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There isn't enough information to know how cudweed might work.
More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of cudweed for these uses.
It is not known if cudweed is safe or what the potential side effects might be.
If you have allergies, be sure to check with your healthcare provider before taking cudweed.
Cudweed is a common name for several plants and may refer to:
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for cudweed.
The appropriate dose of cudweed depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
Several wild plants, including purple cudweed and the nation's largest poison sumac, thrive there.
It is commonly known as arctic cudweed.
People use cudweed as a gargle or rinse for diseases of the mouth or throat.
Cudweed is an herb.
The name cudweed comes from the fact that they were once used to feed cows that had lost the ability to chew the cud.
Pregnancy and breast-feeding: Not enough is known about the use of cudweed during pregnancy and breast-feeding.
Gnaphalium palustre, known by the common name western marsh cudweed, is a species of flowering plant in the daisy family.
Gnaphalium uliginosum or Marsh Cudweed is an annual plant found on damp, disturbed ground and tracks.
The Cudweed (Cucullia gnaphalii) is a moth of the Noctuidae family.
The wood cudweed, or owl's crown, was also found in a remote Adirondack area in northern Herkimer County.
On the fringes of the copse there is a considerable amount of Common Cudweed but generally the copse is species poor.
Dwarf Cudweed (Omalotheca supina)
Dorset Nature: Wildflowers - Common Cudweed (Filago vulgaris) - image gallery.
Gamochaeta antarctica, the Antarctic Cudweed, is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae.
Gnaphalium norvegicum, is similar to Gnaphalium sylvaticum, Heath Cudweed.
Two rare plants, the purple crowberry and the wood cudweed, have been discovered in New York State for the first time, the state botanist reported this week.
Also, don't confuse cudweed (Gnaphalium uliginosum) with Pilosella officinarum; both are sometimes called mouse ear.
Allergy to ragweed and related plants: Cudweed may cause an allergic reaction in people who are allergic to the Asteraceae/Compositae plant family.