Comfrey root
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Comfrey Root
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Information About Comfrey root:
Common Uses: As a cell proliferant, Comfrey is used externally as a poultice, fomentation or liniment to speed the healing of wounded tissue, broken bones, and sprains. It is traditionally used internally as an anti-inflammatory and to soothe and heal GI tract tissue.(Suggested only for external use unless under treatment of herbalist or knowledgeable health care provider)
Suggested Uses: Recommended for external use only.
Traditional Uses: Other traditional uses: Ulcers, fractures, bruises, diarrhea, cough, bronchitis, gum disease.
Herbal Anecdote: Formerly country people cultivated Comfrey in their gardens for its virtue in wound healing, and the many local names of the plant testify to its long reputation as a healing herb - in the Middle Ages it was a famous remedy for broken bones. The very name, Comfrey, is a corruption of con firma, in allusion to the uniting of bones it was thought to effect, and the botanical name, Symphytum, is derived from the Greek symphyo (to unite).
![]() | 500mL mL - Comfrey root (Symphytum off.) Formerly country people cultivated Comfrey in their gardens for its virtue in wound healing, and the many local names of the plant testify to its long reputation as a healing herb - in the Middle Ages it was a famous remedy for broken bones. The very name, Comfrey, is a corruption of con firma, in allusion to the uniting of bones it was thought to effect, and the botanical name, Symphytum, is derived from the Greek symphyo (to unite). |
| Base Composition: Grain alcohol (organic, pure), Distilled water | |



