Main page content
Chamomile (Matricaria chamomilla β German Chamomile; Chamaemelum nobile β Roman Chamomile) is one of the oldest and most widely used medicinal herbs in the world, with documented use dating back to ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Its name comes from the Greek "chamaimelon" meaning "earth apple" β for the sweet apple-like fragrance of its flowers. Today, Chamomile is the most consumed herbal tea globally. Its calming, anti-inflammatory, and digestive properties are well established in modern pharmacology: the primary active compound, apigenin, binds to benzodiazepine receptors producing mild sedation; the essential oil (bisabolol, chamazulene) provides powerful anti-inflammatory and anti-spasmodic effects. Chamomile is effective for anxiety, insomnia, digestive disorders, and skin conditions.
Key Benefits of Chamomile
- Apigenin binds benzodiazepine receptors β gentle anxiolytic and sleep support
- Anti-inflammatory via chamazulene and bisabolol in the essential oil
- Anti-spasmodic β relaxes smooth muscle in digestive and respiratory tracts
- Digestive tonic β relieves IBS, gas, bloating, and nervous stomach
- Reduces cortisol and anxiety in clinical trials
- Skin anti-inflammatory β topically applied for eczema, wounds, inflammation
- Safe for infants and children β used for colic, teething, and sleep
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Perspective
MΗ JΓΊ (ζ―θ) β German Chamomile has a TCM counterpart in GΔn JΓΊ (ηθ β Sweet Chrysanthemum), which shares its cool, Liver-calming, and eye-brightening properties. In modern integrative TCM, Chamomile occupies the Heart-calming, Liver Qi-regulating, and digestive-harmonizing category.
- Chinese Name: MΗ JΓΊ (ζ―θ) β German Chamomile; related to GΔn JΓΊ (ηθ) β Sweet Chrysanthemum
- Nature & Flavor: Cool; Sweet, Slightly Bitter
- Meridians Entered: Heart, Liver, Stomach
- Key TCM Actions: Calms the Heart Shen and reduces anxiety β apigenin binds benzodiazepine sites; clears Liver Heat and subdues Liver Yang Rising; harmonizes Liver-Stomach disharmony β relieves "nervous stomach," nausea, and digestive upset from stress; anti-spasmodic for smooth muscle; mildly clears Wind-Heat from the eyes and skin; promotes restful sleep.
Chamomile exemplifies the TCM concept of Gan Wei Bu He (Liver-Stomach Disharmony) β the pattern where emotional stress (Liver Qi stagnation) overacts on the digestive system (Stomach), causing nausea, bloating, and appetite loss alongside anxiety and insomnia. Chamomile addresses this axis from both ends: calming the Liver (reducing the stressor) and harmonizing the Stomach (soothing the symptom). This is why chamomile tea before bed has been used across every culture with access to it β it simultaneously calms the mind and settles the digestive system, the two most common barriers to restful sleep.
Classic Chamomile Calming Tea: Steep 1β2 tbsp dried chamomile flowers in hot water for 10 minutes (covered to preserve volatile oils). Add honey and lemon. Drink 1β3 cups daily. For insomnia: drink 1 large cup 1 hour before bed. As a tincture: 2β3 ml, 3 times daily. Combine with Passionflower, Lemon Balm, and Skullcap for a complete anxiety-and-sleep formula.
Before you use this: Avoid if allergic to ragweed, chrysanthemum, or daisy family plants (rare but documented). May enhance effects of blood thinners (anti-platelet flavonoids). Do not combine with sedative medications without supervision. Generally considered safe during pregnancy in culinary amounts. Avoid in known allergy. Safe for children in appropriate doses.