17 February 2011

AROMATHERAPY:Treatment that makes lots of Scents.

The word Aromatherapy was coined by a French chemist, Rene Gattefosse in 1926 but its fragrant
healing connotations recall an antiquity beyond Cleopatra's Egypt.  Apart from their pleasing aromas,
essential oils are valued equally for their potent therapeutic and cosmetic properties.  Aromatherapy, is
perhaps the most luxurious treatment for mind and body
 

AN ANCIENT ART

Aromatherapy has a long history,. The Egyptians had a sophisticated understanding of aromatic oils. 
Translations of hieroglyphics found in ancient tombs and temples reveal aromatics were used to treat a
variety of illnesses.  They also used the essential oils for embalming, for creating perfumes for the
pharaohs and for scenting the temples during religious ceremonies.
 

THERAPEUTIC PROPERTIES

Essential oils possess numerous properties in which make them useful for treating many of our most
common health and beauty problems.  A large number of pure essential oils have natural anti bacterial
and antiseptic properties.  Dr Jean Valnet a French medical expert on Aromatherapy, writes at length
about some of the most remarkable feats that essential oils can perform.  He says that a simple solution
of thyme essential oil in water at a concentration of only 5% of the oil can kill dysentry bacillus in two minutes.
 
The plant essences offer a wide range of therapeutic properties.  Lavender or rosemary, can be used to
soothe or stimulate the nervous system, tea tree to speed wound healing, juniper to detoxify, the system,
ylang ylang to lower blood pressure, eucalyptus to relieve asthma, and fennel to regulate hormones -just to
name a few.
 
Essential oils are useful in treating stress related problems, ranging from tension headaches, insomnia and
certain skin disorders.  We rarely, realise how the fragrances which surround us affect the way we feel. 
 We perfume our bodies and scent our rooms with fresh flowers because they, give us intense pleasure. 
We never stop to wonder  why.
 
The reasons for this response are -yet unclear, but it is known that odour molecules are perceived by, thousands
of tiny, nerve cells in the nose and these nerves are connected to that part of the brain which is concerned
with emotional drive, creativity  and sexual behaviour. That is why, certain perfumes will make us feel happy,
and unpleasant smells such as petrol fumes, can induce depression.
 

HOW TO USE THE ESSENTIAL OILS

Because of their potency, essential oils are usually diluted and mixed with a cold pressed oil, such as
almond oil, before being applied to the skin in the form of a massage.
 
You may decide to turn the bathroom into a luxury, treatment centre by using aromatic oils in the bath water
to soothe, refresh, relax or enhance a particular mood.  In this way they are able to enter the blood stream and
are transported to the bodies organs.  Oils can also be burned like incense or directly inhaled through a
steam vaporiser.
 
The plant essences used in Aromatherapy, are extracted from flowers, leaves  fruits, woods. spices and
resins and are usually, extracted through steam distillation.  Some essential oils may take several tonnes
of plant material to make little more than a litre of essential oil.  It is vital that pure unadulterated essential
oils are used for Aromatherapy, purposes.

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