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Elecampane (Inula Helenium
LINN.) Click on graphic for larger
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Elecampane
Botanical: Inula Helenium (LINN.) Family: N.O. Compositae
---Synonyms---Scabwort. Elf Dock. Wild
Sunflower. Horseheal. Velvet Dock. (French) Aunée
(German) Alantwurzel (Welsh) Marchalan
---Part Used---Root. ---Habitat---Elecampane is one
of our largest herbaceous plants. It is found widely distributed
throughout England, though can scarcely be termed common, occurring only
locally, in damp pastures and shady ground. It is probably a true native
plant in southern England, but where found farther north may have
originally only been an escape from cultivation, as it was cultivated for
centuries as a medicinal plant, being a common remedy for sicknesses in
the Middle Ages. When present in Scotland, it is considered to have been
introduced. Culpepper says:
'It groweth in moist grounds and shadowy places oftener than in the dry
and open borders of field and lanes and other waste places, almost in
every county in this country, but it was probably more common in his days,
cultivation of it being still general.'
It is found wild throughout continental Europe, from Gothland
southwards, and extends eastwards in temperate Asia as far as Southern
Siberia and North-West India. As a plant of cultivation, it has wandered
to North America, where it has become thoroughly naturalized in the
eastern United States, being found from Nova Scotia to Northern Carolina,
and westward as far as Missouri, growing abundantly in pastures and along
roadsides, preferring wet, rocky ground at or near the base of eastern and
southern slopes.
---Description---It is a striking and handsome
plant. The erect stem grows from 4 to 5 feet high, is very stout and
deeply furrowed, and near the top, branched. The whole plant is downy. It
produces a radical rosette of enormous, ovate, pointed leaves, from 1 to 1
1/2 feet long and 4 inches broad in the middle velvety beneath, with
toothed margins an borne on long foot-stalks; in general appearance the
leaves are not unlike those of Mullein. Those on the stem become shorter
andrelatively broader and are stem-clasping.
The plant is in bloom from June to August. The flowers are bright
yellow, in very large, terminal heads, 3 to 4 inches in diameter, on long
stalks, resembling a double sunflower. The broad bracts of the leafy
involucre under the head are velvety. After the flowers have fallen, these
involucral scales spread horizontally, and the removal of the fruit shows
the beautifully regular arrangement of the little pits on the receptacle,
which form a pattern like the engine-turning of a watch. The fruit is
quadrangular and crowned by a ring of pale-reddish hairs - the pappus.
The plant springs from a perennial rootstock, which is large and
succulent, spindleshaped and branching, brown and aromatic, with large,
fleshy roots.
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- ---History---Elecampane was known to the
ancient writers on agriculture and natural history, and even the Roman
poets were acquainted with it, and mention Inula as affording a root
used both as a medicine and a condiment. Horace, in the Eighth Satire,
relates how Fundanius first taught the making of a delicate sauce by
boiling in it the bitter Inula, and how the Romans, after dining too
richly, pined for turnips and the appetizing Enulas acidas:
- 'Quum rapula plenus
- Atque acidas mavult inulas.'
Inula, the Latin
classical name for the plant, is considered to be a corruption of the
Greek word Helenion which in its Latinized form, Helenium,
is also now applied to the same species. There are many fables about the
origin of this name. Gerard tells us: 'It took the name Helenium of
Helena, wife of Menelaus, who had her hands full of it when Paris stole
her away into Phrygia.' Another legend states that it sprang from her
tears: another that Helen first used it against venomous bites; a fourth,
that it took the name from the island Helena, where the best plants grew.
Vegetius Renatus about the beginning of the fifth century, calls it
Inula campana, and St. Isidore, in the beginning of the seventh,
names it Inula, adding 'quam Alam rustici vocant.' By the mediaeval
writers it was often written Enula. Elecampane is a corruption of
the ante-Linnaean name Enula campana, so called from its growing
wild in Campania.
The herb is of ancient medicinal repute, having been described by
Dioscorides and Pliny. An old Latin distich celebrates its virtues:
Enula campana reddit praecordia sana (Elecampane will the spirits
sustain). 'Julia Augustus,' said Pliny, 'let no day pass without eating
some of the roots of Enula, considered to help digestion and cause mirth.'
The monks equally esteemed it as a cordial. Pliny affirmed that the root
'being chewed fasting, doth fasten the teeth,' and Galen that 'It is good
for passions of the hucklebone called sciatica.'
Dioscorides, in speaking of Castus root, related that it is often mixed
with that of Elecampane, from Kommagene (N.W. Syria) (Castus, derived from
Aplotaxis auriculata (D.C.), is remarkably similar to Elecampane,
both in external appearance and structure. It is an important spice,
incense and medicine in the East.)
Elecampane is frequently mentioned in the Anglo-Saxon writings on
medicine current in England prior to the Norman Conquest; it is also the
'Marchalan' of the Welsh physicians of the thirteenth century, and was
generally known during the Middle Ages.
It was formally cultivated in all private herb-gardens, as a culinary
and medicinal plant, and it is still to be found in old cottage gardens.
Not only was its root much employed as a medicine, but it was also candied
and eaten as a sweetmeat. Dr. Fernie tells us, in Herbal Simples:
- 'Some fifty years ago, the candy was sold commonly in London as
flat, round cakes being composed largely of sugar and coloured with
cochineal. A piece was eaten each night and morning for asthmatical
complaints, whilst it was customary when travelling by a river, to suck
a bit of the root against poisonous exalations and bad air. The candy
may still be had from our confectioners, but now containing no more of
the plant Elecampane than there is of barley in Barley Sugar.'
- In Denmark, Elecampane is sometimes called Elf-Doc. Here one
sometimes comes across the name Elf-Dock locally, also Elfwort.
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---Cultivation---Although Elecampane is no
longer grown to any extent in England, it is still cultivated for
medicinal use on the Continent, mainly in Holland, Switzerland and
Germany, most largely near the German town of Colleda, not far from
Leipzig.
It grows well in moist, shady positions, in ordinary garden soil,
though it flourishes best in a good, loamy soil, the ground being damp,
but fairly well-drained.
It is easily cultivated. Seeds may be sown, either when ripe, in cold
frames, or in spring in the open. It is best propagated, however, by
off-sets, taken in the autumn from the old root, with a bud or eye to
each. These will take root very readily, and should be planted in rows
about a foot asunder, and 9 or 10 inches distant in the rows. In the
following spring, the ground should be kept clean from weeds, and if
slightly dug in autumn, it will greatly promote the growth of the roots,
which will be fit for use after two years' growth.
By cutting the root into pieces about 2 inches long, covering with
rich, light, sandy soil and keeping in gentle heat during the winter, a
good stock of plants can also be obtained.
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---Part Used Medicinally---The drug, Elecampane
(Radix Inulae), consists of both rhizome or rootstock and roots. It
is official in most pharmacopoeias.
For pharmaceutical use, the root is taken from plants two to three
years old; when more advanced it becomes too woody. As a rule, it is dug
in autumn.
Elecampane root has at first a somewhat glutinous taste, but by
chewing, it becomes subsequently aromatic, and slightly bitter and
pungent; it has an agreeably aromatic somewhat camphoraceous orris-like
odour.
The distinguishing characteristics of Elecampane root to be noted by a
student are:
Its horny, not starchy nature.
The presence of oil-glands.
The absence of well-marked radiate structure in the wood.
Most roots of similar appearance to Elecampane root, such as
Belladonna, Dandelion and Marsh Mallow, are devoid of oil-glands.
Belladonna, moreover, is distinguished from it by its starchy fracture,
Dandelion by its thick, ringed bark, and Marsh Mallow by its radiate
structure and fibrous, easily separated bark. Pellitory root, which
has oil-glands, is distinguished by its yellow, radiate wood,
distinctive odour and taste.
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---Constituents---The substance most abundantly
contained in Elecampane root is Inulin, discovered by Valentine Rose, of
Berlin in 1804, who named it Alantin (the German name of the plant is
Alantwurzel; French, Aunée), but the title, Inulin proposed
by Thompson, has been generally adopted. It has the same composition as
starch, but stands to a certain extent in opposition to that substance,
which it replaces in the rootsystem of Compositae. In living
plants, Inulin is dissolved in the watery juice, and on drying, is
deposited within the cells in amorphous masses, which in polarized light
are inactive. It resembles starch in appearance, but differs from it in
giving a yellow instead of a blue colour with iodine, in being soluble in
boiling water without forming a paste, and in being deposited unchanged
from the hot aqueous solution when it cools. With nitric acid, Inula
affords no explosive compound as starch does. By prolonged heat or the
action of dilute acids, it is changed first to inulin then to
levulin, and finally to levulose. It is only slightly
changed to sugar by ferments.
Sachs showed in 1864 that by immersing the roots of Elecampane or
Dahlia variabilis in alcohol and glycerine, Inulin may be
precipitated in globular aggregations of needleshaped crystalline form.
Elecampane is the richest source of inulin.
The amount of Inulin varies according to the season, but is more
abundant in the autumn. Dragendorff, who in 1870 made it the subject of a
very exhaustive treatise, obtained from the root in October not less than
44 per cent, but in spring only 19 per cent, its place being taken by
levulin, mucilage, sugar and several glucosides. Inulin is widely
distributed in the perennial roots of Compositae, and has been met
with in the natural orders Campanulacae, Goodeniaceae, Lobeliaceae,
Stylidiaceae, and in the root of the White Ipecacuanha of Brazil,
belonging to the order Violaceae.
Inulin is closely associated in Elecampane with Inulenin,
obtainable in microscopical needles, slightly soluble in cold water and
weak alcohol, and pseudo-inulin, which occurs in irregular
granules, very soluble in hot water and weak, hot alcohol, but insoluble
in cold alcohol.
It was observed by Le Febre as early as 1660 that when the root of
Elecampane is subjected to distillation with water, a crystallizable
substance collects in the head of the receiver, and similar crystals may
be observed after carefully heating a thin slice of the root, and are
often found as a natural efflorescence on the surface of roots that have
been long kept. This was considered as a distinct body called
Helenin, or Elecampane camphor, but the researches of Kallen in
1874 showed that it was resolvable into two crystallizable substances,
which he named Helenin, a body without taste or colour, and
Alantcamphor, with a peppermint odour and taste. As a result of
further research, it is considered that the crystalline mass yielded by
Elecampane root on distillation with water in the proportion of 1 to 2 per
cent, and associated with about 1 per cent volatile oil, consists of
Alantolactone, iso-alantolactone and Alantolic acid, all of which
are crystalline, nearly colourless, and have but slight odour and taste.
The oily portion, Alantol, found in the distillate, a colourless
liquid, has a peppermint-like odour.
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---Medicinal Action and Uses---Diuretic, tonic,
diaphoretic, expectorant, alterative, antiseptic, astringent and gently
stimulant. It was employed by the ancients in certain diseases of women,
also in phthisis, in dropsy and in skin affections. Its name 'Scabwort'
arose from the fact that a decoction of it is said to cure sheep affected
with the scab, and the name 'Horse-heal' was given it from its reputed
virtues in curing the cutaneous diseases of horses.
In herbal medicine it is chiefly used for coughs, consumption and other
pulmonary complaints, being a favourite domestic remedy for bronchitis. It
has been employed for many years with good results in chest affections,
for which it is a valuable medicine as it is in all chronic diseases of
the lungs asthma and bronchitis. It gives relief to the respiratory
difficulties and assists expectoration. Its principal employment as a
separate remedy is in acute catarrhal affections, and in dyspepsia
attended with relaxation and debility, given in small, warm and frequently
repeated doses. It is, however, seldom given alone, but most frequently
preferred in combination with other medicines of a similar nature. It is
best given in the form of decoction, the dose being a small teaspoonful,
three times a day.
The root used not only to be candied and eaten as a sweetmeat, but
lozenges were made of it. It has been employed in whooping-cough. It is
sometimes employed in the form of a confection for piles, 1 OZ. of
powdered root being mixed with 2 OZ. of honey.
In the United States, it has also been highly recommended, both for
external use and internal administration in diseases of the skin, an old
use of the root that has maintained its reputation for efficacy.
Externally applied, it is somewhat rubefacient, and has been employed
as an embrocation in the treatment of sciatica, facial and other
neuralgia.
Of late years, modern scientific research has proved that the claims of
Elecampane to be a valuable remedy in pulmonary diseases has a solid
basis. One authority, Korab, showed in 1885 that the active, bitter
principle, Helenin, is such a powerful antiseptic and bactericide, that a
few drops of a solution of 1 part in 10,000 immediately kills the ordinary
bacterial organisms, being peculiarly destructive to the Tubercle
bacillus. He gave it successfully in tubercular and catarrhal diarrhoeas,
and praised it also as an antiseptic in surgery. In Spain it has been made
use of as a surgical dressing. Obiol, in 1886, stated it to be an
efficient local remedy in the treatment of diphtheria, the false membrane
being painted with a solution of Helenin in Oil of Almond.
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---Medicinal Preparations---Powdered root 1/2
to 1 drachm. Fluid extract, 1/2 to 1 drachm. Inulin, 1 to 3 grains.
- Gerard tells us: 'It is good for shortnesse of breathe and an old
cough, and for such as cannot breathe unless they hold their neckes
upright.' And further:
- 'The root of Elecampane is with good success mixed with
counterpoisons, it is a remedy against the biting of serpents, it
resisteth poison. It is good for them that are bursten and troubled with
cramps and convulsions.'
- And Culpepper says:
- 'The fresh roots of Elecampane preserved with sugar or made into a
conserve, or a syrup, are very effectual to warm a cold windy stomach
and stitches in the side, caused by spleen and to relieve cough,
shortness of breath and wheezing in the lungs. The dried root made into
powder and mixed with sugar, and taken, serveth the same purpose.... It
cures putrid and pestilential fevers and even the plague. The roots and
herbes beaten and put into new ale or beer and daily drunk, cleareth,
strengtheneth and quickeneth the sight of the eyes. The decoction of the
roots in wine or the juice taken therein, destroys worms in the stomach,
and gargled in the mouth or the root chewed, fasteneth loose teeth and
keeps them from putrefaction, and being drunk is good for spitting of
blood, and it removes cramps or convulsions, gout, sciatica, pains in
the joints, applied outwardly or inwardly, and is also good for those
that are ruptured, or have any inward bruise. The root boiled well in
vinegar, beaten afterwards and made into an ointment with hog's suet or
oil of trotters is a most excellent remedy for scabs or itch in young or
old the places also bathed and washed with the decoction doth the same;
it heals putrid sores or cankers. In the roots of this herb lieth the
chief effect for the remedies aforesaid. The distilled water of the
leaves and roots together is very good to cleanse the skin of the face
or other parts from any morphew, spots or blemishes and make it clear.'
In Switzerland (Neufchâtel) Elecampane root is one of the
substances used in the preparation of Absinthe, and it was also used for
the same purpose in France. It furnishes the Vin d'Aulnée of the
French.
A blue dye has been extracted from the root, bruised and macerated and
mingled with ashes and whortleberries.
'The wine wherein the root of Elicampane hath steept,' says Markham
(Countrie Farme 1616), 'is singularly good against the colicke.' A
cordial was made from the plant by infusing Elecampane roots with sugar
and currants in white port.
See:
FLEABANE, CANADIAN
FLEABANE, COMMON
FLEABANE, GREAT
(PLOUGHMAN'S) SPIKENARD
(GOLDEN) SAMPHIRE.
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