Wormseed
Botanical and Common Names
- Family Chenopodiaceae
- Chenopodium ambrosioides syn. Teloxys ambrosioides (Wormseed Oil, Mexican Tea, American Wormseed, Jesuit’s Tea; Spanish: Epazote/Epasote/Ipazote, Pazote, Epázotl [Nuhuatl], Lukum-xiu [Maya])
- Chenopodium vulvaria (Arrach, Stinking Arrach, Stinking Goosefoot, Dog’s Arrach, Goat’s Arrach, Goosefoot, Stinking Motherwort, Netchweed, Orache; Spanish: Epazote del Zorillo, Yerba del Zorillo, Yerba del Perro)
Cautions
Do not use during pregnancy.
Note that Wormseed and Wormwood are two different plants.
Description
History
The Catawaba peoples of the US used the plant for poultices to detoxify snake bites and other poisonings.
Although the Arrach has long been used as a medicine in Europe, Northern Africa, and the Caucasus to relieve menstrual cramps and promote menstruation, its distinctive unpleasant smell (like that of musty herring brine) often precludes any danger of continued or long-term use. Its name comes from the Nahuatl word for skunk (épatl). Zorillo is the Spanish word for skunk.
Used as both a food and a remedy, the plant was used by the Aztecs, who developed very sophisticated and refined uses to flavour many of their dishes with the herb. Today, it remains a staple in Mexican cooking, spiking a pot of beans with its tangy flavour.
Medicinally, the Aztecs used the plant to treat asthma and dysentery. Mexicans consider it a first-line of defence against intestinal parasites (especially roundworms and hookworms), administering it to adults and children alike, as well as to animals. A tea is used for menstrual cramps, fever, and chills.
Key Actions
- antifungal
- anti-inflammatory
- antispasmodic
- cardiac stimulant
- digestive tonic
- expels worms, especially roundworm and hookworm
- promotes menstruation
Key Components
- volatile oil (up to 90% ascaridol, geraniol, and methyl salicylate
- triterpenoid saponins
Medicinal Parts
- Aerial parts, flowering tops, seeds
Traditional Uses
Wormseed has long been used as an anti-asthmatic and for treating cramps and some types of paralysis.
In Mexico, both species are used for menstrual problems and to expel worms, but it is also used to treat nervousness and depression.
Decoctions or fresh juices are used for gastrointestinal complaints. Washes from the juice used for hemorrhoids and poultices can be applied to speed wound healing or to treat bites.
Some closely realted species are used for foods. C. quinoa is the nutritious Quinoa grain (see Foods section) and C. bonus-henricus is the spinach-like vegetable known as Good King Henry (see Foods section). The seeds of C. rhadinostachyum are used as food by Aborginal peoples in central Australia.
