Chamomile, German — Essential Oil (Matricaria chamomilla)

Chamomile, German — Essential Oil

Matricaria chamomilla


Botanical identity

  • Botanical name: Matricaria chamomilla L. (syn. Chamomilla recutita)

  • Family: Asteraceae

  • Common names: German chamomile, blue chamomile, wild chamomile

  • Plant part used: Flowering tops (capitula)

  • Origin (typical): Hungary, Germany, Egypt, Balkans, Eastern Europe


Essential oil production

  • Extraction method: Steam distillation

  • Yield: Low (≈ 0.2–0.6%)

  • Appearance: Deep blue to inky blue (fresh oil)

  • Aroma profile: Warm, sweet-herbaceous, apple-like, slightly tobacco-tea nuance

🔬 Key note:
The blue color is not present in the fresh plant. It forms during distillation from matricin → chamazulene, a heat-induced transformation.


Chemical composition (typical ranges)

(composition varies with origin, harvest time, and distillation parameters)

  • Sesquiterpenes

    • α-Bisabolol: ~5–35%

    • β-Bisabolol: trace–10%

  • Sesquiterpene oxides

    • Bisabolol oxide A: ~20–45%

    • Bisabolol oxide B: ~5–25%

  • Azulenes

    • Chamazulene: ~1–15%

  • Others

    • Farnesene, spiroethers, minor monoterpenes

🧠 Interpretation:

  • Bisabolol & oxides → anti-inflammatory, soothing, tissue-protective profile

  • Chamazulene → strong anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, antiallergic marker


Pharmacological & functional properties

(based on pharmacognosy, in-vitro / in-vivo data, and traditional use)

  • Potent anti-inflammatory

  • Antispasmodic (smooth muscle)

  • Soothing / calming (neuro-vegetative level)

  • Antipruritic (itch-relief)

  • Antiallergic

  • Mild analgesic

  • Vulnerary (supports tissue repair)

  • Antioxidant


Dermal & cosmetic relevance

German chamomile essential oil is considered one of the most skin-compatible essential oils when properly diluted.

Particularly suited for:

  • Sensitive, reactive, intolerant skin

  • Redness, couperose-prone skin

  • Post-procedure skin (aftercare formulations)

  • Baby-care concepts (very low doses only)

  • Scalp irritation, itchy scalp

Formulation note:
Its intense blue color can naturally tint formulations (green-blue hue). Color fades with oxidation.


Psycho-emotional profile

  • Calming, grounding, reassuring

  • Supports emotional decompression

  • Traditionally associated with tension release, irritability, inner agitation

  • Gentle “nervous system sedative” without heaviness


Traditional & ethnobotanical uses

  • Digestive spasms, colic

  • Nervous tension, restlessness

  • Skin inflammations, wounds

  • Allergic conditions

  • Infant care (infusions more than essential oil)

⚠️ Historically, hydrosol and infusion were preferred internally; essential oil use remained rare and highly dosed.


Safety & precautions

  • Dermal use: Safe when well diluted (≤0.5–1% typical)

  • Sensitization: Rare but possible (sesquiterpene oxides)

  • Oxidation: Oil oxidizes → store airtight, dark, cool

  • Pregnancy & infants: Only with professional guidance

  • Internal use: Not recommended without qualified supervision

❗ Always perform a patch test before topical use.


Storage

  • Dark glass bottle

  • Cool temperature

  • Protect from light and air

  • Shelf life: ~3–5 years (shorter once opened)


Comparative note

Do not confuse with:

  • Roman chamomile (Chamaemelum nobile)

    • Different chemistry (esters dominant)

    • Clear to pale yellow oil

    • More sedative, less anti-inflammatory


Key identity summary

  • Color: Deep blue

  • Chemistry: Sesquiterpene-rich

  • Signature molecules: α-Bisabolol, chamazulene

  • Core actions: Anti-inflammatory, soothing, antispasmodic

  • Energetic signature: Gentle calm, emotional safety