Difference between revisions of "Hiera"

From Epilepsy Naturapedia
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "Hiera is a non-scientific common name that may refer to a number of plant species and varieties. == Nomenclature== === Other Names:=== == Historical Use of Hiera== === Hiera i...")
 
(Added Western Medicine category)
Line 31: Line 31:
 
===Pregnancy and Breastfeeding===
 
===Pregnancy and Breastfeeding===
 
===Adverse Effects===
 
===Adverse Effects===
 +
[[Category:Western Medicine]]

Revision as of 11:53, 8 April 2015

Hiera is a non-scientific common name that may refer to a number of plant species and varieties.

Nomenclature

Other Names:

Historical Use of Hiera

Hiera in Traditional Chinese Medicine

Description

Historical Use of Hiera in Western Medicine

Quote Paraph: "The arteries in front of, and behind, the ears might be opened. Potent purgatives such as hiera, and medicines which drew off phlegm from the head, were to be used."
Sec Auth: Eadie MJ and Bladin PF
Title: A Disease Once Sacred. John Libbey & Company Ltd, 2001
Page: 172
Source: A Disease Once Sacred, John Libbey & Company Ltd, 2001, M.J. Eadie and P.F. Bladin
Complete: Eadie MJ, Bladin PF. A disease once sacred: a history of the medical understanding of epilepsy. Eastleigh: John Libbey; 2001. p. 172.
Primary Source:

Background

Synonymns for Hiera

Patent Medicines and Medicines with Multiple Ingredients that include Hiera

Pharmaceutical Information

Chemical Constituents

Evidence or the Use of Hiera in the Treatment of Epilepesy

Basic Science

Animal Studies

Cohort, Case-Control and Non-Randomized Trials

Randomized Controlled Trials

Meta-Analysis

1st Five Results: pubmed search

Seungyon Koh, Dong Yun Lee, Jae Myung Cha, Yerim Kim, Hyung Hoi Kim, Hyeon-Jong Yang, Rae Woong Park, Jun Young Choi
Association between pre-diagnostic serum uric acid levels in patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy and conversion rate to drug-resistant epilepsy within 5 years: A common data model analysis.
Seizure: 2024, 118;103-109
[PubMed:38669746] [WorldCat.org] [DOI] (I a)

Tizian Rosenstock, Heike Schneider, Mitra Lara Neymeyer, Lena-Luise Becker, Bettina Schulz, Anna Tietze, Pablo Hernáiz Driever, Angela M Kaindl, Peter Vajkoczy, Thomas Picht, Ulrich-Wilhelm Thomale
Analysis of bihemispheric language function in pediatric neurosurgical patients using repetitive navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation.
J Neurosurg Pediatr: 2024;1-11
[PubMed:38669716] [WorldCat.org] [DOI] (I a)

Henry M Skelton, Katie Bullinger, Faical Isbaine, Jonathan C Lau, Jon T Willie, Robert E Gross
Optimal hippocampal targeting in responsive neurostimulation for mesial temporal lobe epilepsy.
J Neurosurg: 2024;1-10
[PubMed:38669705] [WorldCat.org] [DOI] (I a)

Mayke Oosterloo, Alexiane Touze, Lauren M Byrne, Jannis Achenbach, Hande Aksoy, Annabelle Coleman, Dawn Lammert, Martha Nance, Peggy Nopoulos, Ralf Reilmann, Carsten Saft, Helen Santini, Ferdinando Squitieri, Sarah Tabrizi, Jean-Marc Burgunder, Oliver Quarrell, Pediatric Huntington Disease Working Group of the European Huntington Disease Network
Clinical Review of Juvenile Huntington's Disease.
J Huntingtons Dis: 2024;
[PubMed:38669553] [WorldCat.org] [DOI] (I a)

Elles van der Louw, Petra Trimmel-Schwahofer, Anita Devlin, Marisa Armeno, Lindsey Thompson, J Helen Cross, Stéphane Auvin, Anastasia Dressler
Human milk and breastfeeding during ketogenic diet therapy in infants with epilepsy: Clinical practice guideline.
Dev Med Child Neurol: 2024;
[PubMed:38669468] [WorldCat.org] [DOI] (I a)

Safety

Allergies

Side Effect and Warnings

Pregnancy and Breastfeeding

Adverse Effects