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Saturday, May 28, 2011

ACTAEA RACEMOSA

(Actaea gyrostachya)
(CIMICIFUGA RACEMOSA)

N. O. ---Ranunculaceae.

Latin, Actaea gyrostachya, A. monogyna, A. orthostachya, A. racemosa, Botrophis actaeoides, B. serpentaria, Christopheriana canadensis racemosa, Cimicifuga, serpentaria ; English, Black cohosh, Black snakeroot, Bugbane, Deerweed, Rattleroot, Rattlesnake root, Rattleweed, Richweed, Squawroot;French, Racine d’actee a grappes; German, Schwarze Schlangenwurzel; Vernacular, Afeoon Ratie.
Description:--
A perennial, deciduous plant, with thick, short, horizontal, tough root, with numerous long fibers underneath, scarred from fallen scales. It is blackish externally, whitish internally, with a peculiar, disagreeable odour, and bitter, astringent taste. The stem is straight, simple, cylindrical, smooth, 3 to 8 feet high. The leaves are bi-or tri-pinnate, lower very large, upper smaller, leaflets cut and serrate. The flowers appear in Jun and July, are numerous, ½ inch wide, on slender horizontal pedicels, forming a terminal raceme 1 to 3 feet long, white and fetid. The fruit ripens in September.

Found in :-Rich woodlands, edges of field, newly cleared hillsides in the United State from Maine to Michigan, Canada and southward. In Pakistan found in Murree Hills.

Introduced in homoeopathic
literature in 1856 by Dr. A. Houghton, N. A. J, of Hom. V. 27. [ Allen’s Encyc. Mat. Med. X. 468].

Part Used:--
The fresh root.

Preparation:--
(a)Tincture Q: =Drug Strength 1/10
Cimicifuga, moist magma containing solids100gm.
Plant moisture 185 Cc.= 285
Distilled Water200 Cc.
Strong alcohol650 Cc.
To make one thousand cubic centimeters of tincture.

(b) Dilutions: 2x to contain one part tincture, four parts distilled water, five parts alcohol ; 3x and higher with dispensing alcohol.

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