Medea Botanicals
Common buckthorn

Common buckthorn

Rhamnus cathartica

Other names: purging buckthorn, European buckthorn, Rhamni cathartici fructus

European

Photo credit: Franz Eugen Köhler / Wikimedia Commons

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

Safety information

Toxicity: Significant. Fresh/unripe berries and overuse cause violent purging, painful cramps, watery diarrhoea, vomiting, and fluid/electrolyte (especially potassium) loss. Prolonged use (>~1-2 weeks) can cause potassium depletion, colonic dysfunction, and laxative dependence.

Contraindications: Intestinal obstruction or stenosis, appendicitis, acute inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's, ulcerative colitis), undiagnosed abdominal pain, severe dehydration. Pregnancy and lactation - avoid (cathartics may be reflexively uterine-stimulant and pass to breast milk causing infant diarrhoea). Children - avoid.

Interactions: Potassium loss potentiates cardiac glycosides (digoxin) toxicity and interacts with other potassium-lowering drugs (thiazide/loop diuretics, corticosteroids, liquorice) and antiarrhythmics. Reduced GI transit time can lower absorption of other oral drugs.

Pregnancy & breastfeeding: avoid in pregnancy and lactation

Evidence level

Folk

Reported in folk medicine sources; not clinically validated. Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.

Preparations

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

traditional preparation · berries

Part used: berries

Traditional use: constipation (purgative)(Folk and historical sources have not been validated by clinical research.)

Proposed mechanism: anthraquinone glycosides (emodin and related) stimulate colonic motility

Evidence:Folk

General preparation guide →

Associated conditions

Nutritional notes

not a food

Healing traditions

European
Sources (2)

  1. Rhamnus cathartica - Wikipedia (chemistry & toxicity overview)
  2. WebMD - European Buckthorn

All sources →

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