
CALUMBA - Uses, Side Effects, and More - WebMD
Calumba (Jateorhiza palmata) is an herb. The root has been used as an ingredient in bitters and has also been used to make medicine. Calumba might help to relax the muscles in the intestinal...
Facts about Calumba – Jateorhiza palmata - Health Benefits Times
Nov 11, 2020 · Calumba scientifically known as Jateorhiza palmata is a perennial climbing plant belonging to Menispermaceae (Moonseed family). The plant is native to tropical East Africa particularly Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and South Africa (Kwazulu-Natal).
Traditional Benefits and Side Effects of Coscinium Fenestratum (Mara ...
Aug 22, 2020 · Coscinium fenestratum is a medicinal herb that offers a lot of ayurvedic benefits, it is derived from the source medicine daruharidra. Every part of this herb produces innumerable uses, its stem is used as a yellow dye and bitter tonic. Europeans named this plant as “ tree turmeric or false calumba”, it comes under the Menispermaceae family.
False Calumba Stem – NutraWiki
False Calumba Stem, as it is sometimes referred to in English, is a flowering woody climber, native to South Asia and Mainland Southeast Asia. It is rare and critically endangered in many of its habitats.
Coscinium fenestratum - Wikipedia
Coscinium fenestratum, or yellow vine as it is sometimes referred to in English, is a flowering woody climber, native to South Asia and Mainland Southeast Asia. It is rare and critically endangered in many of its habitats. Coscinium fenestratum is a member of the family Menispermaceae and the genus Coscinium.
Coscinium fenestratum (Gaertn.) Colebr.-A Review on this Rare ...
The stem of Coscinium can be easily distinguished from that of Berberis by large vessels in the wood, bright greenish yellow colour with open, porous structures and devoid of crenate rings. Wood is lighter and softer than Berberis sp. (Anonymous, 2001).
Potent Roots on the Move - History of Pharmacy and …
Jul 25, 2022 · Calumba (Jateorhiza calumba / J. palmata) and abutua (Cissampelos pareira) are multi-purpose medicinal plants, whose roots have been used in Eastern, Southern, and West-Central Africa for a considerable time.
the stem, and were formerly considered as belonging to two species, jateorhiza calumba and jateorhiza palmata, but later botanists have united them under the former name. Calumba (also columbo) root has long been in use under the name “kalumb” among the African tribes of Mozambique, who employed it as a remedy for dysentery
Endangered Medicinal Plant Coscinium fenestratum (Gaertn.) …
Stem and root of this species are highly medicinal and is sold in the drug sales of India as Maramanjal and Europe as False Calumba or tree turmeric. The stem is bitter, anti-inflammatory, antiseptic, febrifuge and tonic and is useful in vitiated conditions of kapha and vata, ophthalmopathy, wounds, ulcers, diabetes, fever, and general debility.
CALUMBA (Jateorhiza palmata; J. calumba; Cocculus palmatus)
The male plant has a single stem of about one-inch thickness proceeding from the root, while the female has two. The leaves are large (10 inches long, 14 inches wide), petiolate (stalked), hairy and palmately-lobed (3-7 lobes); and the flowers are small and inconspicuous (borne in pendulous maxillary panicles).