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cholagogue การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • In medical use, it is administered as a cholagogue and choleretic.
  • It is also known as a cholagogue and choleretic.
  • It is used as a cholagogue and choleretic.
  • Boldo is officially listed as phytotherapic plant as cholagogue and choleretic, for treatment of mild dyspepsia in Brazilian pharmacopoeia.
  • Typically, the patient is recommended dietary restriction table with fatty foods, enzyme preparations, antispasmodics, sometimes cholagogue.
  • Peppermint oil may also act as a carminative, cholagogue, antibacterial, and secretolytic, and it has a cooling action.
  • Kokum fruit is considered to act as a cholagogue, and is also used in treatment of skin rashes caused by allergies.
  • The drug is not a cholagogue, nor does it markedly affect the muscular coat of the bowel, but it causes a great increase of secretion from the intestinal glands.
  • *There is some evidence for dandelion leaf and root acting as a cholagogue and increasing bile flow in rats and dogs, respectively, by 40 % and 100 %.
  • In traditional Russian herbal medicine, saponin extracts from the roots of various varieties of wild yam are used as an anticoagulant, antisclerotic, antispasmodic, cholagogue, depurative, diaphoretic, diuretic and a vasodilator.
  • :I think it's probably supposed to be " cholagogue : a medicine that carries off bile " ( OED ) .-- feed me 08 : 59, 30 December 2007 ( UTC)
  • Homoeopathy still made use of the leaves against rheumatism, HIV and fever In Turkey this tea ( one glass a day ) is still consumed for antihelminthic, diaphoretic, and cholagogue purposes and is called  Abi ^ im _ ir.
  • *Globe artichoke leaves also appear to have such effects, described as choleretic ( some sites use this interchangeably with a cholagogue, but apparently many sources describe an increase in production of bile as choleretic, whereas a cholagogue might merely encourage its release from the liver or gall bladder.
  • *Globe artichoke leaves also appear to have such effects, described as choleretic ( some sites use this interchangeably with a cholagogue, but apparently many sources describe an increase in production of bile as choleretic, whereas a cholagogue might merely encourage its release from the liver or gall bladder.
  • In Patrick O'Brian's " Post Captain " ( Ch . 10 ), which is set in the Napoleonic era, Stephen Maturin, one of the book's main characters ( who is also a physician, naturalist and spy ) sits in the snug of the Rose and Crown in Deal, Kent, and drinks a " good " tea described as an " unrivalled cholagogue ".