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Black Walnut

The bittersweet and nutritious oil of the black walnut has a long history of medicinal and food uses. Once used as treatment for diphtheria and syphilis, black walnut is now used mostly for the astringent properties of its hulls and bark. It has been used world-wide for several centuries for its anti-parasitic, anti-bacterial, and anti-fungal actions and remains in use today. Studies of black walnut are scarce. However, the existing data coupled with overwhelming cross-cultural use of black walnut in treating similar health conditions for centuries cannot be ignored. Further studies are certainly warranted and deserving for the use of black walnut in Western medicine.
 
Browse Sections:
 Summary
 Other Names
 Description
 Traditional Internal Uses
 Traditional Topical Uses
 Indications
 Actions
 Constituents / Nutrients
 Pharmacological Summary
 Research
 Precautions / Contraindications
 Interaction with Medications
 Possible Side Effects
 Dosage
 References

Common Name
Black Walnut
 
Botanical Latin Name / Classification
Juglans Nigra
 
Parts Used
Hulls, bark, and leaves.
 
Other Names
Eastern Black Walnut, American Walnut.

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Description
The walnut tree is also known as the English, Persian, or Carpathian walnut tree; it is just one species in the vast walnut family called Juglandaceae. About one-fifth of all Juglandaceae species are Juglans, including black walnuts (J. nigra), butternuts (J. cineria), and heartnuts (J. ailantifolia); all these are believed to have tannins and other healing compounds in their leaves.

Although the J. regia tree had its origins in eastern Europe, it is now cultivated throughout North America, Europe, North Africa, and other temperate regions of the globe. Most of the walnuts produced for consumption are cultivated in California. The black walnut tree grows widely in the western U.S. and Canada and is native to the hardwood forests of the Central Mississippi Valley and the Appalachian region of North America. It is a large tree and can sometimes reach a height of 100 feet and 4-5 feet in diameter.

Black walnut extract is made by harvesting the green hulls which surround the nut of the black walnut tree. These green hulls are stripped from the nuts, cleaned, and then they are broken down into smaller parts for use in prepared supplements and liquid extracts.

The earliest known reference to the walnut tells that Alexander the Great introduced it to Greece from the Middle East. In fact, in almost every part of the world, the walnut is part of local herbal nutrition.

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Traditional Internal Uses
Black walnut has been used to relieve both constipation and diarrhea due to a normalizing effect that juglone, one of its active compounds, may exert on intestinal tissue. It is thought to have some effectiveness, as well, for eliminating internal parasites such as tapeworms.

Astringents shrink and tighten the top layers of skin or mucous membranes, thereby reducing secretions, relieving irritation, and improving tissue firmness. These effects may contribute to the anti-diarrheal properties of oral black walnut preparations as well as giving them some usefulness for treating other gastrointestinal complaints such as indigestion.

As a laxative, black walnut is often used due to its gentle, non-irritating, and cramp-free intestinal actions. All of these therapeutic uses are based on case reports; however, none have been verified through clinical studies in humans.

A gargle made from black walnut extract in water may be used to treat mouth sores and sore throat. A similar liquid preparation is sometimes used topically to disinfect injuries and treat skin conditions such as acne and ringworm. Results from animal studies show that black walnut may have anti-infective and anti-inflammatory properties. Inflammation is a response to irritation, injury, or infection. It usually includes pain, redness, and swelling in the area of the damage and it can occur within body tissues as well as on the surface of the skin. The juice of black walnut hulls has also been used to treat warts.

Historically, Native Americans such as the Cherokee have used black walnut as a laxative, a remedy for tapeworms, and to detoxify the body. The ancient Greeks used the hulls to support the intestinal system and to treat skin infections. The bark has been used in India and Pakistan as a toothpaste.

In veterinary medicine, black walnut is commonly used for canine heartworms, ringworm, candida, hotspots, and intestinal parasites.

Black walnut trees even produce a natural insecticide. According to a professor and extension forester at Iowa State University, juglone is known to repel various garden insects. Just by placing branches of the tree around the house and under furniture, dog and cat owners are amazed to find that their pets have fewer fleas! (1)

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Traditional Topical Uses
Recently, the delicious and easy-to-crack nuts from the walnut tree (Juglans regia) have received a lot of attention because of their rich stores of omega-3 fatty acids and other healing nutrients. But for centuries herbalists have recognized the healing properties of another part of the walnut tree - its pointy green leaves.

High concentrations (up to 10%) of astringent compounds called tannins account for most of the healing qualities in walnut leaf preparations. Tannins tighten and constrict tissues, making them valuable for protecting areas of skin and controlling inflammation and itching.

Because of the astringent properties of black walnut, that is, its ability to tighten top layers of skin and mucous membranes, many topical mask formulas include black walnut hulls as a means of maintaining vibrant, youthful-looking skin.

Black Walnut's anti-fungal actions also make it useful as a body cream for persistent skin rashes such as eczema, psoriasis, herpes, boils, ringworm and other difficult skin conditions. Many commercial preparations include black walnut hull with other active ingredients such as tea tree oil, slippery elm, and witch hazel.

Topical black walnut formulations have been used for excessive sweating of the hands and feet. In France, in particular, the leaf is often applied to sunburns and to a scalp that is peeling and itching from dandruff.

According to researchers, walnut leaves even have bacteria-killing, anti-parasitic, and insect-repelling properties. This largely confirms long-held folk beliefs about the healing qualities of the leaf. An intriguing survey of older farmers and shepherds in central Italy, published in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology in 1999, found that walnut leaf was one of the local plants most frequently used for repelling insects and treating parasitic infections on the skin.

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Indications
Primary Indications: Parasites / Parasitic Infections, Worms, Ringworms, Tapeworms, Pinworms, Intestinal Disorders, Gastrointestinal Disorders, Indigestion, Hemorrhoids, Constipation

Secondary Indications: Athlete's Foot, Canker Sores, Carbuncles, Eczema (Dermatitis), Herpes (Genital), Periodontal / Gum Disease, Scrofula, Skin Disorders

Other Indications: Cancer / Cancer Prevention, Hypercholesterolemia, Thyroid Disorders (Hypothyroidism / Hyperthyroidism)

Secondary Indications: Bruising, Skin Itch

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Actions
Alterative (Restorative), Anodyne, Anthelmintic, Anti-Diarrheal, Antibacterial, Antifungal, Antimicrobial, Antiparasitic, Antiseptic, Astringent, Blood Tonic, Depurative, Detergent, Emetic, Laxative, Pectoral, Tonic, Vermifuge

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Constituents / Nutrients
Nut/Fruit: Alpha-hydrojuglone-4-glucoside, cobalt, ellagic acid, fat, iron, magnesium, manganese, myricetin, myricitrin, neosakurnin, niacin, riboflavin, sakuranetin, sakuranin, selenium, silicon, sodium, tannin, thiamin, tin.

Hull: Aluminum, ascorbic acid, barium, calcium, chromium, phosphorus, potassium, zinc.

Seed: Antimony, arsenic, barium, beta-carotene, boron, bromine, cadmium, calcium, cerium, cesium, chlorine, chromium, cobalt, copper, europium, fat, fluorine, gold, hafnine, iodine, iron, lanthanum, lead, lutetium, magnesium, manganese, mercury, molybdenum, niacin, nickel, phosphorus, potassium, riboflavin, rubidium, samarium, scandium, selenium, silicon, sodium, strontium, sulfur, tantalum, thiamin, thorium, tin, titanium, tungsten, uranium, vanadium, ytterbium, zinc.

Plant/Root: Juglone (5-hydroxy-alphanapthaquinone).

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Pharmacological Summary
It is widely agreed that the astringents in black walnut, known as tannins and juglone, help to tighten the top layers of skin or mucous membranes, thereby limiting secretions, relieving irritants and improving tissue firmness. Consequently, black walnut has been considered an effective treatment for gastrointenstinal problems such as indigestion, constipation and diarrhea. One study on Juglans regia extract indicated some activity against Microsporum canis and Tricophyton mentagrophytes suggesting its anti-bacterial, anti-parasitic actions.(2)

While there have been some animal studies to confirm some of the therapeutic properties of black walnut, further studies, particularly human trials, are required for any conclusive assertions. It should be noted, however, The American Medical Ethnobotany Reference Dictionary claims that the juice from Black Walnut hull is effective against ringworm.(3)

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Research
"The Black Walnut Tree: A Vegetative Guardian Angel"
"Black Walnut: From the Kitchen Doctor"
"Parasites: The Hidden Cause"
"Black Walnut Trees Produce A Natural Insecticide"

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Precautions / Contraindications
Black Walnut is listed as safe for short term oral use (typical oral dose is 1,000 mg three times daily with water), but is regarded as possibly unsafe for topical application. Due to the lack of reliable studies on the use of Black Walnut during periods of pregnancy or lactation it is not recommended for use during these times.

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Interaction with Medications
No interactions between black walnut and drugs or other herbals have been reported. However, the tannin content of oral black walnut products may interfere with the way that prescription drugs such as Theophylline, Codeine, and oral Ephedrine; non-prescription drugs such as Pseudoephedrine; and other nutritional supplements are used by the body. If prescription drugs and oral black walnut supplements are taken at the same time, they should be taken at different times of the day.

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Possible Side Effects
Juglone (a constituent of roots and root bark) is a depressant and may cause severe pulmonary interstitial and alveolar edema in dogs (Auyong et al, 1963; Boelkins et al, 1968).

Black walnut wood shavings have been reported to cause laminitis in horses (Thomsen, 2000), (Eaton, 1995), (Galey, 1991), (Galey, 1990), (Galey, 1989), (Minnick, 1987).

Moldy hulls and nuts may contain a neurotoxic mycotoxin, known as Penitrem A, which may have strychnine-like effects with tremors and hyperexcitability. If ingestion is recent, emesis can be induced and activated charcoal administered. If the patient is showing signs of toxicity, it should be anesthetized and gastric lavage performed - emesis is contraindicated.

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Dosage
Black walnut capsules, in extract and liquid form, are available commercially and range in strength from 300 mg to 1000 mg. Typically, a capsule strength of 400 to 500 mg is recommended to be taken 3 times daily.

Alternatively, 10 to 20 drops of the extract can be mixed with water to drink . Generally, oral doses are taken three times a day, but oral use for longer than 6 weeks is not recommended, due to the tannin content.

As an extract black walnut can be used as a skin application. It also comes already added to creams, lotions, and ointments. The usual recommendation for topical use is twice a day.

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References
1. Pokorney, Marilyn. Article Warehouse. February 27, 2005
2. Ali-Shtayeh, M. S. & Abu Ghdeib, Suheil I. (1999). Antifungal activity of plant extracts against dermatophytes. Mycoses 42 (11-12), 665-672. doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0507.1999.00499.x
3. Moerman, DE. American Medical Ethnobotany: A Reference Dictionary. New York, NY: Garland Publishing. 1977.

Our thanks to the following information resources: DrugDigest.org, HerbMed.com.

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2 total products
Black Walnut   (Read all about Black Walnut.)

Botanical Latin Name: Juglans Nigra
Plant Part: Hulls, bark, and leaves.
Black Walnut - Health - 30 Day Paraway Cleanse Kit - 30 mL + 200/108 Capsules
Black Walnut - Health - 30 Day Paraway Cleanse Kit - 30 mL + 200/108 Capsules
Parasite Cleanse Based on Dr. Hulda Clark's Teachings.

62.91 US
More Info
Black Walnut - Health - Artemisia / Wormwood Combo - 440 mg
Black Walnut - Health - Artemisia / Wormwood Combo - 440 mg
100 capsules

17.56 US
More Info


These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Products are intended to support general well being and are not intended to treat, diagnose, mitigate, prevent, or cure any condition or disease. If conditions persist, please seek advice from your medical doctor.



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