Difference between revisions of "Hippophaestron"
(Created page with "Hippophaestron is a non-scientific common name that may refer to a number of plant species and varieties. == Nomenclature== === Other Names:=== == Historical Use of Hippophaes...") |
(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
Hippophaestron is a non-scientific common name that may refer to a number of plant species and varieties.
Contents
Nomenclature
Other Names:
Historical Use of Hippophaestron
Hippophaestron in Traditional Chinese Medicine
Description
Historical Use of Hippophaestron in Western Medicine
Quote Paraph: "botanical materials and preparations were also described for the treatment of epilepsy. These included: white hellebore contained within a split radish; root of the panaces (heraclion) in a drink with seal's rennet; plantain; betony; agaric in oxymel; leaves of cinquefoil; archezostis; dried root of baccar plus coriander; centunculus in vinegar or honey or hot water; varvain taken in wine; crushed berries of hyssop; peucedanus and seal's rennet taken in a drink; scammony in beaver-oil; hippophaestron; senecio."
Sec Auth: Eadie MJ and Bladin PF
Title: A Disease Once Sacred. John Libbey & Company Ltd, 2001
Page: 171
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. 171.
Primary Source: Pliny the Elder, Gaius Plinius Secundus, Natural History: Books XXV to XXXII (Translated Jones WHS 1951 and Translated Jones WHS in 1963)
Background
Synonymns for Hippophaestron
Patent Medicines and Medicines with Multiple Ingredients that include Hippophaestron
Pharmaceutical Information
Chemical Constituents
Evidence or the Use of Hippophaestron 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
Nora Jandhyala, Monica Ferrer, Jacob Pellinen, Hadley T Greenwood, Dennis J Dlugos, Kristen L Park, Liu Lin Thio, Jacqueline French, for Human Epilepsy Project Investigators
Unrecognized Focal Nonmotor Seizures in Adolescents Presenting to Emergency Departments.
Neurology: 2024, 102(10);e209389
[PubMed:38691824]
[WorldCat.org]
[DOI]
(I p)
Nunzia Cristiano, Alexandre Cabayé, Isabelle Brabet, Ralf Glatthar, Amelie Tora, Cyril Goudet, Hugues-Olivier Bertrand, Anne Goupil-Lamy, Peter J Flor, Jean-Philippe Pin, Isabelle McCort-Tranchepain, Francine C Acher
##Title##
J Med Chem: 2024;
[PubMed:38691510]
[WorldCat.org]
[DOI]
(I a)
J Kumaravel, Phulen Sarma, Vanita Suri, Parampreet Singh, Ajay Prakash, Bikash Medhi
Therapeutic Drug Monitoring of Levetiracetam in Different Trimesters of Pregnant Women with Epilepsy in a Tertiary Care Center: A Prospective Study.
Neurol India: 2024, 72(2);358-363
[PubMed:38691482]
[WorldCat.org]
[DOI]
(I p)
Loretta Giuliano, Vania Durante, Giulia Battaglia, Sara Gasparini, Elena Zambrelli, Caterina Ermio, Angela La Neve, Barbara Mostacci, Epilepsy, Gender Commission of the LICE (Italian chapter of the ILAE)
Sex Differences in Adverse Effects of Antiseizure Medications in Adults with Epilepsy: A Systematic Review.
CNS Drugs: 2024;
[PubMed:38691320]
[WorldCat.org]
[DOI]
(I a)
Lucas Henriques Viscardi, Fabricio Diniz Kleber, Henrique Custódio, Angelo Brandelli Costa, Janaína Brollo
Akinetopsia (visual motion blindness) associated with brain metastases: a case report.
Neurol Sci: 2024;
[PubMed:38691276]
[WorldCat.org]
[DOI]
(I a)