Medical Toxicology of Natural Substances || Daffodils and Other Emetic Bulbs
โ Scribed by Barceloux, Donald G.
- Publisher
- John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
- Year
- 2008
- Weight
- 115 KB
- Category
- Article
- ISBN
- 047172761X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Hepatotoxic, pyrrolizidine -containing herbs are present in several plant families, and the consumption of these plants as teas or contaminates of cereal have caused epidemics of hepatic veno -occlusive disease in various countries throughout the world. 1 In 1920, Wilmot and Robertson described live
The toxicity of honey collected from bees frequenting rhododendron leaves has been recognized since ancient times. The ancient Greek soldier, Xenophon, reported in the Anabasis the poisoning of his troops by the honey of Rhododendron ponticum fl owers. While disabled after honey ingestion, Pompey '
Both the d -and l -isomers of limonene and the racemic mixture (dipentene) occur naturally. In Florida in the early 1940s, d -limonene was discovered as a by -product of citrus molasses production. 1 Since the 1980s, dlimonene has been an alternative to chlorinated hydrocarbon solvents and degreasin