Note: This is a project under development. The articles on this wiki are just being initiated and broadly incomplete. You can Help creating new pages.

Difference between revisions of "Hyoscyamus niger - Pārasīkayavānī, Henbane"

From Ayurwiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Mode of Propagation)
(Commonly seen growing in areas)
Line 54: Line 54:
  
 
==Commonly seen growing in areas==
 
==Commonly seen growing in areas==
{{Commonly seen|}}, {{Commonly seen|}}.
+
{{Commonly seen|Cultivated beds}}, {{Commonly seen|Walls of fields}}, {{Commonly seen|Waste ground}}, {{Commonly seen|stony places}}, {{Commonly seen|Lower mountain slopes}}.
  
 
==Photo Gallery==
 
==Photo Gallery==

Revision as of 16:56, 9 April 2019

Help icon-72a7cf.svg This page is a stub. Learn how you can help expanding it.

Pārasīkayavānī consists of the seed of Hyoscyamus niger Linn. (Fam. Solanaceae), an annual or biennial herb, native to the Mediterranean region and temperate Asia, occurring in Western Himalayas from Kashmir to Kumaon at an altitude of 1600 to 4000 m, imported into India.

Uses

Toothache, Mania, Hysteria, Asthma, Bronchitis, Earache.

Parts Used

Leaves, Seeds.

Chemical Composition

The chief constituent of Henbane leaves is the alkaloid Hyoscyamine, together with smaller quantities of Atropine and Hyoscine, also known as Scopolamine. The proportion of alkaloid in the British Pharmacopoeia dried drug varies from 0.045 to 0.14 per cent. Higher yields are exceptional. The amount of Hyoscyamine is many times greater than that of Hyoscine.[1]

Common names

Language Common name
Kannada
Hindi
Malayalam
Tamil
Telugu
Marathi NA
Gujarathi NA
Punjabi NA
Kashmiri NA
Sanskrit
English Henbane


Properties

Reference: Dravya - Substance, Rasa - Taste, Guna - Qualities, Veerya - Potency, Vipaka - Post-digesion effect, Karma - Pharmacological activity, Prabhava - Therepeutics.

Dravya

Rasa

Guna

Veerya

Vipaka

Karma

Prabhava

Habit

Biennial plant

Identification

Leaf

Kind Shape Feature
Paripinnate Oblong Leaf Arrangementis Alternate-spiral

[2]

Flower

Type Size Color and composition Stamen More information
Unisexual 2-4cm long pink Flowering throughout the year and In terminal and/or axillary pseudoracemes

Fruit

Type Size Mass Appearance Seeds More information
oblong pod Thinly septate, pilose, wrinkled seeds upto 5 Fruiting throughout the year

Other features

List of Ayurvedic medicine in which the herb is used

Where to get the saplings

Mode of Propagation

Seeds

How to plant/cultivate

By the walls of fields, waste ground, near buildings and in stony places from low-lying ground near the sea to lower mountain slopes.[3]

Commonly seen growing in areas

Cultivated beds, Walls of fields, Waste ground, stony places, Lower mountain slopes.

Photo Gallery

References

External Links