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Poisons and Panaceas: Plants Tell History of Healing 11/9/18, 3(38 PM
NEW YORK — Modern medicine owes a great debt to botany. Plants exploited by ancient apothecaries have given rise to
more complex and effective cures, and alkaloids isolated from natural herbs have found their way into the neat little pills
people get from the pharmacy today.
In a nod to the world's 30,000 herbs that belong to a storied history of healing, botanists have gathered 500 medicinal
plants for a living exhibition called "Wild Medicine" here at the New York Botanical Garden.
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Foxglove (Digitalis purpurea), beloved by gardeners for its drooping bell-shaped blooms, may be one of the most famous
examples. The plant can be deadly if eaten, but it was historically used as a remedy for a wide range of ails, many of which
it couldn't actually treat (such as epilepsy).
" #
In the 18th century, William Withering, a British physician and friend of Erasmus Darwin, used infusions of foxglove with
surprising success to treat dropsy, a disease now known as edema that can cause swelling bad enough to rip open the
skin. More recently, scientists have harnessed chemicals from the plant to create digitalis medications such as digoxin,
which is often administered to patients with congestive heart failure.
Rosy periwinkle, too, is toxic to eat, but has been used to treat ailments from diabetes to constipation in traditional Indian
and Chinese medicines. Sometimes called Madagascar periwinkle, it's adorned with pink flowers and is endangered in the
wild. More than four decades ago, scientists isolated vincristine and vinblastine from the plant, and showed that these
alkaloids could be used in chemotherapy treatments. The discovery is often credited with dramatically boosting the
survival rate of children with leukemia.
For foxglove, rosy periwinkle and other potent medicinal plants, the line between poison and panacea is often thin.
Opium poppy gave rise to morphine, which revolutionized pain treatment. But the plant is also the source of the highly
addictive body-wasting drug heroin. The active agent in curare, a chemical known as tubocurarine, was found to be useful
as a muscle relaxer during surgeries and electroconvulsive therapy. But hunters in the Amazon also extracted the
chemical from the plant's woody vines to make paralyzing blow darts.
Balick, who is the garden's vice president for botanical science, knows all too well about the dangers of curare.
One night years ago, Balick was up late going through some old materials that he had collected in the field when he stuck
himself with a curare dart from the Amazon. When he called his local poison control center and explained his story, the
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Poisons and Panaceas: Plants Tell History of Healing 11/9/18, 3(38 PM
operator told him to call plant expert Michael Balick of the New York Botanical Garden. When he said that he was Michael
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Balick, the operator told him to go to the hospital. He said he was cleared of any possible toxic effects by the next day.
Vanishing wisdom
Many of the plants featured in "Wild Medicine" sit in a replica of Italy's Orto Botanico di Padova in Padua, a UNESCO World
Heritage site and the oldest intact academic botanical garden, established in 1545. In a garden like this, Renaissance-era
medical students would have studied the labels of the neatly laid plots and learned how to identify plants. And when they
didn't have access to the herbs themselves, they would have hit the books. A concurrent exhibition of manuscripts at the
New York Botanical Garden offers examples of early botanical textbooks, some of them more than 700 years old.
Other cultures don't have such well-documented traditions, and they're at risk of losing their herbal history. Today, Balick
partners with people in far-flung locales like Vanuatu and NEWS TECH HEALTH
Micronesia PLANET
to write EARTH STRANGE
manuals NEWS ANIMALS
of traditional healingHISTORY CULTURE SPACE
practices
before they die out.
He told one story of a traditional healer he met in Micronesia whose younger family members received training in
Western medicine.
" 0 When the local clinic ran out of supplies during a dysentery epidemic, the healer was dismayed that
her professionally trained young relatives didn't know that the plant growing all around the health care facility was an
effective traditional
# 0treatment for diarrhea.
"Wild Medicine" is on view until Sept. 8.
Follow Megan Gannon on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on Live
Science. '
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