Well-being through plant substances

Herbal medicine and the health-promoting use of plants are centuries old. If they were temporarily pushed into the background, it was not because of a lack of effectiveness, but because they were no longer fashionable.

Our body consists of 50 billion cells that must function in harmony if we want to stay healthy. When used skillfully, medicinal plants harmonize, stimulate, strengthen, or inhibit different cell groups, thus promoting a return to coordinated interaction. Plants utilize all cell signaling pathways. Using the entire plant creates a spectrum of effects where the amount of individual active ingredients is not important, but rather a harmonious, synergistic composition.

Herbal medicine and the health-promoting use of plants date back centuries. If they were temporarily pushed into the background, it was not due to a lack of effectiveness, but because they were no longer fashionable. Secondary plant substances are of particular value. The term 'secondary' is not due to a lack of importance, but rather because these substances were discovered after the primary plant substances (proteins, fats, carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals). Experts estimate the number of secondary plant substances at 50,000 to 100,000 compounds. The best-known group is the antioxidant polyphenols.

Every plant is its own, fully adapted version of survival. Highland plants, for example, require the ability to store minerals and amino acids to survive; swamp-dwelling plants must adapt to defend themselves against fungi. This ability to adapt to diverse environmental requirements requires a range of nutrients in every plant: vitamins, minerals, trace elements, and amino acids – precisely the same nutrients the human body needs.

The herbal product line is a standalone product line, each consisting of balanced, multi-ingredient herbal mixtures. Each product can be used as a standalone basic preparation or in addition to the orthomolecular Allvital products. The products in both lines mutually support each other by increasing the absorption of the active ingredients. This is achieved through the enzyme complexes contained in the plants. The recipes in the herbal product line consist of ingredients that reinforce each other. This means that the individual ingredients are effective even in small quantities. A good herbal mixture does not have a one-sided effect, but rather supports the entire system.