Difference between revisions of "Ventunculus"

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

Revision as of 11:54, 8 April 2015

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

Nomenclature

Other Names:

Historical Use of Ventunculus

Ventunculus in Traditional Chinese Medicine

Description

Historical Use of Ventunculus 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 Ventunculus

Patent Medicines and Medicines with Multiple Ingredients that include Ventunculus

Pharmaceutical Information

Chemical Constituents

Evidence or the Use of Ventunculus 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

Haijiao Wang, Ge Tan, Xiuli Li, Deng Chen, Dongmei An, Qiyong Gong, Ling Liu
Aberrant functional connectivity associated with drug response in patients with newly diagnosed epilepsy.
Neurol Sci: 2024;
[PubMed:38653915] [WorldCat.org] [DOI] (I a)

Sobia Tabassum, Susan Shorter, Saak V Ovsepian
Analysis of the action mechanisms and targets of herbal anticonvulsants highlights opportunities for therapeutic engagement with refractory epilepsy.
J Mol Med (Berl): 2024;
[PubMed:38653825] [WorldCat.org] [DOI] (I a)

Nils Berginström, Linus Andersson
Remote neuropsychological assessment of patients with neurological disorders and injuries-a study protocol for a cross-sectional case-control validation study.
BMJ Open: 2024, 14(4);e080628
[PubMed:38653513] [WorldCat.org] [DOI] (I e)

Michael Schwarz, Annabell Sophie Badstübner, Karlotta Meyn, Katrin Walther, Hajo Hamer
[Neurorehabilitation after epilepsy surgery in the temporal lobe in patients with specific neurocognitive risk profiles]. [Anforderungen an die Neurorehabilitation nach epilepsiechirurgischen Eingriffen im linken Temporallappen bei Patienten mit neurokognitivem Risikoprofil.]
Fortschr Neurol Psychiatr: 2024;
[PubMed:38653457] [WorldCat.org] [DOI] (I a)

Wenqiang Fang, Shihao Chen, Xuefen Xia, Wenting Huang, Yanru Du, Zhipeng Liu, Lekai Chen, Xinshi Wang, Huiqin Xu
Interictal interleukin-6 and tumor necrosis factor α levels are associated with seizure recurrence in adults with epilepsy.
Epilepsy Behav: 2024, 155;109786
[PubMed:38653175] [WorldCat.org] [DOI] (I a)

Safety

Allergies

Side Effect and Warnings

Pregnancy and Breastfeeding

Adverse Effects