Diluted with a suitable carrier oil, it is used externally in traditional medicine for abrasions, anxiety, bronchitis, catarrh, coughs, cuts, ringworm, scabies, stress-related conditions and wounds.
en.wikipedia.org Eaten raw it can also be effective in rheumatic conditions, catarrh, excessive sweating and tummy upsets.
www.theecologist.org Most people -- including many doctors -- think of catarrh as excess mucus that collects at the back of the throat.
www.dailymail.co.uk After three or four days, he who is wrong shows it by suffering some illness - ulcers, or catarrh, or malignant fever - while the other remains in perfect health.
en.wikipedia.org Gastrointestinal catarrh is usually present, and hematemesis may occur.
en.wikipedia.org