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buboi (WHITE SILK COTTON TREE ) explore

Folkloric

- Bark is reported to be vomitive and aphrodisiac.

- Decoction of bark used for catarrh.

- Tender fruit used as emollient.

- Decoction of bark regarded as a specific in febrile catarrh.

- Gum is astringent; used for bowel complaints. In children, gum with milk, given as cooling laxative. Also used for urine incontinence in children.

- Gum used as styptic, given in diarrhea, dysentery, and menorrhagia.

- In Liberia, Infusion of bark used as mouthwash.

- Infusion of leaves, onions, and a little tumeric, used for coughs.

- Young roots, shade-dried and powdered, is a chief ingredient in aphrodisiac medicines.

- Tap-root of young plant used for gonorrhea and dysentery.

- Bark in diuretic; in sufficient quantities, produces vomiting.

- In Cambodia, bark used for fevers and diarrhea. Also, as a cure for inebriation, used to bring about perspiration and vomiting.

- Malays used the bark for asthma and colds in children.

- In India, roots used for gonorrhea, dysuria, fevers. Decoction of bark used for chronic dysentery, diarrhea, ascites, and anasarca. Tender leaves also used for gonorrhea.

- In Java, bark mixed with areca nuts, nutmegs, and sugar candy, used as diuretic and for treatment of bladder stones. Infusion of leaves used for cough, hoarseness, intestinal catarrh, and urethritis. Leaves also used for cleaning hair.

- In the Cameroons, bark, which has tannin, is pounded and macerated in cold water and applied to swollen fingers.

- In French Guiana, decoction of flowers used for constipation.

- In Mexico, used for boils, insect bites, mange; used as anti-inflammatory; bark and leaf decoctions used as poultices. Bark decoction taken internally as emetic, diuretic and antispasmodic.

- Bark used for liver and spleen conditions, abdominal complaints, flatulence, constipation.

- Leaves used as emollient. Decoction of flowers is laxative.

- In Nigerian folk medicine, used for treatment of diabetes and infections. Leaves used as alterative and laxative, and as infusion for colic in man and in livestock. Seed oil used in rheumatism. Also, leaves used as curative dressings on sores and to maturate tumors.

- Compressed fresh leaves used for dizziness; decoction of boiled roots used to treat edema; gum eaten to relieve stomach upset; tender shoot decoction used as contraceptive; leaf infusion taken orally for cough and sore throat. (34)

- In India and Malaya, used for bowel complaints.

- In the Ivory Coast, mucilage obtained by boiling used to remove foreign bodies from the eye. Also, bark sap given to sterile women to promote conception.

- In West Africa, used for diarrhea and gonorrhea.

 

source: stuart xchange

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Uploaded on January 12, 2016
Taken on January 11, 2016