
Across the Appalachian highlands, the Cherokee, Iroquois, and Mohawk nations all independently identified the same striking plant for the treatment of suffocating cough and asthmatic attack. Verbascum thapsus — common mullein — grows wild from Pennsylvania to Georgia, sending up tall stalks crowned with bright yellow flower spikes and broad fuzzy gray-green leaves so soft early colonists called them “cowboy toilet paper.” Beneath the humble appearance is one of the most documented natural bronchodilators ever identified.
Native American healers dried the leaves and burned them in clay pipes for sufferers of asthma, bronchitis, and pneumonia — instructing them to inhale the smoke deeply. Within minutes, even the most severe wheezing patients reported a sudden opening of the airway. Spanish and English colonists adopted the practice across the eastern colonies. By the 1800s, mullein was the standard pulmonary medicine of rural America.
Then in the 1940s, American pharmaceutical companies introduced inhaled albuterol — a beta-2 adrenergic agonist that forces bronchial smooth muscle to relax through catecholamine signaling. Albuterol works fast and effectively, but at a measurable cost: rapid heart rate, hand tremor, nervousness, downregulation of beta receptors over time (so it works less well the more it is used), and a documented increase in asthma-related deaths in long-term heavy users.
Mullein operates through a completely different mechanism. The leaves contain two active compound families. Verbascoside (a polyphenol) acts directly on bronchial smooth muscle, reducing acetylcholine-mediated constriction without touching the adrenergic system. Saponins emulsify and thin mucus, allowing trapped phlegm to be cleared from deep airways. Mucilage soothes irritated tissue at the surface.
The result is bronchial relaxation without heart stimulation, mucus clearance without dependency, and tissue repair without downregulation. Patients can use mullein chronically — for years — without losing efficacy. They cannot say the same for albuterol.
In 2012, a study in Phytotherapy Research measured significant bronchodilator effects in mullein extract using standardized pulmonary function tests. Subsequent investigations have catalogued additional antiviral activity against respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and influenza A — a profile no pharmaceutical bronchodilator possesses.
The American pharmaceutical asthma industry is worth $26 billion. Mullein grows wild along every American highway. Your pulmonologist will not mention it. Native healers wrote no patents.
Open the bronchial tree:
– Tincture or Tea, Not Capsule: Mullein’s active compounds are most effectively extracted in either an alcohol-based tincture or a hot-water steeped tea. Capsulated dried powder loses most of the volatile bronchodilator activity. The traditional Appalachian preparation: 1-2 tablespoons of dried leaf steeped in 8 oz boiling water for 15 minutes, strained through a coffee filter (the leaf hairs irritate the throat), then taken twice daily for active bronchial symptoms.
– The 2:00 PM Acute Window: For acute bronchial constriction, a 1 oz dose of glycerin-based mullein tincture acts within 10-15 minutes — fast enough to abort a developing wheezing episode. Keep a 4 oz bottle accessible during ragweed and cold seasons.
– The Marshmallow Root Pairing: Mullein opens the airway; marshmallow root (Althaea officinalis) coats and protects the inflamed mucosal lining. Traditional pulmonary herbalism uses them together. Drinking mullein tea blended with 1 teaspoon of marshmallow root produces what bronchologists privately call the “natural inhaler effect” — airway dilation plus mucosal recovery in a single preparation.
Sources:
Phytotherapy Research. “Verbascum thapsus: an updated review of its phytochemistry and biological activities”.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology. “Traditional uses and pharmacology of Verbascum thapsus”.









