To harvest feverfew plants for medicinal use, cut them in full flower. If just harvesting leaves, do not take more than a third of each plant’s offering. For bouquets, the same rule applies. Try not ...
Compounds from the feverfew plant, which destroyed chronic lymphocytic leukaemia cells, show promise of being developed into drugs, said the University of Birmingham. Cancer-fighting substances can be ...
Combining tamoxifen, the world's most prescribed breast cancer agent, with a compound found in the flowering plant feverfew may prevent initial or future resistance to the drug, say researchers. The ...
Feverfew, a common flowering garden plant usually is used as a remedy for migraine and other aches and pains. It was found to have drug-like anti-cancer properties to treat chronic lymphocytic ...
A daisy-like plant known as Feverfew or Bachelor's Button, found in gardens across North America, is the source of an agent that kills human leukemia stem cells like no other single therapy, ...
Imagine finding relief from stubborn migraines or nagging fevers with a simple herb that has been used for centuries. Enter feverfew (Tanacetum parthenium), a daisy-like plant with a long-standing ...
Sometimes a plant needs to do just one thing, especially if it does that one thing really well. Nowhere is this more evident than with Tanacetum parthenium aureum, commonly known as golden feverfew.
Feverfew, a daisy-like perennial found around waste sites and roadsides, appears unexceptional. But for the millions of Americans who suffer from migraines, it holds tremendous promise. For years, ...
The daisy and chrysanthemum family (Asteraceae) has some wonderful plants in it. One of them has hairy, furrowed stalks that hold small, corymb, thumbmail-sized, white flowers with bright yellow ...