White snakeroot
Ageratina altissima
Synonyms: Eupatorium ageratoides, Ageratina ageratoides, Ageratum altissimum, Kyrstenia altissima, Eupatorium altissimum, Batschia nivea, Eupatorium rugosum
Gallery
Botanical Description
Ageratina altissima, the white snakeroot or white sanicle (formerly Eupatorium rugosum), is an erect perennial herb in the family Asteraceae native to eastern and central North America, occurring from southern Canada south to the Gulf states and west to the Great Plains. It grows in moist deciduous woodland, shaded ravines, woodland edges, and shaded fence rows. The plant arises from a fibrous-rooted crown and produces clustered erect stems 30-150 cm tall that are smooth, slender, and freely branched in the upper portion. Leaves are opposite, long-petioled, broadly ovate to ovate-cordate, 6-15 cm long, with coarsely serrate margins, an acuminate apex, and a rounded to subcordate base; the surface is sparsely hairy to glabrate. The inflorescence is a flat-topped compound corymb of numerous small heads, each 3-5 mm across with 12-25 brilliant white tubular disc florets and no ray florets, the involucre cylindrical with a single row of narrow green bracts. Flowering occurs from midsummer to autumn. The achenes are five-angled, black, and bear a single row of fine white pappus bristles. The entire plant contains the toxin tremetol and was the cause of historical "milk sickness" outbreaks when cattle grazed the foliage.
Cultural & Historical Context
Traditional American Uses
Ageratina altissima (white snakeroot) is recorded in the NAEB database with 21 medicinal uses, principally by the Iroquois (8), Cherokee (7), Choctaw (3), and Meskwaki (2). Documented applications include use as a stimulant, tonic, diaphoretic, toothache remedy, antidiarrheal, diuretic, febrifuge, blood medicine, cathartic, gynecological aid, and a panacea; the root was the part most commonly used, prepared as a decoction or infusion (Hamel and Chiltoskey, 1975; Herrick, 1977; Smith, 1928). Native users employed the root prior to recognition of the plant's toxicity (tremetol), and these uses are documented historically rather than recommended for contemporary practice.
Chemistry & External Identifiers
Important Disclaimer
This information is for educational purposes only and is not intended to replace professional medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using any herbal remedy, especially if you are pregnant, nursing, or taking medications.