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More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of senega for these uses.
There isn't enough information about the safety if applying senega to the skin during pregnancy.
Senega is considered safe when taken by mouth short-term.
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for senega.
Some people use senega as a gargle for sore throat.
This may explain how senega works as an expectorant.
Not enough is known about the safety of using senega as a gargle or applying it to the skin.
The appropriate dose of senega depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
Senega is used chiefly as a stimulating expectorant in chronic bronchitis.
Don't take senega by mouth.
In 1911, senega was official in the British and United States pharmacopoeias.
Senega is usually taken orally in dosages equivalent to 0.5-1 gram of the powdered root.
Senega is a plant.
Don't confuse asarabacca with bitter milkwort or senega.
Senega contains an active ingredient, saponin.
The chemicals in senega irritate the stomach lining, which causes production of larger amounts of lung secretions.
Senega is the dried root of the Polygala senega, sometimes used medicinally.
By the above-mentioned statute, gum senega, or gum arabic, being among the enumerated dyeing drugs, might be imported duty free.
Pregnancy and breast-feeding: It's UNSAFE to take senega by mouth if you are pregnant.
Stomach and intestinal conditions including ulcers, ulcerative colitis, and Crohn's disease: Don't use senega if you have one of these conditions.
Radix Polygalae (SENEGA)
Cadamosto is the first known person to refer to the Senegal River by its recognizably modern name (Rio di Senega) rather than the "western Nile".
Senega (Polygala senega)
Senega is used for swelling (inflammation) of the throat, nose, and chest; for lung conditions including asthma, chronic bronchitis, and emphysema; and for rattlesnake bite.
By the 25th George II, therefore, gum senega was allowed to be imported (contrary to the general dispositions of the Act of Navigation) from any part of Europe.