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Contents:
Common Names
Parts Usually Used
Plant(s) & Culture
Where Found
Medicinal Properties
Biochemical Information Legends, Myths and Stories
Uses
Formulas or Dosages
Nutrient Content
Warning
Bibliography
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Common Names
Beechdrops
Blueberry
Blue cohush
Blue ginseng
Papoose root
Squaw root
Yellow ginseng
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Parts Usually Used
Rootstock
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Description of Plant(s) and Culture
Blue cohosh is a hardy perennial plant 3 feet in height; the round, simple,
erect stem grows from a knotty rootstock and bears a large, sessile, tri-pinnate
leaf whose leaflets are oval, petioled, and irregularly lobed. Smooth-stemmed,
stem and leaves covered with bluish film. The 6-petaled, yellow-green flowers
are borne in a raceme or panicle. April to June before leaves expand. The fruit
is a pea-sized, dark blue berry on a fleshy stalk. Blooms in May or June and
the berries ripen in August.
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Where Found
Found in eastern North America, near running streams, around swamps, and in
other moist places. South Carolina to Arkansas, North Dakota to Canada.
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Medicinal Properties
Stimulant, sedative, sudorific (produces sweat), tonic, antispasmodic, anti-inflammatory,
anti-rheumatic, parturient, emmenagogue (stimulates menstrual flow), anthelmintic
(destroys intestinal worms), demulcent, diaphoretic, diuretic, oxytocic (stimulates
uterine contractions).
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Biochemical Information
Calcium, coulosaponin, gum, inositol, iron, leontin, magnesium, methylcystine,
phosphoric acid, phosphorus, potassium, salts, silicon, starch, and vitamins
B3, B5, B9, and E.
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Legends, Myths and Stories
Cohosh is a name given the plant by the Algonquins.
Roots are collected in the fall, when their chemical constituents are richest.
The aborigines found in this herb their
most valuable parturient; an infusion of the root taken as a tea, for a week
or two preceding confinement, renders delivery rapid and comparatively painless.
They also used the root as a remedy for rheumatism, dropsy, uterine inflammation,
and colic. These uses have been proven reliable by all methods of practice since.
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Uses
A bitter, mildly toxic herb for menstrual disorders, painful menses, stimulates
menstrual flow, cramps, fever, edema, blood tonic, leukorrhea, rheumatism, gout,
nervous disorders, gonorrhea, ovarian neuralgia, vaginitis, dropsy, hysteria,
palpitations of the heart, colic, and diabetes. Elevates blood pressure and
stimulates uterine contractions of childbirth and stimulates the small intestine,
and enhances symptoms of hyperglycemia. Good for hiccough, whooping cough, spasms,
and epilepsy.
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Formulas or Dosages
Blue cohosh should be used with medical supervision.
Infusion: use 1 oz. rootstock with 1 pint boiling water; steep for 1/2 hour. Take 2 tbsp. every 2 to 3 hours, in hot water.
Tincture: take 5-10 drops at a time.
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Nutrient Content
Potassium, magnesium, calcium, iron, silicon, and phosphorus. These minerals
help to alkalinize the blood and urine.
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Warning
Blue cohosh should not be used during pregnancy until the last 2 to 3 weeks
before confinement; it is a uterine stimulant.
Blue cohosh should be taken for only one week at a time, one to three capsules daily. It can be very irritating to mucous surfaces and can cause dermatitis on contact. Children have been poisoned by the berries.
Do no take blue cohosh if high blood pressure is present. This herb raises blood pressure. Blue cohosh should be used with medical supervision.