Halifax Courier

Folk medicine mystery - why dock leaves help nettle stings

- By Dr Keith Souter

SINCE THE easing of lockdown, I have been helping out on my daughter’s allotment.

One particular patch had become very overgrown and my task has been to clear it up.

Weeds, brambles and nettles have had to be dealt with.

Nettles are a real nuisance and nettle stings can be quite painful.

The thing is that you only have to brush against them and you get the instantane­ous burning pain of the sting.

The instinctiv­e thing is to reach for the nearest dock leaf and apply possibly the oldest piece of folk medicine that everyone knows about.

It always seems to work. Or does it?

The scientist in me tells me that it is unlikely to and it is simply a placebo. So, I did a little research and began by putting nettles under my microscope.

The stems and the leaves are covered in tiny hairs, which are actually delicate tubes which have a silica tip.

When you brush against them the tip is fractured, like glass and the hair becomes like a needle that injects chemicals into the skin.

This is mainly formic acid, but also includes histamine, acetylchol­ine, serotonin, leukotrien­es and moroidin.

These immediatel­y irritate, causing the burning sting and the raised bumps of nettle rash.

The scientific Latin name for the stinging nettle is

Urtica dioica.

Interestin­gly, the Romans used it to treat rheumatism and arthritis by thrashing affected joints with nettles, a process they called urtication.

A principle belief of early medicine was that nature allowed healing plants to grow where they would be needed.

So that was the reason people believed that dock leaves tended to grow near nettles.

Various explanatio­ns about why the dock leaf works have been put forward, including that the sap contains an antihistam­ine, but I have not been able to find any research to back that up.

Another is that the sap is alkaline and counteract­s the formic acid.

That is not correct, since the sap is actually slightly acidic.

It may be that it is cooling and soothes as it evaporates, or that the rubbing is a counter-irritant that overrides the itch.

Or it could simply be a placebo after all.

But other leaves I’ve tried just don’t seem to work, so

I’ll be sticking with the dock leaves.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom