Showing posts with label hemoroids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hemoroids. Show all posts

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Medicinal Trees Dogwood (Cornus ) bark is used for ever, pneumonia, diarrhea, malaria, hemoroids, colic, ringworms

By Liliana Usvat
Blog 188-365


Dogwood (Cornus )

A medicine made from the bark of this tree native to the eastern United States often has been substituted for quinine.


Fruits

Cornus mas is commonly cultivated in Southeastern Europe for its edible berries, which can be eaten raw after slight bletting, turned into jams, and fermented into a wine.

Useful Parts of the Plant:
  • Leaves
  • Bark
  • Ripe fruit
 
  • Flowers
  • Peel

Medicinal Uses
  • Astringent, 
  • febrifuge, 
  • stimulant, 
  • tonic
Cornus florida has been proven to prevent the spread of malaria. Their bark is rich in tannin and has been used as a substitute for quinine. During the civil war confederate soldiers would make a tea from the bark to treat pain and fevers, and dogwood leaves in a poultice to cover wounds


Dogwood bark is best used as an
  • ointment for ague - A tincture can be made out of either the leaves or the bark of the plant and can be used to treat various ailments such as eczema, skin infections, intestinal parasites, veal skin, and gout and so on. 
The tincture should be prepared in the following: mix 50 g of the ground plant in 250 ml of alimentary alcohol. Filter this mixture for 15 days. It is advisable to consume about 10-15 drops of this tincture (after diluting in water) about three times a day.
  • Cornus is also useful in treating colic.
  • Making a tea out of dogwood has been found beneficial in bringing down high temperatures, and relieving body chills as well.
  • Dogwood teas are also effective in inducing vomiting as well as bringing about relaxation in sick persons.  
  • The bark of the dogwood can also be used to treat external hemorrhoids. All you need to do is to boil about 4 tablespoons of the bark in about 1 liter of water for about half an hour. Filter this mixture and then apply on the affected areas for relief. 
  • The leaves of the cornus plant are also effective in treating ringworm. A decoction should be made by boiling cornus leaves along with hag berry leaves. Consume this decoction in order to treat ringworm. 
  • malaria (substitute for quinine), 
  • fever, pneumonia, 
  • colds, and similar complaints. 
  • Used for diarrhea.  The fruits were widely used to treat dysentery and diarrhea. The method for doing this is as follows. About 9 cornus fruits were mixed with some pears and nutshells and a tea was made from these. This remedy was found to be effective for diarrhea.
Externally, poulticed onto external ulcers and sores.

  • Jamaican dogwood is a fairly potent sedative well known as a specific for migraine headaches, neuralgia, and for treatment of insomnia caused by pain , nervous tension, and stress. The bark is anti-inflamatory and antispasmodic and can be used in cases of dysmenorrhea (painful periods). Jamaican dogwood is a strong analgesic that can be used along with other herbs to treat the musculoskeletal pain of arthritis and rheumatism. Preparation Methods & Dosage :Most often as a decoction, also taken in tincture and caps.

Formulas or Dosages

Use only dried dogwood bark. Fresh bark upsets the stomach and bowels.
Infusion: steep 1 tbsp. bark in 1 pint water for 30 minutes and strain. Take 1/2 cup every 2-3 hours.
Tincture: take 20-40 drops in water, as needed.

Folklore
 
This tropical shrub grows wild in Central America and the northern parts of South America. The bark of the root works similarly to aspirin pain relievers by blocking an enzyme that produces inflammatory and pain causing chemicals called prostaglandins. It gained its nickname "fish poison tree" from the West Indian practice of using it to stupify fish to make them easier to catch. 

Other Uses

The flowers of the plant can either be eaten raw or used in the making of syrups, brandy or marmalade.

Twigs used as chewing sticks, forerunners of the toothpick. It was sometimes used as a substitute when Peruvian bark could not be obtained. 

Biochemical Information

Tannic and gallic acids, resin, gum, oil, wax, lignin, lime potash and iron
Forestation
 
Dogwood can be propagated without much difficulty by its seeds. The seeds of dogwood are sown in the fall into organized rows of sand or sawdust and the seedling usually emerge in the ensuing spring. If you are using clean seeds the germination rate is excellent, almost 100 per cent. In fact, the dormancy of the seeds is prevailed over by means of cold stratification treatments for about 90 to 120 days (three to four months) at around 4°C (39°F).

Alternately, dogwood may also be propagated by softwood cuttings taken from new growth in the later part of spring or early part of summer and rooted.

While the success of rooting can be as high as 50 per cent to 85 per cent, this method is not generally used by commercial cultivators.  Selected cultivable varieties are usually propagated by a method called T-budding in the later part of summer or by means of another method known as whip grafting in the greenhouse during winter months onto seedling rootstock.

Name
 
Cornus is a genus of about 30–60 species of woody plants in the family Cornaceae, commonly known as dogwoods.
Other Names of Cornus:
  • Common dogwood (Cornus sanguinea)
  • Flowering dogwood (Cornus florida)
  • Pacific dogwood (Cornus nuttallii)
  • Kousa Dogwood (Cornus kousa)
  • Canadian Dwarf Cornel (Cornus Canadensis)
  • Eurasian Dwarf Cornel (Cornus suecica)
  • Cornelian Cherry (Cornus Mas)
  • Golden Dogwood (Cornus Alba)
  • Dogwood (Cornus Contoversa)
  • Flaviramea (Cornus Stolonifera)