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http://www.herbs2000.com/herbs/herbs_mayapple.htm

Mayapple

Podophyllum peltatum

American Mandrake

Ducks Foot

Ground Lemon

Hog Apple

Indian Apple

Lang-tu

Love Apples

Mandragora

Mandrake

Mayapple

Racoon Berry

Umbrella Plant

Wild Lemon

Wild Mandrake

Mayapple - this perennial grows one to two feet tall. One or two large

leaves unfold like umbrellas, and a solitary white blossom forms below them.

The mayapple's rhizome is thick and reddish brown. Its fruit is small and

yellow.

The umbrella like leaves of the mayapple are a common sight in woodlands,

where the plant is native. Mayapple was well known to North American Indians,

who valued it for its powerful laxative effect, as a treatment for intestinal worms, as a cure for warts

, and even as an

insecticide for use on their crops. Apparently the Indians recognized

mayapple's toxic qualities; it is said that they sometimes ate the roots and

shoots to commit suicide.

Indians also ate the mayapple's fruits (the only part of the plant that is

not poisonous), as many people do to this day. Some, however, say they are

insipid. One 19th-century botanist dismissed them as " somewhat mawkish,

beloved of pigs, raccoons, and small boys. "

The plant's creeping rhizome, pencil-thin and up to 6 feet long, is the part

that is used for medicinal purposes. Gathered in autumn as the plants are dying

down, the rhizomes are dried and crushed into a powder. Although the remedy has

traditionally been used to treat conditions ranging from liver ailments to

cancers, mayapple remains best known as a laxative. But its purgative action is

so strong that the U. S. Food and Drug Administration lists this use of the

plant as " unsafe. "

PARTS USED

Rhizome.

USES

Mayapple gets its Latin name from the Greek words podos and phyllon

(foot-shaped leaves); peltatum means " shield like " . While the

mayapple's ripe fruit is edible, and jellies and juices are prepared from it,

the root, leaves, seeds, and unripe fruit all can be poisonous. To encourage

children to stay away from the poisonous mayapple, their elders traditionally

taught them that it was tended by the devil. Native Americans used the root,

the fruit, or decoctions of the whole plant as insecticides.

Native North American tribes drank a brew made from the dried, ground

rhizome as a treatment for intestinal worms, as an antidote for snakebite, and as a

laxative. This herb was formerly used as one of the laxative ingredients in the

over -the-counter medication called " 's Little Liver Pills. "

Extracts of mayapple are currently administered externally to treat genital

warts and some skin

cancers. Podophyllotoxin, a potentially lethal component of mayapple,

blocks cell division and has tumor-inhibiting properties. Two medications

derived from it are approved for use in the United States. Etoposide is used to

treat testicular and small-cell lung cancer.

Teniposide is employed with brain tumors and childhood leukemia. The FDA

has warned against mayapple as a laxative because of its potential toxicity.

Despite 19th-century beliefs in its safety, American mandrake is no longer

taken internally because of its cytotoxic (cell-killing) action. However,

applied externally as a poultice, lotion, or ointment, the root can be an

effective treatment for all kinds of warts.

Other medical uses

Homeopathy.

HABITAT AND CULTIVATION

Indigenous to the eastern United States and southern Canada, American

mayapple usually grows in patches.

RESEARCH

The lignans in mayapple - podophyllotoxin in particular - act against tumors

and have been extensively researched for their anticancer potential. Semi

synthetic derivatives of podophyllotoxin appear to be the most promising,

having minimal toxicity.

CONSTITUENTS

The rhizome of mayapple

contains lignans (especially podophyllotoxin), flavonoids, resin, and

gums. The

lignans are responsible for the rhizome's purgative action.

Radiating

UNCONDITIONAL LOVE & Truth

To ALL who share our circle, our

universe, our love, our trust.

May

I always be found worthy.

Gratitude

& Thankfulness to All of Us

aSoaringHawk

Look at everything as though you were seeing it either for the

first or last time. Then your time on earth will be filled with joy &

glory.

Thank you for YOU, ALL!

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