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"Latin
Name: Hydrastis canadensis L.
Family Name: Ranunculaceae
Common Names:
Goldenseal, Ground Raspberry or Orange root.
Parts Used:
Root
Botanical
Description:
A low perennial
herb with a knotty, yellow rhizome from which arises a single leaf
and an erect, hairy stem. In early spring, it bears two 5-9 lobed,
rounded leaves near the top, which are terminated by a single greenish-white
flower. The rhizome is yellowish-brown, about 5 cm (2)
long and 1 cm (½ ") thick, knotty and twisted, wrinkled
longitudinally and encircled by leaf scars. Rootlets frequently
present in abundance. Taste is very bitter; odour strong, characteristic
and disagreeable.
Distribution:
Native
to Canada and eastern United States; found in shady woods and the
edges of woodland on rich, moist soil.
Cultivation:
Wild,
but becoming rare. Some commercially grown in Oregon and Washington.
Propagate by rootlets planted in the fall or by division when dormant.
Plant in rich moist well-drained soil in the shade. pH 6.0-7.0.
Germination from seed is slow and difficult (seeds must be freshly
stratified).
Harvest:
Rhizomes
are lifted in the autumn after the foilage has died down, then dried.
Constituents:
Isoquinoline
alkaloids, mainly hydrastine, berberine, and canadine (=catrahydroberbe)
with lesser amounts of related alkaloids.
Miscellaneous; fats, acids, resin, polyphenolic acids and a small
amount of volatile oils.
Properties:
Tonic, Alterative, Stimulant
The price of
Hydrastis has soared to such a height that many practitioners have
been tempted to use a substitute. We can only advise the student
to use the agents they need, no matter what the price, as nothing
builds up a practice like getting results. We have lost this plant
because of not having sufficient shade when seeking to grow it and
because of over zealous wildcrafting. The root should be four years
old before taking up for use.
This root has
been well named the king of tonics to the mucus membrane. It has
been largely used since about 1820. It received its name from the
Thompsonians. It is claimed that the aborigines of North America
discovered this agent and used it as a tonic. It is intensely bitter
and somewhat unpleasant to the taste. We have, however, in spite
of the price and unpleasant taste, used it freely for years, and
can assure the practitioner that it is a very reliable article.
It is extremely
useful in dyspepsia, gastric catarrh and gastric ulceration. It
will improve the appetite and aid digestion. In cases where the
gastric membrane is clogged with congestion, and all the above troubles,
give your Goldenseal in small and frequent doses.
It may be used
in infusion, decoction, fluid extract or substance. The fluid extract
has been much used in recent years and can be procured at any drug
house. We prefer ourselves to use the root. It is a very good remedy
in the vomiting of pregnancy. It is eligible for a combination with
almost any other remedies where a tonic is needed.
Hydrastis canadensis
is one of the very few agents which will tone and sustain the venous
circulation. It can be made to specially influence the stomach,
bowels, bronchi, urinary tract or generative organs by combining
it with agents which specially influence the given part.
Combined with
Mitchella repens (Partridge Berry) its influence will quickly be
manifest upon the genitalia. Used with Juglans cin. (Butternut)
you have a powerful intestinal tonic. If combined with Eupatorium
purpureum (Gravel Root) the kidneys will soon feel its influence.
A very fine
tonic to the spinal nerves is made as follows:
Hydrastis (Goldenseal) 1 ounce
Humulus
(Hops) ¾ ounce
Scutellaria (Scullcap) ½ ounce
Infuse in 1½
pints of boiling water. Cover till nearly cold. Strain and give
as freely as the case demands from a wineglassful three times daily.
The above may
be given in substance. Two or three capsules every two hours, or
as the case demands.
The infusion
of Hydrastis is a good wash for inflamed or sore eyes and ulcers
in the mouth. In the eruptive diseases, as smallpox, measles, etc.,
where itching and burning of the skin are a trouble, and in scarletina
to prevent scales spreading from the patient, use the following
wash.
It will relieve the patient.
Fluid Extract Hydrastis 1 ounce
Ol.
Lini. (Linseed Oil) 9 ounces
Mix and apply as required.
Dr. Cook, an
old time practitioner, now dead, says of Hydrastis:
"I would
also particularly commend a decoction of it as a wash, to a part
of the whole of the surface in the maturing stage of variola, in
which it at once allays the itching, relieves the nervous system
and so tones the new cuticle under the postules as greatly to lessen
the danger of pitting. It may be used several times a day upon the
face and hands, each application being followed with a light dressing
of sweet oil, and my eighteen years of experience with it in this
form justifies me in speaking of its value in the highest terms."
In granular
opthalmia, with ulceration of the cornea, the following will be
of decided value:
Hydrastis (Goldenseal) 1 ounce
Lobelia
Herb. ¼ ounce
Capsicum 20 grains
Infuse in 1
pint of boiling water. Cover till almost cold. Strain and use a
wash. In some cases it may be preferable to use the powdered Gum
Myrrh in place of the Capsicum.
Hydrastis is
one of the finest agents in powder form for the treatment of irritable
chancres and buboes, and in treating labial ulcers in syphilis,
used as follows, will give the physician every satisfaction.
Powdered Hydrastis (Goldenseal) 4 drachms
Powdered
Commiphora (Myrrh) 1 drachm
Powdered Capsicum (Cayenne) 5 grains
Rub up well
in mortar and fill the ulcers several times a day.
The decoction,
fluid extract or tincture, is a good local application for ringworms.
In purchasing the fluid extract the practitioner will find there
are two kinds offered for sale. The ordinary fluid extract and the
colorless extract. We advise the physician not to accept the colorless,
even though he may be told it contains all the therapeutic value
of the root. This is not so.
Finally, we
believe this agent to merit all that is said concerning it and much
more. We know from personal experience how valuable a remedy it
is. We have paid as high as thirty dollars a pound for it during
war times. This will be sufficient, we think, to satisfy our students
that we think it a worthwhile article.
Contraindications:
Berberine
and berberine-containing plants are generally non-toxic at recommended
doses. However, berberine-containing plants are not recommended
for use during pregnancy, and high dosages may interfere with the
metabolism of B vitamins."
Dominion Herbal College - Chartered
Herbalist Diploma Course Book
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