Plant Detective, The   /     Mistletoe (Part One): A Parasite That Can Hurt Or Heal

Description

Mistletoe, a parasitic plant that grows on a wide range of host trees, shows up on every continent but Antarctica - and on each continent, it's been used in folk medicine. From ancient Greece into twentieth-century America, it was prescribed for epilepsy. Over the centuries, healers have used mistletoe to treat arthritis, menstrual problems, miscarriage (through controlling bleeding), hypertension, and pain - and that's just the short list. It's prescribed frequently in Europe. But don't try any of these uses without a trained health practitioner, because mistletoe can be toxic. More on mistletoe and cancer next time. ( Podcast : " The Plant Detective ," 12/20/14)

Summary

Mistletoe, a parasitic plant that grows on a wide range of host trees, shows up on every continent but Antarctica - and on each continent, it's been used in folk medicine. From ancient Greece into twentieth-century America, it was prescribed for epilepsy. Over the centuries, healers have used mistletoe to treat arthritis, menstrual problems, miscarriage (through controlling bleeding), hypertension, and pain - and that's just the short list. It's prescribed frequently in Europe. But don't try any

Subtitle
Mistletoe, a parasitic plant that grows on a wide range of host trees, shows up on every continent but Antarctica - and on each continent, it's been used in folk medicine. From ancient Greece into twentieth-century America, it was prescribed for epilepsy.
Duration
89
Publishing date
2014-12-20 12:00
Link
http://mtpr.org/post/mistletoe-part-one-parasite-can-hurt-or-heal
Contributors
  Beth Anne Austein
author  
Enclosures
https://cpa.ds.npr.org/kufm/audio/2014/12/Mistletoe1.mp3
audio/mpeg