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Facts and benefits of Queen’s Delight

Facts and benefits of Queen’s Delight

Queen’s Delight Quick Facts
Name: Queen’s Delight
Scientific Name: Stillingia sylvatica
Origin Southeastern US.
Shapes Three-chambered seedpod or capsules
Taste Bitter and unpleasant
Queen’s delight scientifically known as Stillingia sylvatica, commonly known as Stillingia , nettle potato, marcory , cockup-hat , Indian flea root, Queen’s Delight, Queen’s Root, Silver Leaf, Yaw Root, Albero Del Sego, Sevo Vegetal, Racine Royale, Raíz de la Reina, Stillingia, Stillingia sylvatica, Stillingia tenuis is a perennial herb, belonging to the family Euphorbiaceae.  Queen’s delight is indigenous to huge areas in the southern United States and the herb is found growing from Virginia south to Florida plus Texas and westwards to south-eastern Colorado. The plant was named after Dr. B. Stillingfleet. Queen’s Delight is not one of the usual medicinal herbs. But it is one that has good uses.  Root is use medicinally and is used to treat bird sickness, diarrhea vomiting and appetite loss in children and in adults. It has also been used to treat menstruation sickness, yellow eyes and skin weakness.

Plant

Queen’s delight is a perennial herb that grows about four feet tall. The plant is found growing in dry forests and sand hills on the coastal plains of the eastern U.S. In Texas, this species grows in sandy prairies and open woods and in Colorado it occurs on sand dunes. The plant has a preference for sandy, medium and clay soils. It also grows in basic, neutral and acidic soils. It needs a damp soil to thrive. Roots are large and woody about 30 cm. (12 inches) long and nearly 5 cm. (2 inches) thick, sub cylindrical, slightly branched, compact, wrinkled, tough, grayish-brown, breaking with a fibrous fracture, showing a thick bark and porous wood, the inner bark and medullary rays having numerous yellowish-brown resin-cells. Root has peculiar, oleaginous odor and bitter and unpleasant taste, followed by a persistent pungent acridity in mouth and throat. Bark is wrinkled longitudinally, greyish brown externally, and reddish-brown or rose-colored internally.  The plant has angled glabrous stem with a milky sap. A milky juice exudes from the plant or root when cut or broken.

Leaves

The plant bears egg-shaped, rubbery leaves that grow alternately and measure about one to three inches in length. The leaves of queen’s delight are jagged at the periphery and are almost without stalks.

Flower & Fruit

The herb bears yellow blooms during the period between April and July or throughout the year in places having warm climatic conditions. The flowers do not have any petals and emerge in thick terminal spikes. Interestingly, the male queen’s delight blooms on the upper portion of the spikes, while the female flowers appear along the lower part of the spikes. Fruit is a three-chambered seedpod or capsules that effectively emit the ripe seed.

History

Queen’s delight was used by Native Americans as a purgative, a treatment for skin eruptions, and a remedy for venereal disease. Greek women who had just given birth took a decoction of the root or were bathed with an infusion. The boiled mashed roots were eaten by native North American women after childbirth and used by settlers as an external treatment for menstrual irregularity. Queen’s delight was included in the Pharmacopoeia of the United States from 1831 to 1926.

Traditional uses and benefits of Queen’s delight

Usual dosage

Queen’s delight can be taken in different forms – as a decoction and a tincture.

Decoction: To prepare the decoction, add half to one teaspoonful of the dehydrated queen’s delight root in a cup (250 ml) of water and boil the mixture. The mixture should be simmered slowly for about 10 to 15 minutes and strained. For best results, take the decoction thrice every day.

Tincture: The tincture prepared with queen’s delight root ought to be taken in dosage of 1 ml to 2 ml three times every day.

Other Uses

Precautions

References:

https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=28414#null

https://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/56498/

http://www.pfaf.org/User/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Stillingia+sylvatica

https://www.mskcc.org/cancer-care/integrative-medicine/herbs/stillingia

https://www.drugs.com/npp/queen-s-delight.html

http://www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/q/queens03.html

http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/kew-197983

https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=STSY

http://www.herbalpedia.com/blog/?p=98

http://www.purplesage.org.uk/profiles/queensdelight.htm

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