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Ce produit n'est pas destiné à diagnostiquer, traiter, guérir ou prévenir toute maladie. Ces déclarations n'ont pas été évaluées par la Food and Drug Administration.
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Aconitum lycoctonum
European species of monkshood with yellow flowers; similarly highly toxic but used in historical medicine for neuralgic pain.
Yellow Monkshood (Aconitum lycoctonum) is a highly toxic European aconite species historically used in folk medicine for neuralgic pain and joint ailments. Its primary active compounds include lycoctonine, delcosine, and aconitine analogs, which are potent cardiotoxins and neurotoxins. Modern use is limited to toxic alkaloid research and ethnobotanical documentation due to extreme toxicity.
Aconitine-like alkaloids bind to voltage-gated sodium channels in cardiac and neuronal tissues, prolonging channel activation and causing persistent depolarization, leading to arrhythmias and neurotoxicity. They also interact with potassium channels and may inhibit acetylcholinesterase, contributing to paralysis and respiratory failure. The cumulative effect is fatal cardiac arrest and neuromuscular blockade.
European species of monkshood with yellow flowers; similarly highly toxic but used in historical medicine for neuralgic pain.
Yellow Monkshood (Aconitum lycoctonum) is a highly toxic European aconite species historically used in folk medicine for neuralgic pain and joint ailments. Its primary active compounds include lycoctonine, delcosine, and aconitine analogs, which are potent cardiotoxins and neurotoxins. Modern use is limited to toxic alkaloid research and ethnobotanical documentation due to extreme toxicity.
Aconitine-like alkaloids bind to voltage-gated sodium channels in cardiac and neuronal tissues, prolonging channel activation and causing persistent depolarization, leading to arrhythmias and neurotoxicity. They also interact with potassium channels and may inhibit acetylcholinesterase, contributing to paralysis and respiratory failure. The cumulative effect is fatal cardiac arrest and neuromuscular blockade.