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echinacea is a perennial plant which produces a stout, bristly, hairy stem 2 to 3 feet in height. The leaves are linear, lanceolate, and grow 3 to 8 inches long; they are rough, hairy, and 3-nerved. The upper leaves are sessile, and the lower leaves grow on long petioles. A single large flower blooms from July to October; it is white-rose to pale purple in color, with a conical disk and 12 to 20 large, spreading rays. It grows in the prairie region of the United States, west of Ohio.
Ãâó: www.springboard4health.com/notebook/dict_e.html
echinacea Is taken to lessen the severity of colds and flu; Native American Indians used this plant for snakebites and other skin wounds. It was also used to treat strep throat and is popular in Europe for its positive effect on the immune system. It is said to expel toxins and poisons, and appears to lessen the severity of colds and flu shortening their duration. It is used as a protection against infection and is a supreme herb for building a stronger immune system.
Ãâó: www.healthsuperstore.com/hni/glossary-e1.asp
echinulate Having a delicate, spiny wall.
Ãâó: www.ec.upstate.edu/medtech/microb/glossary.htm
echinacea Echinacea is a natural product that
Ãâó: www.glossary-of-terms.net/glossary-of-cosmetics-te...
echinulate with slight projections, usually pointed, on the surface of conidia or conidiophores. Torula,Heterosporium.
Ãâó: intramar.ugent.be/nemys/fungi/web/glossary.htm
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