Horse bite
Horse bite is a veterinary or animal-use term preserved from historical source records.
Source label: Bite(Horse)The source labels are now translated into readable use profiles. Open a term to understand its meaning, browse every associated plant, and find separately sourced recipes or preparation notes where the library has a genuine connection.
Horse bite is a veterinary or animal-use term preserved from historical source records.
Source label: Bite(Horse)Leech bite is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Source label: Bite(Leech)Rat bite is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Source label: Bite(Rat)Spider bite is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Source label: Bite(Spider)Tick bite is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Source label: Bite(Tick)Veterinary burn is a veterinary or animal-use term preserved from historical source records.
Source label: Burn(Veterinary)Brachycardia is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Bulla is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Bunion is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Bear bite is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Source label: Bite(Bear)Beauty is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Bedridden is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Bee-Sting is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Bil is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Bitter-Aromatic is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Black-Eye is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Black-Fever is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Black-Leg is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Blennorhea is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Blenorrhagia is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Blood-Vessel is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Bloodshot is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Bloody Stool is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Boiler Water is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Brain-Tonic is a historical action or property term used in ethnobotanical literature. It describes reported intent, not a verified pharmacological effect.
Breathing is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Broken-Bones is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Broken-Limb is a source vocabulary term preserved from historical ethnobotanical literature. The original term is retained even when its modern meaning is broad or uncertain.
Bronchial is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Bronchorrhea is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Burning-Feet is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
A connective tissue disease that is characterized by the inflammation of bursae, small, fluid-filled sacs that cushion the bones, tendons and muscles near your joints.
Mosquito bite is the condition or symptom label preserved in the historical source data. The label may be older, broader or less precise than current diagnostic terminology.
Source label: Bite(Mosquito)Veterinary black-gall is a veterinary or animal-use term preserved from historical source records.
Source label: Black-Gall(Veterinary)The profile explains the source vocabulary and connects related data. It does not establish effectiveness, dose, preparation, route or suitability for an individual diagnosis.