Dictionary Definition
bloodroot n : perennial woodland native of North
America having a red root and red sap and bearing a solitary lobed
leave and white flower in early spring and having acrid emetic
properties; rootstock used as a stimulant and expectorant [syn:
puccoon, redroot, tetterwort, Sanguinaria
canadensis]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A North American plant, Sanguinaria canadensis, of the poppy family which has a red root and sap and a single white flower in early spring.
Extensive Definition
Bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis) is a perennial,
herbaceous flowering
plant native to eastern North
America from Nova Scotia,
Canada
southward to Florida, United
States. It is the only species in the genus Sanguinaria, and is included
in the family Papaveraceae
and most closely related to Eomecon of eastern
Asia.
Bloodroot is also known as bloodwort, red puccoon
root, and sometimes pauson. Bloodroot has also been known as
tetterwort in America, although that name is used in Britain to
refer to Greater
Celandine.
Bloodroot is a variable species growing from 20
to 50 cm tall, normally with one large, sheath-like basal
multi-lobed leaf up to 12
cm across. The flowers
are produced from March to May, with 8-12 delicate white petals and
yellow reproductive parts. The flowers appear over clasping leaves
while blooming. Plants are variable in leaf and flower shape and
have in the past been separated out as different subspecies due to
these variable shapes; currently most taxonomic treatments lump
these different forms into one highly variable species. Bloodroot
stores sap in an orange colored rhizome, that grows shallowly
under or at the soil surface. Over many years of growth, the
branching rhizome can grow into a large colony. Plants start to
bloom before the foliage unfolds in early spring and after blooming
the leaves expand to their full size and go summer dormant in mid
to late summer. Plants are found growing in moist to dry woods and
thickets, often on flood plains and near shores or streams on
slopes, they grow less frequently in clearings and meadows or on
dunes, and are rarely found in disturbed sites. The flowers are
pollinated by small bees and flies, seeds develop in elongated
green pods 40 to 60 mm in length and ripen before the foliage goes
dormant. The seeds are round in shape and when ripe are black to
orange-red in color. Deer will feed on the plants in early
spring.
Caution: the sap is toxic; see below for further
details.
Reproduction and genetics
Bloodroot is one of many plants whose seeds are spread by ants, a process called myrmecochory. The seeds have a fleshy organ called an elaiosome that attracts ants. The ants take the seeds to their nest, where they eat the elaiosomes, and put the seeds in their nest debris, where they are protected until they germinate. They also get the added bonus of growing in a medium made richer by the ant nest debris.The double
flowering forms are prized by gardeners for their large showy
white flowers, which are produced very early in the gardening
season. Bloodroot flower petals are shed with in a day or two of
pollination so the flower display is short lived. The double forms
bloom much longer than the normal forms, the double flowers are
made up of stamens that have been changed into petal looking like
parts, making pollination more difficult.
Bloodroot produces morphine-like alkaloids
Bloodroot produces benzylisoquinoline
alkaloids, primarily
the toxin sanguinarine. The alkaloids
are transported to and stored in the rhizome.
In comparing the biosynthesis of morphine and sanguinarine, the final
intermediate in common is (S)-reticuline. A number of
plants in Papaveraceae
and Ranunculaceae,
as well as plants in the genus Colchicum (family
Colchicaceae)
and genus Chondodendron
(family Menispermaceae),
also produce such benzylisoquinoline alkaloids.
Plant geneticists have identified and sequenced
genes which produce the enzymes required for this production. One
enzyme involved is CYP80B1, which
produces (S)-3'-hydroxy-N-methylcoclaurine from
(S)-N-methylcoclaurine.
Bloodroot extracts are toxic to animal cells
Sanguinarine
kills animal cells by blocking the action of Na+/K+-ATPase
transmembrane proteins. As a result, applying bloodroot to the skin
may destroy tissue and lead to the formation of a large scab,
called an eschar.
Bloodroot and its extracts are thus considered escharotic.
In spite of supposed curative properties, and
historical use by
Native Americans as an emetic, internal use is
inadvisable. Although applying escharotic agents, including
bloodroot, to the skin is sometimes suggested as a home treatment
to remove skin cancers,
these attempts can be severely disfiguring . Salves derived from
bloodroot cannot be relied on to remove an entire malignant tumor.
Microscopic tumor deposits may remain after visible tumor tissue is
burned away, and case reports have shown that in such instances
tumor has recurred and/or metastasized.
On 13 Aug 2005, U.S. news media reported that Dan
Raber (of Georgia,
United
States) came under felony investigation for dispensing
bloodroot paste to women with various ailments including breast
cancer. It was reported that nine women developed disfiguring
destruction of skin and underlying tissue. Reports also indicated
that Lois March, M.D., who is a practicing physician in Cordele,
Georgia, has also come under U.S. FDA investigation for her role in
prescribing pain medication to Raber's disfigured customers while
their use of bloodroot was ongoing.
Commercial uses of sanguinarine extracted from bloodroot
The United States FDA has approved the inclusion of sanguinarine in toothpastes as an antibacterial or anti-plaque agent. Currently, it is believed that this use may cause leukoplakia, a premalignant oral lesion. On 24 Nov 2003, the Colgate-Palmolive Company of Piscataway, New Jersey, United States commented by memorandum (see: PDF file) to the United States Food and Drug Administration that then-proposed rules for levels of sanguinarine in mouthwash and dental wash products were lower than necessary. Professor George T. Gallagher also commented from his post at Boston University Goldman School of Dental Medicine, see his memorandumhttp://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/dailys/03/jul03/070303/81N-0033P_emc-000001.txt of 23 June 2003.Sangrovit
is an animal food additive sold and distributed in Europe.
Sangrovit is manufactured by Germany-based Phytobiotics. Sangrovit
contains sanguinarine and chelerythrine.
On 14 May 2003, Cat Holmes reported in the Georgia Faces that Jim
Affolter and Selima Campbell, horticulturists at the University of
Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, were
meeting with Phytobiotics to relate their research into commercial
cultivation of bloodroot. It is also used in the mole remover
Dermatend.
Buck
Mountain Botanicals manufactures an herbal drug called
Neoplasene, which is derived from the isoquinoline alkaloids in
sanguinaria canadensis.
Historical use of Bloodroot and derivatives
The plant was used as a dye and for an herbal remedy by the native population. A break in the surface of the plant, especially the roots, reveals a reddish sap.In physician William Cook's 1869 work The
Physiomedical Dispensatory is recorded a chapter on the uses and
preparations of bloodroot. described tinctures and extractions, and
also included at least the following cautionary report:
The U. S. Dispensatory says four persons lost
their lives at Bellevue Hospital, New York, by drinking largely of
blood root tincture in mistake for ardent spirits
[...]
Greater
Celandine (Chelidonium majus), a member of the Poppy family
(Papaveraceae) was used in Colonial America as a wart remedy. Bloodroot has been
similarly applied in the past. This may explain the multiple
American and British definitions of "Tetterwort" in
1913.
References
External links
bloodroot in Danish: Blodurt
bloodroot in Spanish: Sanguinaria
canadensis
bloodroot in French: Sanguinaire du Canada
bloodroot in Lithuanian: Kanadinė
sangvinarija
bloodroot in Portuguese:
Sanguinaria