PARTE
UTILIZADA=USED PART: hoja
ACCIÓN
FARMACOLÓGICA=PHARMACOLOGICAL ACTION: diuretico, colagoga y depurativa
POSOLOGÍA=POSOLOGY: su dosis es de dos tazas de te por día; se prepara en forma de té
ZONA GEOGRÁFICA =GEOGRAFICAL ZONE: Argentina
--------------
Uso tradicional: estas plantas se utilizan para tratar la fiebre y los parásitos estomacales.
Método de empleo: se usa cualquier parte de las plantas, preferiblemente ramas de individuos adultos. Estas se recogen en cualquier época del año. Se prepara una bebida hirviendo las partes de la planta en agua o agua de panela.
Origin: Colombia
Origin
Throughout the warmer parts of India.
Action:
Plant—boiled with butter milk is a home remedy for indigestion and diarrhoea in children. Used for tympanitis, dyspepsia, biliousness and dysentery; also for its anti-inflammatory, analgesic, antipyretic and antiscorbutic activities. Leaf paste is applied over forehead to cure headache.
-----------------------
Origin
Jamaica
Folk medicinal uses
Oxalis spp. contain oxalic acid: they are commonly regarded as cooling. febrifuge. antiscorbutic and stomachic. O. corniculata is used in Jamaica to make tea which is regarded as antidiuretic (though Lunan reported it diuretic) and of value for the treatment of a "bad back". The species also finds use in Africa. Cuba. India. It has been much used in dysentery cases. to remove films from the cornea and. it is said. as an antidote to Datura poisoning.
--------------------
Origin:
Nigeria
Part used
leaves
Medicinal uses
Fever,warts,boils
----------------------
Origin:
Northern sector of Kibale National Park, Uganda
Disease treated:
- Cough, syphilis candida, Suture left after normal delivery
- Meat allergy
------------------------------
Origin
Mizoram, Northeast India
Parts used
Whole plant
Ailments
Hair lotion
1) Plantas que curan. Buenos Aires: Ediliba, 1987.
2) Arango Caro, Sandra /Guía de plantas medicinales de uso común en Salento, Colombia. St. Lois : Missouri Botanical Garden Press., 2004. - p. 71
3) Khare, C.P./ Indian Medicinal Plants. -- Nueva Dheli: Springer, 2007 . - p 459.
4) Asprey, G.F; Phylis Thornton/ Medicinal plants of Jamaica. Parts III & IV. – p. 64.
5) Abd El-Ghani1, Monier M./ Traditional medicinal plants of Nigeria: an overview: Agric. Biol. J. N. Am., 2016, 7(5): 220-247. - p. 238.
6) Jane Namukobe; et al. / Traditional plants used for medicinal purposes by local communities around the Northern sector of Kibale National Park, Uganda. Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 2011(136) p. 241.
7) Birla Kshetrimayum/ Medicinal Plants and Its Therapeutic Uses/ USA: OMICS Group eBooks, 2017. p. 30