Description:
Affective disorders have become prevalent and costly worldwide chronic conditions. Lemon
Balm (Melissa officinalis L.) is a medicinal plant with beneficial effects on neuropsychiatric
disorders. Its potential to specifically treat conditions such as depression and anxiety has been
investigated for over 20 centuries. Given the lack of a historical overview of lemon balm in mood
disorders, the present review aimed to introduce the historical course of the neuro-psychiatric
applications of lemon balm across the centuries. We investigated several viable medieval Arabic
sources up to the 15th century, to distinguish the neuropsychiatric applications, especially
anxiolytic and anti-depressive effects of lemon balm. In the early centuries, lemon balm was
mainly prescribed to treat gastrointestinal disorders. Over time, physicians identified the
efficient use of lemon balm in sadness, sleep disorders, anxiety, depression, epilepsy, ischemic
stroke, amnesia, sciatalgia, and radicular neuropathy. Importantly, it was established that the
therapeutic effects of lemon balm in the field of neuro-psychiatric diseases were emphasized
by physicians during the Middle Ages. These findings have since been validated in human
clinical trials. Lemon balm has also demonstrated the ability to be utilized in epilepsy, amnesia
and ischemic stroke. Based on the extensive history of lemon balm in neuropsychiatry, future
investigations could use this knowledge to extensively investigate the potential of lemon balm
in neuropsychiatric disorders such as depression and anxiety, and possibly develop an efficient
neuropsychiatric remedy
URL:
http://103.158.96.210:88/web_repository/uploads/ps-28-224.pdf
Type:
Journal
Document:
Diploma III Farmasi
Date:
23-06-2024
Author:
Javid Ghazizadeh