ბოტანიკა / Botanica
Pheasant's eye

Pheasant's eye

Adonis vernalis

Other names: Spring pheasant's eye, false hellebore, Adonidis herba, горицвет весенний (goritsvet vesenniy)

EuropeanSlavic

Photo credit: Martin Bahmann / Wikimedia Commons

This plant carries serious safety risks. All information is for educational reference only.

Safety information

Toxicity: SERIOUS — contains cardiac glycosides (adonitoxin ~15–20% of glycoside fraction, cymarin, k-strophanthoside; total cardenolides ~0.2–1.0% dry wt). Narrow therapeutic index; overdose causes nausea, vomiting, bradycardia/arrhythmia, AV block, hyperkalaemia, cardiac arrest. Adonitoxin i.v. LD50 in cats ~191 µg/kg. Tea must NOT be used (uncontrolled dosing).

Contraindications: Concurrent digitalis/other cardiac glycoside therapy; hypokalaemia/potassium deficiency; AV block; pregnancy/lactation; children. Not for self-medication.

Interactions: Additive/dangerous with digitalis glycosides, other cardenolide herbs (Convallaria, Strophanthus, oleander, squill); potassium-depleting diuretics, corticosteroids, and laxatives increase glycoside toxicity; calcium and quinidine potentiate arrhythmia risk.

Pregnancy & breastfeeding: Contraindicated in pregnancy/lactation.

Evidence level

Traditional (systematized)

Documented in systematic traditional medicine literature.

Preparations

This plant carries serious safety risks. All information is for educational reference only.

standardized extract · aerial flowering herb

Part used: aerial flowering herb

Traditional use: cardiotonic (historical pharmaceutical only)(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Proposed mechanism: cardiac glycosides

Dosage note (descriptive only): no home/dosing detail — standardized galenic extracts only, historically

Reference only — not a dosage instruction

Evidence:Historical

General preparation guide →

Associated conditions

Healing traditions

EuropeanSlavic
Sources (3)

  1. Adonis rose drug monograph — Arzneipflanzenlexikon (EN, transl. from DE)
  2. Adonis vernalis — Wikipedia (EN)
  3. The Genus Adonis as an Important Cardiac Folk Medicine (Frontiers in Pharmacology, 2019)

All sources →

Not medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare professional before using any plant or preparation.