Anonymous ID: a23d4e May 12, 2020, 7:42 p.m. No.9149665   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9723 >>9806 >>0044 >>0104 >>0183 >>0197

>>9149093 PB on HCQ patent.

How about home made brew of Natural HCQ type medicine, and poultice from a Plant common in North America and commonly used by American Indians and American Settlers?

 

("Poultice" is when you grind the plant fresh, and slap in on the problem, like a wound, and bandage it to keep the plant juices acting on the infection)

 

>>9149000

 

>Process for the preparation of highly pure hydroxychloroquine or a salt thereof

 

https://patents.google.com/patent/CA2561987A1/en

 

I want to add to this.

 

Normally Chloroquine is made from Cinchona bark, from a tree in South America originally. Tea from the bark is used to make quinine water. We have research archived on how quinine is a zinc ionopore, like HCQ, but, it looks like it does more.

 

Recently I discovered that when this bark became scarce, the pharmacists turned to a north American plant called Wild Quinine. (Parthenium integrifolium) (pic 1 related)

 

Check out the uses (pic 2 related).

 

>"TRADITIONAL USES

>Several Native American Indian tribes used wild quinine leaves made into a poultice to treat burns, and tea made from the leaves of the plant to treat dysentery. Wild quinine also had veterinarian medicine properties as well (USDA). The first European settlers of the New World soon found that wild quinine treated fevers, coughs, and sore throats (Fairchild, 2012). Currently, Duke et al. (2002) describe antibacterial, antiseptic, and immunostimulant properties for wild quinine. It is also indicated for general bacteria, bronchitis, colitis, “cold,” cough, fatigue, immunodepression, and non-specific infections (Duke et al., 2002). During World War I, when the cinchona tree, whose bark provides the ingredient the true quinine, was in short supply, wild quinine was substituted to treat malaria (Fairchild, 2012)."

 

Poultice, and tea.

Huhhh.

This wild plant grows all over North America.

I just ordered seeds for the plant this spring to do some pharma research.

 

Would be good for gardenfags to get some, grow some, and share the seeds with the neighbors so it does not go suddenly "extinct" at the seed centers.

(That could happen, the same way they are threatening pharmacists not to fill prescriptions for HCQ this past month).

Time for us to take back our herbs and medicines.

Anonymous ID: a23d4e May 12, 2020, 7:52 p.m. No.9149790   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9816 >>9963

>>9149723

That's what I did!!! ( especially when I read that the Natives and Early Americans used it as poultice and tea). Have a farm to grow it on, so have to learn the habitat. But even if it is a weed, or invasive, I have a safe far 40. Plan to contact Seed Savers Exchange and get this one distributed to the nations "heirloom" seed saving crowd.

Buy America!

And learn from early Americans. :)