Botanical Profile
Urtica dioica L. — Leaf (primary); root (prostate-specific); seed (adrenal/renal tonic). Native to Europe, Asia, and northern Africa; naturalized throughout temperate North America. Found growing wild in rich, moist soils near waterways, disturbed ground, and forest edges.
Fresh leaf: bright green, slightly fuzzy with visible stinging hairs. Flavor when cooked is mild, green, spinach-like with slight mineral earthiness. Dried leaf: deep green color, hay-like aroma with green vegetal notes. Infusion is dark green, deeply mineral-tasting, almost broth-like in a long infusion.
Stinging nettle is an abundant wild plant with minimal adulteration risk for leaf material. The primary quality concern is harvest timing — post-flowering nettle leaves develop cystoliths (calcium carbonate concretions) that can irritate kidneys with long-term use.
Active Compound Profile
Long infusion (overnight steep): Extended steeping (4–8 hours) in just-boiled water maximizes extraction of minerals, chlorophyll, and flavonoids from the tough leaf matrix. Short steeping (5–10 minutes) extracts only a fraction of the mineral content.
Mechanism of Action
What It Moves in Your Labs
| Biomarker | Direction | Target | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| Serum Ferritin | ↑ Increase | 60–90 ng/mL (optimal for thyroid function) | Bioavailable iron from nettle leaf; chlorophyll supports hemoglobin synthesis; iron is a cofactor for thyroid peroxidase |
| Serum Iron / TIBC | ↑ Increase iron; ↓ TIBC | Iron 60–170 μg/dL; TIBC normalized | Direct iron supplementation from plant source; vitamin C co-administration enhances non-heme iron absorption |
| hs-CRP | ↓ Decrease | <1.0 mg/L | Quercetin-mediated NF-κB inhibition; mast cell stabilization reduces inflammatory mediator release |
| RBC Magnesium | ↑ Increase | 5.0–6.5 mg/dL | Bioavailable magnesium from long nettle infusion; addresses the widespread magnesium depletion in hypothyroid patients |
Extraction & Preparation
Long infusion (overnight, boiling water): Maximum mineral extraction (4–10x more than quick steep); good flavonoid extraction; deep green color indicates chlorophyll
Dosing Framework
Nettle infusion can be consumed throughout the day with or between meals — it is a nutritive food-herb with no significant timing restrictions.
Synergy Partners
THE MINERAL REPLETION INFUSION
Components: Stinging Nettle (leaf) + Oatstraw (aerial parts) + Red Raspberry Leaf (leaf) + Lemon juice (vitamin C) · Multi-pathway convergence: Iron repletion for thyroid peroxidase function (nettle + vitamin C) + calcium-magnesium optimization (all three herbs) + nervous system mineral support (oatstraw) + anti-inflammatory flavonoids (nettle quercetin) + uterine tonic (raspberry leaf) · The Mineral Repletion Infusion addresses the widespread mineral deficiency pattern in Hashimoto's hypothyroidism through food-grade herbal infusion rather than synthetic supplements. This is mineral supplementation through traditional herbal nutrition. · Practical integration: Overnight infusion of 0.5 oz nettle + 0.25 oz oatstraw + 0.25 oz raspberry leaf in 1 quart boiling water. Strain in morning; add lemon juice; drink throughout the day. Daily use for 3–6 months minimum.
Contraindications & Interactions
Evidence Base
Evidence Gaps
The highest-value research gap for Meridian Medica: no published RCT has evaluated daily nettle leaf infusion (long infusion method) on iron status (serum ferritin, hemoglobin) and thyroid function markers in iron-deficient Hashimoto's women. Given that iron deficiency impairs thyroid peroxidase function and that nettle is one of the richest plant sources of bioavailable iron, a study measuring iron markers and thyroid function (TSH, free T4, TPO antibodies) before and after 3 months of daily nettle infusion would directly test a fundamental Meridian Medica nutritional repletion strategy.
Stinging nettle leaf has relatively low adulteration risk due to its abundance and low cost:
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
Stinging nettle appears in the following Meridian Medica protocol contexts: