Uses: skin problems.
Origin: Caribbean, French Guiana, Gabon, Moluccas.
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Range. The Moluccas. Widely cultivated in warm regions. Cultivated in Myanmar.
Uses
Flower: Buds (cloves sun-dried buds) are sharp, spicy and bitter in taste; regarded as having the following properties: carminative, stomachic, antiemetic, antinauseant, febrifuge, vermifuge, emmenagogue, and tonic. They are used as an aid in treating diseases of the arteries, for lung problems, and as a general stimulant and excitant of the digestive functions.
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Origin
Cultivated in Tamil Nadu and Kerala.
Action:
Carminative, antiinflammatory, antibacterial.
Flower buds—antiemetic, stimulant, carminative. Used in dyspepsia, gastric irritation.
Oil—employed as a local analgesic for hypersensitive dentlines and carious cavaties; internally as a carminative and antispasmodic.
1) Geraldini , Isanete, Journal of Ethnopharmacology v. 173, 2015 . -- p. 383-423
2) DeFilipps, Robert A.; Krupnick, Gary A. / PhytoKeys, v. 102. - - p. 1 - 314, 2018.
3) Khare, C.P./ Indian Medicinal Plants. -- Nueva Dheli: Springer, 2007 . - p 637.