ბოტანიკა / Botanica
Landysh / Lily of the valley

Landysh / Lily of the valley

Convallaria majalis

Slavic

Photo credit: Ivar Leidus

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

Safety information

Toxicity: Serious / potentially fatal. Cardiac-glycoside poisoning — nausea/vomiting, abdominal pain, bradycardia/arrhythmia, hyperkalaemia, cardiac arrest. Children poisoned by the attractive red berries.

Contraindications: Not for self-medication at all. Any cardiac-glycoside-containing plant is contraindicated with existing digitalis/digoxin therapy, arrhythmia, hypokalaemia, etc.

Interactions: Additive lethal toxicity with digoxin/digitalis; potentiated by potassium-depleting drugs (loop/thiazide diuretics, anthranoid laxatives, liquorice), calcium, and certain antiarrhythmics.

Pregnancy & breastfeeding: Not for self-medication at all.

Evidence level

Clinical

Supported by clinical trials in humans.

Preparations

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

standardised pharmaceutical tincture (cardiac drops) — NOT a home preparation · whole plant

Part used: whole plant

Traditional use: historically a cardiac herb for mild heart failure/'weak heart' (under medical supervision), similar to foxglove

Proposed mechanism: cardiac glycosides (convallatoxin, convalloside) acting like digitalis on the heart; all parts incl. red berries poisonous

Dosage note (descriptive only): explicitly NOT for self-preparation

Reference only — not a dosage instruction

Evidence:Clinical

General preparation guide →

Associated conditions

Nutritional notes

Not a food source.

Healing traditions

Slavic
Sources (2)

  1. Witkowska et al. 2024 (PMC11085323)
  2. Ershad & Khalid, StatPearls (NBK536963)

All sources →

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