Rhus, Sumac
Sumach
Sumaq (Unani)

Ortus Sanitatis, Meydenbach, 1491
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| New Kreuterbuch, Matthiolus, 1563 | Medical Botany, Woodville, Hooker, Vol. 3, 1832 |

Rhus coriaria
(Photo by Lazaregagnidze) (Wikimedia)

SUMAC
Squibb’s Atlas of the Official Drugs, Mansfield, 1919
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Botanical name:
Rhus spp.
R. parviflora, R. coriaria (European Sumac); some American species are used similarly
Parts used:
Seed
Temperature & Taste:
Cold, dry. Sour
Classifications:
Uses:
1. Clears Heat, Stops Leakage:
-Diarrhea, Dysentery
2. Clears Heat, Stops Bleeding:
-Bleeding from the Stomach
3. Clears Stomach Heat:
-Nausea, Vomiting
4. Externally:
-decoction is used to strengthen the gums
Dose:
Powder: 2–4 grams
Correctives:
Substitutes:

Main Combinations:
1. Diarrhea, Dysentery:
i. Sumac with … available in PRO version
ii. Chronic Diarrhea, Sumac with … available in PRO version
iii. Diarrhea, Gastritis, Sumac with … available in PRO version
iv. Sumac with … available in PRO version
v. Sumac with … available in PRO version
2. Stomach Heat, Fever, Sumac with … available in PRO version
3. Diabetes, Sumac with … available in PRO version
4. Bleeding from Heat:
i. Sumac with … available in PRO version
ii. Sumac with … available in PRO version
5. Bleeding from the Stomach:
i. Sumac with … available in PRO version
ii. Sumac with … available in PRO version
6. Bladder Ulcers, Sumac with … available in PRO version
7. Receding Gums, prepare a mouth wash of Sumac, … available in PRO version
8. Gingivitis, Sumac, … available in PRO version
9. A Gargle to expel “exudations of the Brain” (Rheum), Sumach, … available in PRO version
Major Formulas:
Powder to Stop Bleeding of the Stomach (Nicholas)
Powder for Diabetes Greater (Unani)
Troches of Ramich (Mesue)
Troches of Spodium (Trochisci Spodii) (Avicenna)
Electuarium Acharistum (Nicholas)
Cautions:
1. Not used in those with Cold Stomach or Liver.
Main Preparations used:
- Extra Info
- History
Pliny on Sumac:
| ‘Nor yet has the tree called “rhus” any Latin name, although it is employed in numerous ways. Under this name are comprehended a wild plant, with leaves like those of myrtle, and a short stem, which is good as an expellent of tapeworm; and the shrub which is known as the “currier’s plant,” of a reddish colour, a cubit in height, and about the thickness of one’s finger, the leaves of which are dried and used, like pomegranate rind, for curing leather. | cure of cceliac affections, and of ulcers of the rectum and phagedamic sores; for all which purposes they are pounded with honey and applied with vinegar. A decoction of them is injected for suppurations of the ears. With the branches, boiled, a stomatice [medicine for the mouth] is also made, which is used for the same purposes as that prepared from mulberries; it is more efficacious, however, mixed with alum. This preparation is applied also to reduce the swelling in dropsy.’ (The Natural History of Pliny, trans. by Bostock and Riley, Vol. 5, 1856) |
| ‘Medical men also employ the leaves of these plants for the treatment of contusions, and for the |




