Are there any side effects or interactions?
Tea and tincture of hyssop are unlikely to cause adverse effects.9 Although, the
volatile oil, particularly its constituent pinocamphone, has been reported to cause seizures
in laboratory animals as well as in humans when taking more than 10 drops in a day or a child
taking 2–3 drops over several days.10 For this reason, the volatile oil
should be used with extreme caution and is not recommended for those with epilepsy or any other seizure disorder. The herb is not
recommended during pregnancy.11
At the time of writing, there were no well-known drug interactions
with hyssop.
References
1. Castleman M. The Healing Herbs. New York: Bantam, 1991,
323–7.
2. Weiss RF. Herbal Medicine. Gothenburg, Sweden: Ab Arcanum and
Beaconsfield, UK: Beaconsfield Publishers Ltd, 1985, 206.
3. Castleman M. The Healing Herbs. New York: Bantam, 1991,
323–7.
4. Gruenwald J, Brendler T, Jaenicke C (eds). PDR for Herbal
Medicines. Montvale, NJ: Medical Economics, 2000, 414–5.
5. Blumenthal M, Busse WR, Goldberg A, et al. (eds). The Complete
German Commission E Monographs: Therapeutic Guide to Herbal Medicines. Austin: American
Botanical Council and Boston: Integrative Medicine Communications, 1998, 338–9.
6. Gollapudi S, Sharma HA, Aggarwal S, et al. Isolation of a previously
unidentified polysaccharide (MAR-10) from Hyssop officinalis that exhibits strong activity
against human immunodeficiency virus type 1. Biochem Biophys Res Commun
1995;210:145–51.
7. Kreis W, Kaplan MH, Freeman J, et al. Inhibition of HIV replication by
Hyssop officinalis extracts. Antiviral Res 1990;14:323–37.
8. Hoffmann D. The New Holistic Herbal. New York: Barnes &
Noble, 1990, 207.
9. Blumenthal M, Busse WR, Goldberg A, et al. (eds). The Complete
German Commission E Monographs: Therapeutic Guide to Herbal Medicines. Austin: American
Botanical Council and Boston: Integrative Medicine Communications, 1998, 338–9.
10. Tisserand R, Balacs T. Essential Oil Safety: A Guide for Health
Care Professionals. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone, 1995, 67.
11. McGuffin M, Hobbs C, Upton R, Goldberg A (eds). American Herbal
Product Association’s Botanical Safety Handbook. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, 1997,
63.
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purposes only. It is based on scientific studies (human, animal, or in vitro),
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