Equisetum arvense

Primary Characteristics

Primary Characteristics

Equisetum arvensebelongs to Equisetaceae, family.
The English Names for this herb are Bottle Brush, Corncob Plant, Dutch Rushes, Horsetail, Paddock-pipes, Pewterwort, Scouring Rush, Shave Grass.

Pharmacological Actions

The pharmacological Actions of Equisetum arvense are Astringent, Diuretic, Haemostyptic, Restorative to damaged pulmonary tissue, Vulnerary.

Indications

The Indications of Whole Herb of Equisetum arvense are Tuberculosis, Osteoarthritis, Osteoporosis, Bladder Troubles, Arthritis, Kidney Troubles, Rheumatoid Arthritis, Bleeding Ulceration, Water retention, Brittle Nails.

No Contra Indication information is available for Equisetum arvense.

Temperaments

No Temperament information is available for Equisetum arvense.

Available Brands

No Brand information is available for Equisetum arvense.

Compound Preparations

No Compound Preparation information is available for Equisetum arvense.

Dosage

PartDoseInstruction
Tincture2.000ml/day - 6.000ml/dayThrice daily.
Whole Herb1.000g/day - 4.000g/day

Herb's Description

Equisetum arvense. Stems: leafless fertile stems light brown in colour are about 0.3 metres tall with a spore-bearing cone (up to 4 cm) on top; fertile stems to 0.6 metres tall, produce whorls of green, four-angled leaf-like branches. Heterophyadic, the vegetative 2-100 cm tall (~ 32) with internodes 1.4-4.5 cm long (m 3.0) and 0.8 to 4.5 mm in diameter (m 1.9), having 4-14 (m 8) ridges. Internally, both carinal and vallecular collenchyma present, and chlorenchyma present under the ridges but interrupted under the valleys, the central canal 1/3-2/3 diameter of stem. Cones: 17-40 (m 24.8) mm long, on peduncles 22-55 (m 37.5) mm long. Rhizome: dark brown to black, dull, covered with hairs, occasionally bearing tubers. Spores: 33-48 µm in diameter (m 42). Gametophytes: Plate tips rounded to funnel-shaped, sparse or absent on males. Antheridia protuberant, 2-3 times longer than wide, with 2-4 (mostly 4) cap cells.

Taste Odor & Occurrence

Occurence: It occurs in Canada, China, Himalayas, Iran, Japan, Korea, Turkey, USA.. It occurce Throughout Europe and Asia south to Turkey, throughout Canada and the USA except the southeast (Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee), across China (except the southeastern part)

Substitutes

No information regarding Equisetum arvense's substitute is currently available.

Active Constituents

Equisetum arvense's Active constituents:

Antidotes

No information regarding Equisetum arvense's antidot is currently available.

Warning & Precautions

The herb in powdered form is not recommended for children or for prolonged use due to the inorganic silica content though decoctions contain mainly organic silica in colloidal form so are not problematic in this reaged. May cause inflammation and benign enlargement of prostate gland, Urinary incontinence; enuresis of children.

Toxicity

Equisetum arvense:
Constituent: Alkaloid (including nicotine & palustrene)
Effects: Nicotene poisoning
Toxicity is reported to be similar to nicotene poisoning in children who have chewed the stem.