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Lemon Balm (Melissa officinalis) is a fragrant member of the mint family with a long history as one of Europe's most beloved nervine herbs โ plants that specifically nourish, calm, and restore the nervous system. The name "Melissa" comes from the Greek for "honeybee," as bees are powerfully attracted to its flowers. Used by Paracelsus, Avicenna, and generations of European herbalists, Lemon Balm was traditionally called "the gladdening herb" for its gentle mood-lifting and anxiety-calming effects. Modern research has identified rosmarinic acid, flavonoids, and volatile oils (particularly citronellal and linalool) as the primary compounds responsible for its remarkable effects on GABA receptors, monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibition, and thyroid regulation.
Key Benefits of Lemon Balm
- Anxiolytic โ reduces anxiety by inhibiting GABA transaminase (increases GABA levels)
- Antidepressant effect โ mild MAO inhibition improves serotonin and dopamine availability
- Improves sleep quality and reduces time to fall asleep
- Antiviral โ rosmarinic acid inhibits herpes simplex virus (HSV-1, HSV-2)
- Gentle digestive relaxant โ reduces nervous stomach and IBS symptoms
- Mild thyroid-regulating effect (useful in mild hyperthyroidism)
- Cognitive enhancement โ improves memory and calmness under stress
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Perspective
Xiฤng Fฤng Cวo (้ฆ่่) โ Lemon Balm is known in TCM as "Fragrant Bee Herb" and integrates into the Heart-calming, Liver Qi-regulating category of aromatic nervine herbs. While not a classical major herb, it is used in modern TCM practice and integrated into Shen-calming formulas.
- Chinese Name: Xiฤng Fฤng Cวo (้ฆ่่) โ "Fragrant Bee Herb" / Melissa
- Nature & Flavor: Cool; Sweet, Slightly Bitter
- Meridians Entered: Heart, Liver, Stomach
- Key TCM Actions: Calms the Heart and settles the Shen โ reduces palpitations, anxiety, and insomnia; regulates Liver Qi stagnation (the primary cause of anxiety from a TCM perspective); harmonizes Stomach Qi disturbed by Liver overacting; mildly clears Heart Heat; thyroid-regulating (reduces TSH โ calms Liver overcontrolling the Pituitary axis); uplifts the spirit (Shen brightening).
Lemon Balm is the premier Liver-Heart axis herb in Western phytotherapy โ and this concept maps precisely onto TCM's most common anxiety and mood pattern: Gฤn Qรฌ Yรน Jiรฉ Bร n Xฤซn Huว Shร ng Yรกn (Liver Qi Stagnation with Heart Fire Rising) โ presenting as anxiety, palpitations, insomnia, and emotional volatility. Lemon Balm simultaneously moves Liver Qi stagnation (aromatic pungency) and calms Heart Fire (sweet-cool moistening) โ addressing both the root (Liver) and the branch (Heart-Shen) of the most prevalent emotional pattern in modern clinical practice.
Lemon Balm Calm Tea: Steep 2 tbsp fresh or 1 tbsp dried lemon balm in hot water for 10 minutes (do not boil โ preserves volatile oils). Add honey. Drink 1โ2 cups daily, especially in the afternoon or evening. As a tincture: 2โ3 ml, 2โ3 times daily. For anxiety: combine with Passionflower and Skullcap. For sleep: combine with Chamomile, Valerian Root, and Passionflower.
Before you use this: Avoid if you have hypothyroidism โ Lemon Balm reduces thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels. Do not combine with thyroid medications without medical supervision. May enhance the effects of sedatives and sleep medications โ use cautiously if on these drugs. Generally safe during pregnancy in culinary amounts. Avoid medicinal doses during pregnancy without guidance.