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Veratrum album, commonly known as false helleborine, white hellebore, European white hellebore, white veratrum; syn.
False Helleborine is a name is used in different parts of the world to describe several different plants of either the Orchid family or the Lily family.
There isn't enough information available to know how white hellebore works.
More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of white hellebore for these uses.
Avoid using white hellebore if you are pregnant or breast-feeding.
In addition to being poisonous, white hellebore might also cause birth defects.
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for white hellebore.
People take white hellebore for cholera, gout, and high blood pressure.
White hellebore is an herb that was used historically in Rome as a poison.
In manufacturing, white hellebore is used as an insecticide against flies and mosquitoes.
White hellebore is sometimes applied directly to the affected area for herpes outbreaks.
Wild lilies in the Glades include yellow clintonia and white hellebore.
The appropriate dose of white hellebore depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
White Hellebore may refer to:
White hellebore is UNSAFE to take by mouth or apply to the skin.
The French comic portrays Papa Smurf constantly preparing magical drinks from white hellebore.
The highly toxic white hellebore (Veratrum album) can be mistaken for gentian and has caused accidental poisoning when used in homemade preparations.
Presently I made a posset, drugged with somnolence, Sleepy with poppy and white hellebore, Fit for the dragon.
The city was famous for its black hellebore (helleborus niger), and for a drug elaborated from the base of white hellebore (veratrum album).
Pregnancy and breast-feeding: Though it's UNSAFE for anyone to use white hellebore, pregnant women have extra concerns.
When taken by mouth, white hellebore can cause irritation and burning of the gut, vomiting, slow heart rate, low blood pressure, breathing problems, blindness, paralysis, convulsions, and death.
Resveratrol was originally isolated by Takaoka from the roots of white hellebore in 1940, and later, in 1963, from the roots of Japanese knotweed.
Veratrum album, commonly known as false helleborine, white hellebore, European white hellebore, white veratrum; syn.
European Hellebore, European White Hellebore, Langwort, Veratre Blanc, Veratrum album, White Hellibore.
The primitive Mediterranean oak, which once dominated the mountain before over-exploitation by man, is still present, as is Mount Atlas Pistachio, rosemary, white hellebore, rock lavender, marine juniper and cistus.
(STORAX) WHITE HELLEBORE White Hellibore.
In antiquity, an effective emetic based on white hellebore and a bitter oval seed (which Hahneman believed was the seed of erigeron or senecio) was mixed by the physicians of Antikyra, a city of Phokis in Greece.
Veratrum album, commonly known as false helleborine, white hellebore, European white hellebore, white veratrum; syn.
Dietary poisoning with Veratrum album--a report of two cases.
The larvae feed on Veratrum album.
Regarding the herbaceous plants, well established populations of Veratrum album are present in the mountain so as other species commonly called 'lilies'.
Cryptenamine (Unitensen) is a mixture of hypotensive alkaloids extracted from Veratrum album.
The highly toxic white hellebore (Veratrum album) can be mistaken for gentian and has caused accidental poisoning when used in homemade preparations.
Isolated from seeds of Schoenocaulon officinale, and from rhizomes of Veratrum album.
In the Lily family it is likely to refer to either Veratrum album, Veratrum californicum or V. nigrum.
The city was famous for its black hellebore (helleborus niger), and for a drug elaborated from the base of white hellebore (veratrum album).
Sneezing powders containing Veratrum album alkaloids have been linked to poisoning, including dyspepsia, fainting, bradycardia and hypotension.
Veratrum album, commonly known as false helleborine, white hellebore, European white hellebore, white veratrum; syn.
The larvae feed on the flowers and seeds of Veratrum viride in North America and Veratrum album in Europe.
The first mention of resveratrol was in a Japanese article in 1939 by Michio Takaoka, who isolated it from the poisonous, but medicinal, Veratrum album, variety grandiflorum.
European Hellebore, European White Hellebore, Langwort, Veratre Blanc, Veratrum album, White Hellibore.
The number of species is affected by whether certain groups of species are treated as one species or several (especially in four groups which include, respectively, Veratrum album, Veratrum nigrum, Veratrum maackii, and Veratrum viride).
In the early days of medicine, two kinds of hellebore were recognized: black hellebore, which included various species of Helleborus, and white hellebore (now known as Veratrum album ("false hellebore"), which belongs to a different plant family, the Melanthiaceae).
His thesis very thoroughly examined the historical literature and sought to differentiate between the ancient use of Helleborus niger, or black hellebore and the medicinal uses of the "white hellebore", botanically Veratrum album, both of which are poisonous plants.
Veratrum album, or white hellebore, an herbal medicine described by Hippocrates before 400 BC, contains the alkaloids cyclopamine and jervine, which are teratogens capable of causing cyclopia and holoprosencephaly, severe birth defects in which a fetus can be born with a single eye.
The trail from Stresa to the Mottarone passes by Androsace vandellii, Campanula glomerata, Gentiana asclepiadea, G. kochiana, G. Kochiana, G. purpurea, Hypochoeris uniflora, Narcissus poeticus, Primula hirsuta, Rhododendron ferrugineum, Trollius europaeus, and Veratrum album.