Cynoglossum officinale L.
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Cynoglossum officinale

Family: BORAGINACEAE
Genus: Cynoglossum
Species: officinale L.
Common names: Hound's Tongue;Gypsyflower
Pharmacopoeia Londinensis name: Cynoglossum
Distribution summary: Eurasia
Habit: Biennial
Hardiness: H5 - Hardy; cold winter
Habitat: Dry grassland, scrub, meadows, open woodland, roadsides
Garden status: Currently grown
Garden location: Pharmacopoeia Londinensis 1618 'Roots' (HSE 2B), Pharmacopoeia Londinensis 1618 'Roots' (HSE 3)
Flowering months: June, July, August
Reason for growing: Medicinal, toxic

Additional Notes

Culpeper: “... being roasted and laid to the fundament, helps the haemorrhoids. It is also good against burnings and scaldings.”

Culpeper, Nicholas. (1650). A Physical Directory . London, Peter Cole.

Cynoglossum officinale L. Boraginaceae. Houndstongue. Distribution: Europe. Culpeper (1650) writes: “... being roasted and laid to the fundament, helps the haemorrhoids. It is also good against burnings and scaldings.” It contains hepatocarcinogenic pyrrolizidine alkaloids and while people are known to eat the young leaves as a vegetable, this is inadvisable. The whole plant is hairy and may cause contact dermatitis. The use of herbal remedies, which contain these alkaloids, by the Bantu of southern Africa correlates with their high incidence of tumours of the liver and pancreas.

Oakeley, Dr. Henry F. (2013). Wellcome Library notes. Link

It contains hepatocarcinogenic pyrrolizidine alkaloids and while people are known to eat the young leaves as a vegetable, this is inadvisable. The whole plant is hairy and may cause contact dermatitis. The use of herbal remedies, which contain these alkaloids, by the Bantu of southern Africa correlates with their high incidence of tumours of the liver and pancreas.

Vertebrate poison, mammals.

Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN) at www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/tax_search.pl

Pyrrolizidine alkaloids poison liver, kidneys, lungs, heart. carcinogenic. Very dangeraous to non-ruminant animals.

Neuwinger, HD. (1996). African Ethnobotany: Poisons & Drugs, Chapman & Hall page 103

Contains hepatotoxic and carcinogenic pyrrolizidine alkaloids

Professor Anthony Dayan, 2022

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