Veratrum album
White Hellebore | ||||||||||||||
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
Veratrum album L. |
Veratrum album, commonly known as the False Helleborine (but also known as White Hellebore, European White Hellebore, White Veratrum; syn. Veratrum lobelianum Bernh.[1]) is a medicinal plant[2][3] of the Liliaceae (lily family) which is native to Europe.
Plant description
The plant is a perennial herb, with a stout vertical rhizome covered with remnants of old leaf sheaths. The stems are stout, simple, 50-175cm tall. They have been mistaken for yellow gentian, Gentiana lutea, which is used in beverages, resulting in poisoning.[4]
Medical uses
It is also used as a homeopathic remedy. The root however is very poisonous, with a paralyzing effect on the nervous system[1]. In two cases of fatal poisoning from eating the seeds, the toxins veratridine and cevadine were present in the blood at 0.17-0.40 nanograms/milliliter and 0.32-0.48 nanograms/milliliter, respectively. In 1983 sneezing powders produced from the herb in West Germany were reported to have caused severe intoxications in Scandinavia.[5]
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References
de:Weißer Germer it:Veratrum album lt:Lobelio čemerys nl:Witte nieswortel uk:Чемериця Лобелієва fi:Valkopärskäjuuri Template:WikiDoc Sources