Botanical Profile
Origanum vulgare L. — Aerial parts (leaves and flowering tops). Native to Mediterranean region and western Asia; naturalized worldwide in temperate climates. Greek/Turkish oregano (O. vulgare subsp. hirtum) has the highest essential oil content.
Leaves: pungent, warm, slightly bitter, with a sharp camphoraceous-thymol aroma. Flavor intensifies when dried. Essential oil: extremely potent, hot, and phenolic — must be diluted. Greek oregano subspecies is more intensely aromatic than common oregano. Fresh leaves have a brighter, less pungent character than dried.
Origanum vulgare is a polymorphic species with wide variation in carvacrol and thymol content. Mediterranean subspecies (O. vulgare subsp. hirtum) contain 60–80% carvacrol in essential oil; northern European populations may contain minimal carvacrol.
Active Compound Profile
Fat co-administration for essential oil compounds: Carvacrol and thymol are lipophilic; fat vehicle enhances absorption and reduces GI mucosal irritation from phenolic compounds
Mechanism of Action
What It Moves in Your Labs
| Biomarker | Direction | Target | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lactulose Breath Test (SIBO) | Normalize | Negative (no hydrogen or methane spike) | Carvacrol/thymol antimicrobial activity eradicates SIBO-associated bacterial overgrowth in small intestine |
| hs-CRP | ↓ Decrease | <1.0 mg/L | Multi-compound NF-κB inhibition (carvacrol + rosmarinic acid + beta-caryophyllene) reduces systemic inflammatory markers |
| Stool Candida culture | ↓ Decrease | Negative or minimal | Carvacrol disrupts Candida cell membrane integrity; sustained antifungal pressure from daily exposure |
| TPO Antibodies | ↓ Decrease | <35 IU/mL | Indirect: gut pathogen clearance and reduced gut permeability remove autoimmune triggers; anti-inflammatory effects reduce immune activation |
Extraction & Preparation
Fresh herb (raw or lightly heated): 100% all compounds including volatile essential oils
Dosing Framework
Culinary oregano: use with any meal; no timing restrictions relative to thyroid medication.
Synergy Partners
THE GUT ANTIMICROBIAL PROTOCOL
Components: Oregano Oil (carvacrol) + Berberine Herb (barberry or Oregon grape) + Garlic (allicin) + Neem (optional, for parasites) · Multi-pathway convergence: Bacterial membrane disruption (carvacrol + allicin) + Intracellular target inhibition (berberine) + Biofilm disruption (carvacrol) + Efflux pump inhibition (berberine) · The Gut Antimicrobial Protocol is the herbal equivalent of rifaximin-based SIBO treatment, with evidence of equal or superior efficacy (Chedid et al. 2014). This protocol addresses the dysbiosis layer of Hashimoto's by clearing pathogenic overgrowth before rebuilding with probiotics. · Practical integration: 4–6 week protocol: Oregano oil capsules (200mg 3x/day) + berberine (500mg 3x/day) + raw garlic (2 cloves/day). Follow with 4–8 weeks intensive probiotic rebuilding. Monitor with breath testing and stool analysis.
Contraindications & Interactions
Evidence Base
Evidence Gaps
The highest-value research gap for Meridian Medica: no published RCT has evaluated the impact of herbal antimicrobial SIBO protocols (including oregano oil) on Hashimoto's autoimmune markers (TPO/TgAb). Given the growing evidence for SIBO as an autoimmune trigger via molecular mimicry and gut permeability, a trial measuring TPO antibodies, thyroid function, and intestinal permeability markers before and after oregano oil-based SIBO eradication in Hashimoto's patients with confirmed SIBO would directly test the gut-thyroid autoimmune axis hypothesis.
Oregano has significant adulteration issues, particularly in dried and powdered forms:
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
Oregano appears in the following Meridian Medica protocol contexts: