Goldenseal & Echinacea Herbal Supplement
Golden Blend
| $13.95 | 100 Count Bottle VP773R | Retails for $16.90 | |
| $67.99 | 5 Bottles 100 Count Each | Retails for $84.50 | |
| $139.99 | 12 Bottles 100 Count Each | Retails for $202.80 | |
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Display An Attractive 12 Bottle Case On Your Counter for Patient/Client Convenience. Additional Wholesale Discounts Available |
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Echinacea Root - 225 mg. Goldenseal Root - 225 mg.
We’ve blended 2 of the world’s most popular herbs into one easy-to-take capsule formulation for convenient dietary supplementation.
Other Ingredients: gelatin (capsule shell)
Contains freshly-milled herb powder from the world's finest crops, without the addition of sugar, starch, salt, preservatives, fillers, or binders.
Find Echinacea and Goldenseal Supplements at a Featured Merchant (below)
Plains Indians used echinacea to treat toothaches, sore throats, insect bites, snake bites, wounds, mumps, smallpox and measles. The settlers quickly adopted the therapeutic use of the plant, and since that time it has become one of the top selling herbs in the United States. In the past century, hundreds of scientific articles have been written about echinacea. Most of the research during the past 10 years has focused on the immunostimulant properties of the plant.
Echinacea Cuts the Chance of Catching a Cold
A comprehensive meta-analysis was done at the University of Connecticut by researchers studying the nutritional value and health benefits of Echinacea Root supplementation.
Meta-analyses combine the findings of large numbers of studies to filter out trends that might not be visible individually. The research team looked at all the randomized, placebo-controlled, peer-reviewed studies available and by combining their data, found that Echinacea reduced the incidence of contracting the common cold and its duration.
Americans catch nearly a billion colds each year and spend about $1.5 billion on doctor's visits and another $2 billion on non-prescription cough and cold treatments. With interest in herbal supplementation for health and wellness on the rise, The Nutrition Business Journal now estimates Echinacea supplement sales in the U.S. were $130 millionannually for the past 2 years.
Echinacea is derived from the Purple Cone Flower, which is native to Eastern North America and it is believed to have immuno-stimulative properties but more research is needed to determine what those are.

