Monograph #021

Celery

Apium graveolens · Garden Celery · Wild Celery · Smallage (wild form)
★★★☆☆ Evidence Vascular Smooth Muscle Relaxation / Antihypertensive NF-κB / Anti-Inflammatory Stalks

Celery is a culinary vegetable and traditional medicinal herb used at food-level doses. This section uses the hybrid Clinical Observations + Biomarker Targets format.

01 Identity 02 Compounds 03 Pathways 04 Biomarkers 05 Extraction 07 Dosing 08 Synergies 09 Safety 11 Evidence 12 Protocol

Botanical Profile

Apium graveolens L. — Stalks (fresh), seeds (dried), root (dried). Native to Mediterranean and Middle East; cultivated globally as vegetable and medicinal herb

Stalks: crisp, watery, mildly bitter-saline with distinctive aromatic note. Seeds: intensely aromatic, warm, slightly bitter, peppery. Root: earthy, dense, concentrated celery flavor. Aroma dominated by phthalides (especially sedanolide and 3-n-butylphthalide).

Species Integrity

Celery seed adulteration is uncommon but substitution with Ajowan (Trachyspermum ammi) or other Apiaceae seeds occurs in bulk trade. Ajowan is more intensely thymol-dominant and quite different pharmacologically.

Active Compound Profile

Phthalides (3-n-butylphthalide, sedanolide, sedanenolide)
0.1–3% in seed oil; trace in fresh stalk
Vascular smooth muscle relaxation; GABA-A modulation (sedative); antiplatelet activity; reduces hepatic lipid synthesis
Apigenin (flavone)
~4.5mg per 100g fresh stalk
Flavone with potent anti-inflammatory (NF-κB and COX-2 inhibition), anxiolytic (GABA-A binding), and antioxidant activity; demonstrated thyroid peroxidase modulating effects
Luteolin
~3mg per 100g fresh stalk
Anti-inflammatory flavone; inhibits histamine release from mast cells; NF-κB suppression; antiproliferative
Vitamin K1 (phylloquinone)
~29mcg per 100g fresh stalk
Cofactor for coagulation factors II, VII, IX, X; bone matrix protein (osteocalcin) carboxylation; vascular calcification prevention
Potassium
~260mg per 100g fresh stalk
Electrolyte; counters sodium-induced hypertension; supports renal fluid regulation; cardiac muscle function
Folate (B9)
~36mcg per 100g fresh stalk
One-carbon metabolism; homocysteine methylation; DNA synthesis; essential for thyroid hormone synthesis pathway
Absorption

Fat co-administration: Phthalides and fat-soluble flavones (apigenin, luteolin) require dietary fat for optimal absorption

Mechanism of Action

★★★☆☆ Vascular Smooth Muscle Relaxation / Antihypertensive Phthalides (3-n-butylphthalide, sedanolide) directly relax vascular smooth muscle via calcium channel modulation and increase vasodilatory prostaglandins; potassium content supports natriuresis
★★★☆☆ NF-κB / Anti-Inflammatory Apigenin and luteolin inhibit NF-κB nuclear translocation, reducing TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1β, and COX-2 expression
★★★☆☆ GABA-A Modulation / Anxiolytic Apigenin is a well-characterized GABA-A receptor ligand (benzodiazepine binding site partial agonist); phthalides have sedative properties via GABA potentiation
★★★☆☆ Uric Acid / Xanthine Oxidase Inhibition Celery seed extracts inhibit xanthine oxidase and promote renal uric acid clearance via mild diuretic and uricosuric activity
★★★☆☆ One-Carbon Methylation (Folate) Folate from celery supports homocysteine-to-methionine conversion; contributes to DNA methylation and thyroid hormone synthesis enzyme support

What It Moves in Your Labs

BiomarkerDirectionTargetMechanism
Systolic Blood Pressure ↓ Decrease <120 mmHg Phthalide-mediated vascular smooth muscle relaxation; potassium-induced natriuresis
Serum Uric Acid ↓ Decrease <5.5 mg/dL Xanthine oxidase inhibition; uricosuric effect of seed compounds
hs-CRP ↓ Decrease <1.0 mg/L Apigenin and luteolin NF-κB inhibition reduces systemic inflammatory marker production
Homocysteine ↓ Decrease <8 umol/L Dietary folate contribution to one-carbon methylation cycle

Extraction & Preparation

Fresh raw stalk: 100% flavones, potassium, folate, phthalides (trace)

Solubility · Lipophilic; fat-soluble; moderate ethanol solubility; very low water solubilityMenstruum · 60% ethanol (seeds); 40% ethanol (stalk/root)Plant material · Dried celery seeds (crushed) or fresh celery rootMaceration time · 4–6 weeks (seeds); 2–4 weeks (fresh root)Ratio · 1:5 (dried seed); 1:2 (fresh root)

Dosing Framework

Consume raw celery with fat (olive oil, nut butter) at meals for maximum flavone and phthalide absorption.

Dose 1
Culinary: 4–8 fresh stalks daily
Primary recommendation; unlimited food-level use; pair with fat for flavone absorption
Dose 3
Celery seed extract (standardized): 75mg, 3x daily
Dose used in Powanda (2012) RCT showing significant BP reduction

Synergy Partners

★★★☆☆ Parsley (Petroselinum crispum) Parsley is the highest dietary source of apigenin; combined with celery's luteolin and apigenin creates powerful NF-κB inhibition; shared diuretic activity; complementary flavone spectrum
★★★☆☆ Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) Dandelion leaf potassium-sparing diuretic complements celery seed antihypertensive; combined natriuretic effect without potassium depletion
★★★☆☆ Lemon (Citrus limon) Citrus flavonoids (hesperidin, diosmin) synergize with celery flavones for vascular support; vitamin C enhances iron absorption from celery; acid environment improves mineral bioavailability
★★★☆☆ Turmeric (Curcuma longa) Curcumin + apigenin provide complementary NF-κB inhibition through different binding mechanisms; combined anti-inflammatory effect for Hashimoto's autoimmunity support
★★★☆☆ Ginger (Zingiber officinale) Gingerols add COX-2 inhibition to celery's NF-κB-targeted flavones; warming action complements celery's cooling diuretic nature; digestive synergy
Signature Stack

THE DIURETIC TRIO
Components: Celery (stalk + seed) + Parsley (leaf) + Dandelion (leaf) · Multi-pathway convergence: Phthalide vasodilation (celery seed) + Potassium-sparing diuresis (dandelion) + Apigenin NF-κB inhibition (celery + parsley) + Uric acid clearance (celery seed) · The Diuretic Trio addresses the fluid retention, subclinical hypertension, and hyperuricemia common in hypothyroid patients. All three plants grow easily in Zone 9a SE Texas gardens. · Practical integration: Combine all three as fresh juice, in salads, or as a daily seed-and-leaf tea. The combined diuretic effect supports kidney function and reduces cardiovascular risk load.

Contraindications & Interactions

Minor Warfarin / anticoagulant interaction Celery is a moderate source of vitamin K1. Large or suddenly increased intake can affect INR. Consistent daily intake at stable levels is manageable with monitoring.
Minor Furosemide / thiazide diuretic interaction Celery seed has additive diuretic effects with pharmaceutical diuretics. Combined use may cause excessive fluid and electrolyte loss.
Avoid Pregnancy (seed and root, medicinal doses) Celery seed in medicinal doses has uterine-stimulating properties and is classified as AHPA Class 2b for pregnancy. Culinary stalk consumption is safe and traditional.
Minor Furanocoumarin photosensitivity Celery (especially roots and seeds) contains psoralen and bergapten, photosensitizing furanocoumarins. Handling large amounts of fresh celery in sunlight can cause phytophotodermatitis.
Minor Celery allergy (Apiaceae cross-reactivity) Celery allergy is one of the most common food allergies in Central Europe. Cross-reactivity with birch pollen, mugwort, and other Apiaceae (carrot, parsley) is well-documented (celery-birch-mugwort-spice syndrome).

Evidence Base

★★★☆☆ Antihypertensive Effect (Celery Seed Extract) Moderate — Human RCT data supporting BP reduction; mechanism well-characterized
★★★☆☆ Anti-Gout / Uric Acid Reduction Moderate — Traditional use strongly supported; mechanistic data solid; few RCTs
★★★☆☆ Anti-Inflammatory (Apigenin/Luteolin) Moderate — Strong mechanistic data; human dietary epidemiology supportive; limited RCTs for celery specifically
★★☆☆☆ Anxiolytic / GABA Modulation (Apigenin) Preliminary — Strong preclinical data; limited human trials at food doses
★★★☆☆ Diuretic Effect Moderate — Well-documented traditional use; mechanistic plausibility; limited formal RCTs

Evidence Gaps

The highest-value research gap for Meridian Medica: no published RCT has evaluated daily celery consumption (stalk + seed) specifically in hypothyroid or Hashimoto's women. Given celery's rich apigenin content — a compound with demonstrated thyroid peroxidase-modulating activity in vitro — the potential for apigenin to affect TPO antibody levels or thyroid function in Hashimoto's patients is clinically significant and completely unstudied at dietary doses.

Quality Alert

Celery seed adulteration risks are low compared to many spices. Primary concerns:

Protocol Integration

Layer 1: Hypothalamic / Autonomic — HPA axis, circadian rhythm, stress response

Layer 2: Systemic Nutritional Repletion — Micronutrient optimization, antioxidant defense

Layer 3: Gut Permeability / Microbiome — Tight junction repair, motility, SIBO management

Recipe Integration
Daily anti-inflammatory salad base
3–4 stalks per serving
Feed the Markers

Celery appears in the following Meridian Medica protocol contexts: