Aethusa cynapium
{{short description|Species of flowering plant in the celery family Apiaceae}}
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| display_parents = 3
| genus = Aethusa
| parent_authority = L.
| species = cynapium
| authority = L.
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Aethusa cynapium (fool's parsley, fool's cicely, or poison parsley) is an annual (rarely biennial) herb in the flowering plant family Apiaceae, native to Europe, western Asia, and northwest Africa. It is the only member of the genus Aethusa. It is related to hemlock and water-dropwort, and like them it is poisonous,Clapham, Tutin, & Warburg: Flora of the British Isles, 2nd edition, page 524 though less so than hemlock. It has been introduced into many other parts of the world and is a common weed in cultivated ground.{{EB1911|inline=y|wstitle=Fool's Parsley|volume=10|page=616}}
Description
Chemical composition, toxicity and medical uses
A. cynapium is poisonous when fresh, but safe if dried. A. cynapium's toxic effects are caused at least in part by cynopine, which resembles coniine in its physical and chemical characters as well as physiological actions. The whole plant is toxic with this alkaloid. Toxins like cynopine are destroyed by drying. A. cynapium also contains trideca-7,9-11-trienoic acid, aethusin, aethusanol A, aethusanol B, as well as flavone glycosides such as rutoside, narcissine, and ascorbic acid.Dwivedi, H., Bhardwaj, M., & Kumar, G. (2021). A Comprehensive Study of Poisonous Plants of Family Apiaceae. In Apiaceae: Ecology, Uses and Toxicity (pp. 1–14). Nova Publisher, New York.{{cite web|title=Fool's Parsley - Uses, Side Effects, and More|url=https://www.webmd.com/vitamins/ai/ingredientmono-447/fools-parsley|website=WebMD|accessdate=2025-01-03}}{{cite journal |last1=Shri |first1=Richa |last2=Bhutani |first2=K.K. |last3=Sharma |first3=Anupam |year=2010 |title=A new anxiolytic fatty acid from Aethusa cynapium |journal=Fitoterapia |volume=81 |issue=5 |pages=337–340 |doi=10.1016/j.fitote.2010.05.003|pmid=20472038 }}
The parts of A. cynapium that grow above the ground are sometimes used to make medicine. The plants has been used in traditional medicine to treat complaints in children, infantile cholera, summer diarrhea, convulsions, mental tension, sleep disorders, delirium, and as stomachic. A. cynapium has actually been shown to cause antianxiety effects in mice because it contains trideca-7,9,11-trienoic acid.
Poisoning from A. cynapium results in symptoms of heat in the mouth and throat. A post-mortem examination has shown redness of the membrane lining the gullet and windpipe, along with symptoms of slight congestion within the duodenum and stomach. Some toxins are destroyed by drying, and indeed, dried hay containing the plant is not poisonous at all.
References
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External links
- {{Commons category-inline}}
- [http://www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/p/parfoo10.html Parsley, Fool's]
{{Taxonbar|from1=Q627429|from2=Q2274537}}
Category:Plants described in 1753
Category:Taxa named by Carl Linnaeus
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