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Elm, Slippery
Botanical: Ulmus fulva (MICH.) Family: N.O. Urticaceae
---Synonyms---Red Elm. Moose Elm. Indian Elm.
---Part Used---The inner bark. ---Habitat---The
United States, Canada.
---Description---The Slippery Elm is a small tree
abundant in various parts of North America.
The branches are very rough, the leaves long, unequally toothed, rough
with hairs on both sides, the leaf-buds covered with a dense yellow Wool.
The flowers are stalkless.
The inner bark has important medicinal value and is an official
drug of the United States Pharmacopoeia.
The bark, which is the only part used, is collected in spring from the
bole and larger branches and dried. Large quantities are collected,
especially in the lower part of the state of Michigan. As the wood has no
commercial value, the tree is fully stripped and consequently dies.
The bark as it appears in commerce for use in medicine consists only of
the inner bark or bast and is sold in flat pieces 2 to 3 feet long and
several inches wide, but only about 1/8 to 1/16 of an inch in thickness.
It is very tough and flexible, of a fine fibrous texture, finely striated
longitudinally on both surfaces, the outer surface reddish-yellow, with
patches of reddish brown, which are part of the outer bark adhering to the
inner bast. It has an odour like Fenugreek and a very mucilaginous,
insipid taste. The strips can be bent double without breaking: if broken,
the rough fracture is mealy, strongly but finely fibrous. The clean
transverse section shows numerous medullary rays and altemate bands of
bast parenchyma, thus giving it a chequered appearance. A section
moistened and left for a few minutes, and again examined, shows large
swollen mucilage cells.
The powdered bark is sold in two forms: a coarse powder for use
as poultices and a fine powder for making a mucilaginous drink. The
disintegrated bark forms, when moistened, a flexible and spongy tissue,
which is easily moulded into pessaries, teats, and suppositories.
It is recommended that ten-year-old bark should be used.
The powder should be greyish or fawncoloured. If dark or reddish, good
results will not be obtained. The powdered bark is said to be often
adulterated with damaged flour and other starchy substances.
---Constituents---The principal constituent of
the bark is the mucilage contained in large cells in the bast. This
mucilage is very similar to that found in linseed. It is precipitated by
solutions of acetate and subacetate of lead, although not by alcohol The
mucilage does not dissolve, but only swells in water and is so abundant
that 10 grains of the powdered bark will make a thick jelly with an ounce
of water.
Microscopic examination of the tissue of the bark shows round starch
grains and very characteristic twin crystals of Calcium oxalate.
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---Medicinal Action and Uses---Demulcent,
emollient, expectorant, diuretic, nutritive. The bark of this American
Elm, though not in this country as in the United States an official drug,
is considered one of the most valuable remedies in herbal practice, the
abundant mucilage it contains having wonderfully strengthening and healing
qualities.
It not only has a most soothing and healing action on all the parts it
comes in contact with, but in addition possesses as much nutrition as is
contained in oatmeal, and when made into gruel forms a wholesome and
sustaining food for infants and invalids. It forms the basis of many
patent foods.
Slippery Elm Food is generally made by mixing a teaspoonful of the
powder into a thin and perfectly smooth paste with cold water and then
pouring on a pint of boiling water, steadily stirring meanwhile. It can,
if desired, be flavoured with cinnamon, nutmeg or lemon rind.
This makes an excellent drink in cases of irritation of the mucous
membrane of the stomach and intestines, and taken at night will induce
sleep.
Another mode of preparation is to beat up an egg with a teaspoonful of
the powdered bark, pouring boiling milk over it and sweetening it.
Taken unsweetened, three times a day, Elm Food gives excellent results
in gastritis, gastric catarrh, mucous colitis and enteritis, being
tolerated by the stomach when all other foods fail, and is of great value
in bronchitis, bleeding from the lungs and consumption (being most healing
to the lungs), soothing a cough and building up and preventing wasting.
A Slippery Elm compound excellent for coughs is made as follows: Cut
obliquely one or more ounces of bark into pieces about the thickness of a
match; add a pinch of Cayenne flavour with a slice of lemon and sweeten,
infusing the whole in a pint of boiling water and letting it stand for 25
minutes. Take this frequently in small doses: for a consumptive patient,
about a pint a day is recommended. It is considered one of the best
remedies that can be given as it combines both demulcent and stimulating
properties. Being mucilaginous, it rolls up the mucous material so
troublesome to the patient and passes it down through the intestines.
In typhoid fever, the Slippery Elm drink, prepared as for coughs, is
recommended, serving a threefold purpose, to cleanse, heal and strengthen,
the patient being allowed to drink as much as desired until thirst has
abated, and other remedies can be used. If the patient is not thirsty, a
dose of 2 large tablespoonfuls every hour for an adult has been
prescribed.
The bark is an ingredient in various lung medicines. A valuable remedy
for Bronchitis and all diseases of the throat and lungs is
compounded as follows: 1 teaspoonful Flax seed, 1 OZ. Slippery Elm bark, 1
OZ. Thoroughwort, 1 stick Liquorice, 1 quart water. Simmer slowly for 20
minutes. Strain and add 1 pint of the best vinegar and 1/2 pint of sugar.
When cold, bottle. Dose: 1 tablespoonful two or three times a day.
In Pleurisy, the following is also recommended: Take 2 oz. each
of Pleurisy root, Marsh Mallow root, Liquorice root and Slippery Elm bark.
Boil in 3 pints of water down to 3 gills. Dose: 1/2 teaspoonful every
half-hour, to be taken warm.
As a heart remedy, a pint of Slippery Elm drink has been
prescribed alternately with Bugleweed compound.
Slippery Elm bark possesses also great influence upon diseases of the
female organs.
It is particularly valuable both medicinally and as an injection
in dysentery and other diseases of the bowels, cystitis and irritation of
the urinary tract. The injection for inflammation of the bowels is made
from an infusion of 1 OZ. of the powder to 1 pint of boiling water,
strained and used lukewarm. Other remedies should be given at the same
time.
An injection for diarrhoea may also be made as follows: 1 drachm
powdered Slippery Elm bark, 3 drachms powdered Bayberry, 1 drachm powdered
Scullcap.
Pour on 1/2 pint of boiling water, infuse for half an hour, strain, add
a teaspoonful of tincture of myrrh and use lukewarm.
As an enema for constipation, 2 drachms of Slippery Elm bark are
mixed well with 1 OZ. of sugar, then 1/2 pint of warm milk and water and
an ounce of Olive Oil are gently stirred in.
Injection for worms (Ascarides): 1/2 drachm Aloes powder,
1 drachm common salt, 1/2 drachm Slippery Elm powder (fine). When well
mixed, add 1/2 pint warm water and sweeten with molasses, stirring well.
Slippery Elm mucilage is also prescribed to be mixed with Oil of Male
Fern (2 oz. of the mucilage to 1 drachm of the oil) as a remedy for the
expulsion of tapeworm
The Red Indians have long used this viscous inner bark to prepare a
healing salve, and in herbal medicine a Slippery Elm bark powder is
considered one of the best possible poultices for wounds, boils, ulcers,
burns and all inflamed surfaces, soothing, healing and reducing pain and
inflammation.
It is made as follows: Mix the powder with hot water to form the
required consistency, spread smoothly upon soft cotton cloth and apply
over the parts affected. It is unfailing in cases of suppurations,
abscesses, wounds of all kinds, congestion, eruptions, swollen glands,
etc. In simple inflammation, it may be applied directly over the part
affected; to abscesses and old wounds, it should be placed between cloths.
If applied to parts of the body where there is hair, the face of the
poultice should be smeared with olive oil before applying.
In old gangrenous wounds, an excellent antiseptic poultice is prepared
by mixing with warm water or an infusion of Wormwood, equal parts of
Slippery Elm powder and very fine charcoal and applying immediately over
the part.
A very valuable poultice in cases where it is desirable to hasten
suppuration or arrest the tendency to gangrene is made by mixing the
Slippery Elm powder with brewer's yeast and new milk.
Compound Bran poultice is made by mixing with hot vinegar equal
quantities of wheaten Bran with Slippery Elm powder. This is an excellent
poultice for severe rheumatic and gouty affections, particularly of the
joints, synovitis etc.
Herbal poultices, generally made from the bruised, fresh leaves
of special herbs, are frequently mixed with Slippery Elm and boiling water
sufficient to give the mass consistency.
Marshmallow Ointment, one of the principal ointments used in
herbal medicine, has a considerable proportion of Slippery Elm bark in its
composition. It is made as follows: 3 oz. Marshmallow leaves, 2 OZ.
Slippery Elm bark powder, 3 oz. Beeswax, 16 OZ. Lard. Boil the Marshmallow
and Slippery Elm bark in 3 pints of water for 15 minutes. Express, strain
and reduce the liquor to half a pint. Melt together the lard and wax by
gentle heat, then add the extract while still warm, shake constantly till
all are thoroughly incorporated and store in a cool place.
The bark of Slippery Elm is stated to preserve fatty substances from
becoming rancid.
It has been asserted that a pinch of the Slippery Elm powder put into a
hollow tooth stops the ache and greatly delays decay, if used as soon as
there is any sign of decay.
Lozenges or troches containing 3 grains of Elm flavoured with methyl
salicylate are used as a demulcent.
---Preparations---Mucilage, U.S.P., made by
digesting 6 grams of bruised Slippery Elm in 100 c.c. and heated in a
closed vessel in a water-bath for 1 hour and then strained.
---Other Species--- Fremontia
Californica, or Californian Slippery Elm, has bark with similar
properties, and is used in the same way, but is not botanically related.
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