oil fraction; the covering step is not cosmetic -- the volatile constituents are pharmacologically active and evaporate readily. Taken three times daily for daytime use or before sleep for insomnia.
Tincture: 1:5 in 45 percent ethanol from dried herb; standard liquid preparation for internal use; 2 to 6 ml per dose, three times daily.
Standardized dry extract: solid extract standardized to rosmarinic acid content (typically 3 to 5 percent), usually in capsule form; the preparation form used in the Kennedy cognitive-modulation studies (300 to 900 mg per dose).
Topical cream: 1 percent standardized Melissa dry extract (Lomaherpan; equivalent commercial preparations) applied topically to cold sore lesions at first symptom; the antiviral evidence is specific to topical preparations with defined rosmarinic acid content.
Essential oil: rarely used therapeutically; primarily aromatherapy; expensive and frequently adulterated with lemongrass (Cymbopogon citratus) or lemon-scented verbena (Aloysia citrodora) oil; if used, always diluted in carrier oil.
Combination preparations: Melissa plus Valeriana officinalis (valerian) is the most common commercial combination, targeting sleep and mild anxiety; this combination has the best clinical evidence base (Kennedy 2006) for lemon balm's anxiolytic and sleep-promoting effects.
Pharmacokinetics
The pharmacokinetics of lemon balm's active constituents have not been characterized to the same degree as those of pharmaceutical preparations. Rosmarinic acid, the principal polyphenolic constituent, is absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract and undergoes conjugation and hydroxylation by intestinal microbiota and hepatic enzymes; plasma levels peak approximately 30 to 60 minutes after ingestion.[citation needed] The apigenin and luteolin flavonoids have been more extensively characterized in other botanical contexts and show oral bioavailability dependent on gut microbiome composition.
Experience
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Problems
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Titration and dosing
Internal preparations
Infusion: 2 to 4 g dried leaf per cup, three times daily and before bed. Acute use for nervous agitation or palpitations: a strong cup (double strength, 4 g covered, 15-minute steep) taken as needed.
Tincture (1:5 in 45 percent ethanol): 2 to 6 ml per dose, three times daily. Children: no established dose adjustment in traditional use; standard practice has been to reduce proportionally by body weight or to use a weaker preparation (diluted infusion), noting the absence of observed adverse effects in pediatric use at herbal practice doses.
Standardized extract: 300 to 600 mg per dose (consistent with Kennedy's effective dose range); 900 mg per dose has been associated with reduced calmness in Kennedy's studies and should be avoided as a starting dose.
For cold sore prevention with oral preparations: no clinical evidence base; oral lemon balm does not substitute for topical treatment and no internal anti-HSV dose has been evaluated.
Combination preparations (Melissa plus valerian): follow manufacturer dosing; typically one to two capsules or 5 to 10 ml liquid combination tincture at bedtime for sleep.
Recreational dose ladder
Lemon balm has no established recreational dose structure. Its sedative-anxiolytic effect at therapeutic doses is among the gentlest in the nervine class -- substantially milder than valerian, kava, or cannabis -- and dose escalation beyond the Kennedy effective range (300 to 600 mg standardized extract) produces diminishing benefit rather than progressive relaxation, as the 900 mg dose in Kennedy's studies reduced, rather than increased, calmness. No ethnobotanical or contemporary self-dosing literature documents recreational use of lemon balm in any form; the ceiling of effect at accessible doses is simply too low and too undramatic to attract recreational interest. No tiered dose ladder is warranted.
Effects
No effects listed yet, be the first to suggest one.
Interactions
Central nervous system depressants: additive effect expected with sedatives, anxiolytics, alcohol, and sedating herbal medicines (valerian, hops, passionflower, kava); lemon balm's own sedative effect is mild, but the interaction is pharmacologically consistent and clinically relevant when adding lemon balm to a regimen that includes prescription sedatives or anxiolytics. Therapeutic use with benzodiazepines should be mentioned to the prescriber. Thyroid preparations: theoretical antagonism with levothyroxine and other thyroid hormone replacement if lemon balm's anti-TSH-receptor activity translates to clinical reduction of thyroid function; this is relevant primarily at high chronic doses in patients with hypothyroidism or those on replacement thyroid therapy. At standard infusion doses, the interaction is theoretical rather than documented; in practice, standard tea use is unlikely to produce clinically significant thyroid antagonism.
Monitoring
No routine monitoring required for standard-dose internal use in healthy adults. Patients with hypothyroidism or on thyroid hormone replacement using chronic lemon balm preparations: thyroid-stimulating hormone at baseline and after two to three months of regular use. Patients adding lemon balm to benzodiazepine or sedative regimens: monitor for excess sedation, particularly at treatment initiation.
Patient counseling
The distinction between oral and topical applications is important to convey clearly. Oral lemon balm (infusion, tincture, extract) is indicated for anxiety, nervous insomnia, palpitations, and nervous digestive symptoms; the clinical evidence for these indications is consistent but modest. Topical Lomaherpan-equivalent cream (1 percent standardized Melissa extract) is the form with the specific antiviral evidence for cold sores, applied at first sign of prodrome; oral lemon balm should not be presented as a substitute for the topical application in herpes management.
Patients with recurrent cold sores benefit most from topical treatment begun at prodrome (tingling, burning, or itching before vesicle formation) rather than after full blister development; early application is the message from Koytchev (1999) and consistent with the mechanism of attachment inhibition working best before viral invasion is complete.
Patients using lemon balm for anxiety who are not experiencing adequate response at standard infusion doses may benefit from a standardized extract at the 300 to 600 mg range, or from a Melissa plus valerian combination product (which has the best clinical evidence for the combined anxiolytic-sleep indication). If anxiety is more than mild to moderate, a clinical assessment for generalized anxiety disorder, for which Silexan (oral lavender oil) has substantially stronger evidence, is appropriate.
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Relevant Literature
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