Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
There isn't enough information available to know how hemp agrimony works.
More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of hemp agrimony for these uses.
If you have allergies, be sure to check with your healthcare provider before taking hemp agrimony.
Some chemicals that form when the liver breaks down hemp agrimony can be harmful.
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for hemp agrimony.
There isn't enough information to know if it's safe to apply hemp agrimony to unbroken skin.
Stay in the safe side and avoid using any hemp agrimony preparation if you are pregnant or breast-feeding.
Some people apply hemp agrimony directly to the skin for wounds and skin infections.
But the hemp agrimony continued to grow strongly, rather swamping the more genteel species, indeed.
The appropriate dose of hemp agrimony depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
Hemp agrimony is an herb.
Despite serious safety concerns, hemp agrimony is used for liver and gallbladder disorders, colds, and fever.
It's also UNSAFE to apply hemp agrimony to broken skin.
Along the left side had once been a -track beside a ditch full of bulrushes and hemp agrimony, but this path was overgrown with thistles.
The dangerous chemicals in hemp agrimony can be absorbed quickly through broken skin and can lead to dangerous body-wide toxicity.
Eupatorium cannabinum (Hemp agrimony)
These include Great Horsetail, Hemp Agrimony and Pendulous Sedge.
Liver disease: There is concern that the hepatotoxic PAs in hemp agrimony might make liver disease worse.
Hemp agrimony -Eupatorium cannabinum - flourished in the Britches, as it happened; Jean Powers was not so wide of the mark.
Hemp agrimony preparations that are not certified and labeled "hepatotoxic PA-free" are considered UNSAFE.
Allergy to ragweed and related plants: Hemp agrimony may cause an allergic reaction in people who are allergic to the Asteraceae/Compositae plant family.
Medications that cause the liver to break down hemp agrimony might enhance the toxic effects of chemicals contained in hemp agrimony.
It's also UNSAFE to use hemp agrimony preparations that might contain hepatotoxic PAs if you are breast-feeding.
(HEMP AGRIMONY) Water Mint.
The flora of most wasteland contains occasional species typical of moist soils, such as Himalayan balsam (Impatiens glandulifera)and hemp agrimony (Eupatorium cannabinum ).
They tend to fly close to Eupatorium cannabinum, where they are hard to notice because of their camouflage.
The larvae feed on Eupatorium cannabinum.
The larvae feed on the flowers and seeds of Eupatorium cannabinum during August to October.
Eupatorium cannabinum L. subsp.
Eupatorium cannabinum (Hemp agrimony)
Hemp-agrimony (Eupatorium cannabinum)
Eupatorium cannabinum, commonly known as Hemp-agrimony, is a herbaceous plant of the family Asteraceae.
Eupatorium cannabinum contains tumorigenic pyrrolizidine alkaloids.
Adults have been recorded feeding on the nectar of Eupatorium cannabinum, Lychnis and Silene species.
Adults feed on nectar of Knautia, Senecio ovatus and Eupatorium cannabinum.
Hemp agrimony -Eupatorium cannabinum - flourished in the Britches, as it happened; Jean Powers was not so wide of the mark.
The larvae feed on various herbaceous plants, such as Stachys, Eupatorium cannabinum and Fragaria vesca.
The larvae feed on Eupatorium cannabinum, Pluchea indica, Solidago virgaurea and Brassica species.
The flora of most wasteland contains occasional species typical of moist soils, such as Himalayan balsam (Impatiens glandulifera)and hemp agrimony (Eupatorium cannabinum ).
The larvae feed on Eupatorium cannabinum, but is also reported on Jacobaea vulgaris, Teucrium scorodonia, Sium latifolium and Stachys.
The larvae feed on Conoclinium coelestinum, Carphephorus paniculatus, Carphephorus ordoratissimus, Pluchea rosea and Eupatorium cannabinum.
For example, each set has a "tall herbaceous perennial": native Eupatorium cannabinum (hemp agrimony), near-native E. maculatum (Joe Pye weed) and exotic Verbena bonariensis.
The larvae feed on the leaves of a wide range of plants, including Urtica, Lamium, Stachys, Galeopsis, Eupatorium cannabinum, Vaccinium myrtillus, Salvia and Senecio.
Different plants are associated with this vegetation, increasing bodiversity to include species such as hemp agrimony Eupatorium cannabinum, purple loosestrife Lythrum salicaria and great hairy willowherb Epilobium hirsutum.