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| Scientific noun: Helleborus foetidus L. |
| Common noun: : Stinking hellebore |
| Family :Buttercup family - Ranunculaceae. |
| Habitat: Calcareous
mountains, by the woods and rocky places. |
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Active principles:
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| Active parts : The whole plant. |
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Uses: In external use, it has been considered a rubefacient to cure the rheumatic pains, applied as an ointment on the skin. Equally it is a vulnerary herb , reason why it has traditionally been used to combat the illnesses of the skin, so much more when we consider its astringent and antiseptic properties. Historically its principles were used as a weapon in warfare to poison darts and arrows with which to eliminate the enemy. Given the toxicity of its components its use is dissuaded in home-made preparations. |
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Toxicity: Deadly in the
event of ingestion of abundant principles, fundamentally for its use
in hammed medicine. Cases of intoxication have sometimes been mentioned
in people who has drunk the milk of bovine livestock that ate this plant.
The intoxication results from the ingestion of the cardiotonic glycosides
that act on the heart and the saponins that exercise their toxic function
on the digestive apparatus. In external use, the contact with the skin produces a clear redness , which may derive in more serious cutaneous lesions with the appearance of bladders. Treatment: Remove product from the stomach, gastric lavage, sedatives, artificial breathing, breathing stimulants and administration of emollients. |