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handroanthus_impetiginosus_mart._ex_dc._mattos

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handroanthus_impetiginosus_mart._ex_dc._mattos [2014/10/10 10:55] andreashandroanthus_impetiginosus_mart._ex_dc._mattos [2015/06/13 09:38] (aktuell) – Externe Bearbeitung 127.0.0.1
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-Handroanthus impetiginosus (Mart. ex DC.) Mattos - syn.Tabebuia impetiginosa (Mart. ex DC.) Standl. - Bignoniaceae \\ +Handroanthus impetiginosus (Mart. ex DC.) Mattos - syn.Tabebuia impetiginosa (Mart. ex DC.) Standl., Tabebuia ipe Mart., Tabebuia avellanedae Lorentz ex Griseb., Tabebuia heptaphylla Vell. - Bignoniaceae \\ 
-pink lapacho, red lapacho, **Lapacho**+pau d'arco, pink lapacho, red lapacho, **Lapacho**
  
-Deciduous tree, up to 30m high, native to Central and South America. +Deciduous tree, up to 20m high, native to Central and South America; bark light grey, inside reddish-brown; leaves opposite,  palmately compound, dark green, smooth; hybrids of Central America, Columbia and West Argentina have 5 leaflets, those of East Argentina mostly 7 leaflets (formerly taken for seperate species); flower 4-7cm long, with funnel-shaped, lavender-pink to red corolla; corolla 5-lipped, with yellow center
  
 "Red Lapacho (Tabebuia impetiginosa, syn. Tabebuia avellanedae), a canopy tree indigenous to the Amazonian rainforest and other parts of South America, has been acclaimed to be one of the “miraculous” cures for cancer and tumours. For the first time, during the 1960s, it attracted considerable attention in Brazil and Argentina as a ‘wonder drug’. Traditionally, the botanical drug is widely used in local and traditional phytomedicine, usually ingested as a decoction prepared from the inner bark of the tree to treat numerous conditions like bacterial and fungal infections, fever, syphilis, malaria, trypanosomiasis, as well as stomach and bladder disorders.\\ "Red Lapacho (Tabebuia impetiginosa, syn. Tabebuia avellanedae), a canopy tree indigenous to the Amazonian rainforest and other parts of South America, has been acclaimed to be one of the “miraculous” cures for cancer and tumours. For the first time, during the 1960s, it attracted considerable attention in Brazil and Argentina as a ‘wonder drug’. Traditionally, the botanical drug is widely used in local and traditional phytomedicine, usually ingested as a decoction prepared from the inner bark of the tree to treat numerous conditions like bacterial and fungal infections, fever, syphilis, malaria, trypanosomiasis, as well as stomach and bladder disorders.\\
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 The bioscientific evidence for products derived from Tabebuia impetiginosa is insufficient and one of the core challenges of future research will be – based on the recognition of the drug's widespread use – to establish appropriate quality control procedures. Further research into the clinical effects and the pharmacology of chemically characterized extracts is also warranted." \\ The bioscientific evidence for products derived from Tabebuia impetiginosa is insufficient and one of the core challenges of future research will be – based on the recognition of the drug's widespread use – to establish appropriate quality control procedures. Further research into the clinical effects and the pharmacology of chemically characterized extracts is also warranted." \\
 [Red Lapacho (//Tabebuia impetiginosa//) — A global ethnopharmacological commodity? Gómez Castellanos, J. R., Prieto, J. M., Heinrich, M., Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 121(1), 2009, 1-13] [Red Lapacho (//Tabebuia impetiginosa//) — A global ethnopharmacological commodity? Gómez Castellanos, J. R., Prieto, J. M., Heinrich, M., Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 121(1), 2009, 1-13]
 +
 +{{http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8d/Iperosaibira.JPG/1280px-Iperosaibira.JPG?600}}
handroanthus_impetiginosus_mart._ex_dc._mattos.1412938557.txt.gz · Zuletzt geändert: 2014/10/10 10:55 von andreas

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