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  1. 240K Followers, 2,404 Following, 5,326 Posts - Bella donna moda brás (@belladonnamodabras) on Instagram: "🧵Fabricação Própria! 📍Showroom e Fábrica ficam no Brás. 👚Tamanhos M/G/GG/G1 📱Compre 100% on-line Clique para comprar!👇🏻".

    • History
    • Description
    • Distribution
    • Cultivation
    • Taxonomy
    • Etymology
    • Toxicity
    • Legal Status
    • Uses
    • Folklore

    Atropa belladonna has a long history of use as a medicine, cosmetic, and poison. Known originally under various folk names (such as "deadly nightshade" in English), the plant was named Atropa belladonna by Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778) when he devised his classification system. Linnaeus chose the genus name Atropa because of the poisonous properties of...

    Atropa belladonna is a branching herbaceous perennial rhizomatous hemicryptophyte, often growing as a subshrub from a fleshy rootstock. Plants can reach a height of 2 m (7 ft) (more commonly 1.5 m (5 ft)), and have ovate leaves up to 18 cm (7 in) long. The bell-shaped flowers are dull purple tinged yellow-green toward the base and are faintly scent...

    Atropa belladonna is native to temperate southern, Central and Eastern Europe, Turkey, Iran and the Caucasus, but has been cultivated and introduced outside its native range. In southern Sweden it was recorded in Flora of Skåne in 1870 as grown in apothecarygardens near Malmö. In Britain it is native only on calcareous soils, on disturbed ground, f...

    Atropa belladonna is rarely used in gardens, but, when grown, it is usually for its large upright habit and showy berries. Germination of the small seeds is often difficult, due to hard seed coats that cause seed dormancy. Germination takes several weeks under alternating temperature conditions, but can be sped up with the use of gibberellic acid. ...

    Atropa belladonna is in the nightshade family (Solanaceae), which it shares with potatoes, tomatoes, eggplants, jimsonweed, tobacco, wolfberry, and chili peppers. The common names for this species include belladonna, deadly nightshade, divale, dwale,banewort, devil's berries, death cherries, beautiful death, devil's herb, great morel, and dwayberry...

    The name Atropa belladonna was published by Carl Linnaeus in Species Plantarum in 1753. Atropa is derived from the name of the Greek goddess Atropos ('she who may not be turned aside' i.e. 'the inflexible' or 'the implacable')—one of the three Greek fates or destinies who would determine the course of a man's life by the weaving of threads that sym...

    Belladonna is one of the most toxic plants known, and its use by mouth increases risk in numerous clinical conditions, such as complications of pregnancy, cardiovascular diseases, gastrointestinal disorders, and psychiatric disorders, among others. All parts of the plant contain tropane alkaloids; roots have up to 1.3%,[a] leaves 1.2%, stalks 0.65%...

    Belladonna cultivation is legal in Southern and Eastern Europe, Pakistan, North America, and Brazil. Belladonna leaves and roots can be bought with a medical prescription in pharmacies throughout Germany. In the United States, there is only one approved prescription drug containing belladonna alkaloids such as atropine, and the FDA regards any over...

    Cosmetics

    The common name belladonna originates from its historic use by women, as bella donna is Italian for "beautiful woman". Drops prepared from the belladonna plant were used to dilate women's pupils, an effect considered to be attractive and seductive. Belladonna drops act as a muscarinic antagonist, blocking receptors in the muscles of the eye that constrict pupil size. Belladonna is currently rarely used cosmetically, as it carries the adverse effects of causing minor visual distortions, inabil...

    Dietary supplements

    In the United States, belladonna is marketed as a dietary supplement, typically as an atropine ingredient in over-the-counter cold medicine products. Although such cold medicine products are probably safe for oral use at typical atropine dosages (0.2 milligram), there is inadequate scientific evidence to assure their effectiveness. By FDAguidelines for supplements, there are no regulated manufacturing standards for cold medicines containing atropine, with some belladona supplements found to c...

    Medicinal uses

    Scientific evidence to recommend the use of A. belladonna in its natural form for any condition is insufficient, although some of its components, in particular l-atropine, which was purified from belladonna in the 1830s, have accepted medical uses. Donnatal is a prescription pharmaceutical, that combines natural belladonna alkaloids in a specific, fixed ratio with phenobarbital to provide peripheral anticholinergic or antispasmodic action and mild sedation. Donnatal contains 0.0194 mg of atro...

    Flying ointment

    In the past, witches were believed to use a mixture of belladonna, opium poppy and other plants, typically poisonous (such as monkshood and hemlock), in flying ointment, which they allegedly applied to help them fly to gatherings with other witches or to experience bacchanalian carousal. Carlo Ginzburg and others have argued that flying ointments were preparations meant to encourage hallucinatory dreaming; a possible explanation for the inclusion of belladonna and opium poppy in flying ointme...

    Female attractiveness

    Among the ancient folk traditions of the Romanian (Moldavian) / Ukrainian region of Bukovina in the Carpathians is the ritual for a Bukovinian girl to enhance her attractiveness by making an offering to deadly nightshade. She entered the fields on a Sunday in Shrovetide, clad in her Sunday best, accompanied by her mother and bringing a bag of bread, salt, and brandy. She would dig up a deadly nightshade root and leave the three offerings in its place. As she returned home, she carried the roo...

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  3. Como usar. Efeitos colaterais. Contra-indicações. A beladona é uma planta extremamente tóxica que pode ser utilizada na preparação de alguns medicamentos naturais, especialmente para aliviar sintomas de cólicas gástricas devido a úlceras ou cólicas menstruais.

  4. Atropa belladonna L., conhecida pelo nome comum de beladona, [ 2] é uma planta subarbustiva perene pertencente à família Solanaceae, com distribuição natural na Europa, Norte de África e Ásia Ocidental e naturalizada em partes da América do Norte.

  5. Belladonna, nome artístico de Michelle Anne Sinclair ( Biloxi (Mississippi) em 21 de maio de 1981 ), é uma ex- atriz pornográfica, diretora e produtora norte-americana. Em alguns de seus filmes é também creditada como Bella e Bella Donna.

  6. Bella Donna is the debut solo studio album by American singer and songwriter Stevie Nicks. Released on July 27, 1981, the album reached number one on the US Billboard 200 in...

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