Archive for the ‘Lagundi’ Category

How to prepare Lagundi Syrup

Sweetened preparation from the leaves of Vitex negundo L.

Materials:

cooking pot,
ladle,
cup strainer,
medicine bottles,
labels,
lagundi leaves,
sugar/honey,
water

Proportion: 1 cup chopped lagundi leaves to 1 cup water

Procedure:

1. In an uncovered pot, prepare a decoction of the lagundi leaves.

2. Cool and strain.

3. Measure the amount of decoction that you produced. One-third of this volume will be the amount of sugar/honey that you are going to use.

4. Add your sweetener, stirring gently. You may put the mixture back on the stove, with low heat, until all he sweetener is dissolved/blended with the mixture. This is your syrup.

5. Transfer the syrup into the sterilized medicine bottles. Seal and label properly.

6. Store your bottled lagundi syrup in a clean, cool, dry place away from light.

Source: www.pcarrd.dost.gov.ph

Uses of Lagundi (Vitex negundo)

Common names: Dangla (Ilokano); five-leaved chaste tree, horseshoe vitex.

Indications and preparations: Leaves and flowering tops decoction, syrup, tablets and capsules for coughs, colds, fever and asthma.

Family: Verbenaceae

Description: A shedding shrub or small tree up to 8 m tall, bark surface slightly rough, peeling off in papery flakes, pale reddish-brown. Leaflets 3-5, narrowly elliptical Fruit spherical to broadly egg-shaped, 3-6 mm long, purple or black when mature.

Ecological distribution: Found in humid places or along watercourses, in waste places and mixed open forest. Eastern Africa and Madagascar to Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Burma (Myanmar), Indo-China, China, Japan, Taiwan, Thailand, throughout the Malesian region, east to the Palau Islands, the Caroline Islands and the Mariana Islands. Widely cultivated in Europe, Asia, North America and the West Indies.

Parts used: Leaves and flowering tops.

Traditional uses:

roots and leaves – for pain, bitter tonic, expectorant and diuretic;
sap from crushed leaves – for coughs and sore throat;
leaf decoction – for wounds, ulcers, aromatic baths, and internally to promote the flow of milk, to induce menstruation, against gastric colic, and against flatulence.
seeds – boiled and eaten to prevent the spread of toxins from poisonous bites of animals;
flowers – for diarrhea, cholera and liver disorders

Special precautions: Make sure to have the five-leaved varieties, as there are other varieties of lagundi.

Lagundi Syrup: A sweetened preparation from the leaves of Vitex negundo L.

Materials: cooking pot, ladle, cup strainer, medicine bottles, labels, lagundi leaves, sugar/honey, water.

Proportion: 1 cup chopped lagundi leaves to 1 cup water

Procedure:

1. In an uncovered pot, prepare a decoction of the lagundi leaves.
2. Cool and strain.
3. Measure the amount of decoction that you produced. One-third of this volume will be the amount of sugar/honey that you are going to use.
4. Add your sweetener, stirring gently. You may put the mixture back on the stove, with low heat, until all he sweetener is dissolved/blended with the mixture. This is your syrup.
5. Transfer the syrup into the sterilized medicine bottles. Seal and label properly.
6. Store your bottled lagundi syrup in a clean, cool, dry place away from light.

Further information in: de Padua,L.S., N. Bunyapraphatsara, R.H.M.J. Lemmens (Editors). 1999. Plant Resources of South East Asia 12(1) Medicinal and Poisonous Plants. Backhuys Publishers, Leiden, the Netherlands.771 pp.

Source:www.pcarrd.dost.gov.ph

Five-leaf Chaste Tree (Lagundi)

Description: a shrub about 5 meters in height. The leaves are arranged like the fingers of the hand.

How to plant Lagunduni: Plant cuttings of 20 centimeters long. Make sure that the cuttings have 3 or more nodes (where the new leaf comes out).

How to care for the plants:

* Water the newly planted cuttings everyday and remove weeds/grass around it.

* Remove leaves or branches that have been destroyed by pests or by plant diseases to prevent them from spreading to the rest of the plant.

* May use compost or organic fertilizer. NEVER use pesticides because the chemicals may remain in the plant.

Harvesting and Proper Storage:

* It would be better if the leaves are collected during the following season.
* Collect only the mature and healthy leaves.
* Make sure that there are enough leaves left on the plant to prevent the plant from dying.
* Completely dry the leaves before storing them and place them in a sealed plastic bag or tightly covered brown container.

Used for:

* Asthma
* Cough
* Body pains
* Fever

Preparation:

* Chop the leaves and place them in an earthen jar according to the following amounts:

For Dried Leaves:

ADULTS = 4 tbspful
7-12 y/o = 2 tbspful
2- 6 y/o = 1 tbspful

For Fresh Leaves:

ADULTS = 6 tbspful
7-12 y/o = 3 tbspful
2-6 y/o = 1 1/2 tbspful

* Pour in 2 glassfuls of water. Cover it. glassfuls of water. Cover it.
* Bring the mixture to a boil.
* Remove the cover and let it continue to boil for another 15 minutes.
* Let it cool, and then strain the mixture.

How to Use:

* Divide the decoction into 3 parts:

- for asthma and cough – drink 1 part 3 times a day
- for fever and body pains- drink 1 part every 4 hours

Source: doh.gov.ph

10 Herbal Medicine Endorsed by DOH

There are 10 herbal drugs that have been scientifically studied and shown to be safe and effective in treating certain illnesses.

1. Five -leaf Chaste Tree (Lagundi)
2. Marsh -Mint; Peppermint(Yerba Buena)
3. Sambong
4. Tsaang Gubat
5. Ulasimang Bato or Pansit-pansitan
6. Garlic
7. Niyog-niyogan
8. Guava (Bayabas)
9. Akapulko
10. Bitter Gourd/Melon (Ampalaya)

Source: www.doh.gov.ph

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