PubMed-compiled information sheet
This sheet was compiled from PubMed (NIH) abstracts using AI assistance. Every factual claim is cited to a real PubMed article (see the source list). It has not yet been human-reviewed — confirm with a healthcare provider before use.
Compiled from 30 PubMed articles · model: gemma4:31b
Summary
Background
Active compounds
Mechanism of action
Clinical evidence
Contact with sap followed by sun exposure results in acute erythema, bullae, and blistering rashes [PMID:35100530, PMID:1017181].
Exposure can cause second-degree and third-degree burns, including partial or full skin thickness burns and epidermal necrosis [PMID:35217057, PMID:27755521, PMID:24549994, PMID:8540985].
Safety & adverse effects
Evidence summary
PubMed sources
- 1.PMID: 23559602 (2013) — Giant Hogweed burns. · Archives of disease in childhood
- 2.PMID: 1017181 (1976) — Phytophotodermatitis from Heracleum mantegazzianum. · Contact dermatitis
- 3.PMID: 35217057 (2022) — Predicted range shifts of invasive giant hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum) in Europe. · The Science of the total environment
- 4.PMID: 35100530 (2021) — Botanical Briefs: Phytophotodermatitis Caused by Giant Hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum). · Cutis
- 5.PMID: 34685912 (2021) — Long-Term Giant Hogweed Invasion Contributes to the Structural Changes of Soil Nematofauna. · Plants (Basel, Switzerland)