Abscess Root
Botanical: Polemonium reptans Family: N.O. Polemoniaceae
---Synonyms---American Greek Valerian. Blue Bells. False
Jacob's Ladder. Sweatroot. ---Habitat---United States.
---Description---This plant grows from New York to
Wisconsin, in woods, damp grounds, and along shady river-banks. It has
creeping roots, by which it multiplies very quickly. The stems are 9 to 10
inches high, much branched, bearing pinnate leaves with six or seven pairs
of leaflets. The nodding, blue flowers are in loose, terminal bunches.
The slender rootstock, when dried and used as the drug, is 1 to 2
inches long and 1/8 inch in diameter, with the bases of numerous stems on
the upper surface, and tufts of pale, slender, smooth, wiry, brittle roots
on the underside. The rootstock has a slightly bitter and acrid taste.
---Medicinal Action and Uses---Astringent,
alterative, diaphoretic, expectorant. The drug has been recommended for
use in febrile and inflammatory eases, all scrofulous diseases, in bowel
complaints requiring an astringent, for the bites of venomous snakes and
insects, for bronchitis and laryngitis and whenever an alterative is
required. It is reported to have cured consumption; an infusion of the
root in wineglassful doses is useful in coughs, colds and all lung
complaints, producing copious perspiration.
The tincture of the root is made of whisky.
---Dosage---1 to 2 fluid ounces, two or three
times a day.
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