Cytisus, Broom

Scotch Broom; Genista, Genesta, Genestra, Scoparius, Spartium
Picture Picture
Picture Herbarius latinus, Petri, 1485

Picture Medical Botany, Woodville, Hooker, Vol. 3, 1832

Picture BROOM TOPS
1. Stem showing the two wings ending in a node.  2. A large flower and a
flower bud.  3. The hairy pistil..  4. Fruit.  5. Three foliate leaves.

Squibb’s Atlas of the Official Drugs, Mansfield, 1919

Botanical name:


Cytisus scoparius (syn. Spartium scoparium; Genista scoparius, Sarothamnus scoparius)

Parts used:


Flowering tops

Temperature & Taste:


Neutral (slightly Warm), Dry. Sweet, Bitter

Classifications:


2F. PURIFYING
4f. SPLENETIC

Uses:


1. Clears Damp, Opens Obstructions:
-Jaundice; constant use of the herb and seed in powder cures Black Jaundice (Pemell, 1652)
-Swelling or Hardness of the Liver, Spleen or Abdominal Organs
-Scrofula, Tumors

2. Clears Damp, Promotes Urine, clears Stones:
-Nephritic, good for Edema, fluid retention;
-‘purges water by vomit, stool and urine’. (Schroder)
-Prostatitis, dribbling Urine
-Gravel and Stones of the Kidney, Bladder and Gall Bladder

3. Moves the Blood, Regulates the Heart:

-Cardiac Arrhythmia’s (specific); used for Atrial and Ventricular Fibrillation.
-Extrasystoles likewise respond well to long-term treatment.
-post-infectious Myocarditis with Arrhythmia (Weiss).
-Hypotension
-Blood stagnation

4. Moves the Blood, clears Wind and Damp:
Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lower Back and Hip Pain, Arthritis, Gout

5. Stops Bleeding, Regulates the Uterus:
-excess Menstruation, Postpartum Hemorrhage
-stimulates Contractions

6. Emetic:
-full doses were traditionally used as an Emetic to purge Phlegm, Damp and Watery humors
Lonicerus (1564) said the flowers were emetic

7. Externally:

-The liquid extracted from the ends of the storks of the heated herb was applied to the tooth for Toothache.
-Sores or Abscesses of the Mouth are helped by gargling the decoction.
-For Pain in the Sides and Stitches the juice was made into an ointment or oil was anointed on.
-the seed paste was applied to Nodes and Scrofula; flowers beaten with Honey and applied to Scrofula
-the juice (or herb) boiled in oil ‘is the safest and surest medicines to kill Lice in the Head or Body of any’. (Culpeper)
-the juice or fresh herb boiled in oil is also ‘an especial remedy for Joint aches, and swollen knees’. (Culpeper)
-Juice boiled in oil is applied to Sciatica (Pemell, 1652)
-oil distilled from roots and seeds takes away spots, freckles and skin deformities (Pemell, 1652)


Dose:


Seeds: 2–4, or 6 grams (1–1 ½ or 2 drams)
Juice of the Herb: 3–5mls, up to 10mls (1–2 or 3 drams)
Powder of the Flowers: 2–4 grams (1–2 drams)
Powder of the Root: 4–9 grams (2–4 drams)
Juice of the Root: 3–10mls (traditionally 1–4 drams) with Hydromel or Water and Honey.

Correctives:


1. Rose
2. Mastic
3. Fennel
4. Honey of Roses

Main Combinations:


1. To Promote Urine, Edema:
i. Broom with Juniper berry
ii. Broom with Cleavers
iii. Broom with Dandelion and Juniper berry
iv. Broom with Juniper berry, lily of the Valley
v. Broom with Squill and Juniper
vi. Broom ashes with Horseradish, Orris, Calamus, Elecampane, Juniper berry, Mustard seed
vii. Broom with Horsetail, Knotgrass, Birch leaf
2. Urinary Irritation, Broom with Juniper berry and Linseed
3. Arthritis:
i. and Rheumatism Broom with Ash leaf, Nettle leaf, Primula leaf (Kroeber)
ii. Broom with Mastic, Rose, Cinnamon (equal parts) (Pemell, 1652)
4. Infertility, Broom flower with Celery seed, Parsley seed, Cumin, Mugwort, Feverfew, Aloe, Saffron (as in Pills Against Barrenness  of Turner)
5. Uterine Fibroids, Broom with Rue
6. Liver disorders, Broom with Agrimony and Dandelion
7. Scrofula, Broom flowers with Honey (Pemell, 1652)
8. Fever, Broom with Centuary
9. Cardiac arrhythmia:
i. Broom with Motherwort
ii. Broom with Hawthorn
10. Cardiac weakness:
i. Broom with Hawthorn, Balm
ii. Broom, Hawthorn, Motherwort, Lily of the Valley
iii. with Edema, Broom with Lily of the Valley
iv. with Edema, Broom with Hawthorn, Juniper
v. Broom, Ginseng, Cinnamon, Licorice
11. Hypertension:
i. Menopausal Hypertension, Broom with Linden flower, Ladies Slipper
ii. Broom with Linden flower, Nettle, Balm
12. As a bath for Eczema, Broom with Elecampane, Artichoke leaf, Chicory, Celandine, Lavender and Nettle

Major Formulas:


Pills Against Barrenness (Turner)

Cautions:


1. Toxic in excess
2. Not used during Pregnancy
3. Avoid in Hypertension

Main Preparations used:


Distilled Water of the whole Herb in Flower, Conserve of the Flowers, Salt of the Ashes
  • Extra Info
  • History
From the fact that this plant is chiefly a native of Western, Northern and Central Europe, it is improbable that the classical authors were acquainted with it; and for the same reason the remarks of the early Italian writers may not always apply to the species under notice. With this reservation, we may state that broom under the name Genista, Genesta, or Genestra is mentioned in the earliest printed herbals, as that of Passau, 1485, the Hortuts Sanitatis, 1491, the Great Herbal printed at Southwark in 1526, and others. It is likewise the Genista as figured and described by the German botanists and pharmacologists of the 16th century, like Brunfels, Fuchs, Tragus, Valerius Cordus (“Genista angulosa“) and others. Broom was used in ancient Anglo-Saxon medicine as well as in the Welsh
Meddygon Myddvai.” It had a place in the London Pharmacopoeia of 1618, and has been included in nearly every subsequent edition. Hieronymus Brunschwyg  gives directions for distilling a water from the flowers, “fiores genestai“— a medicine which Gerarde relates was used by King Henry VIII. “against surfiets and diseases thereof arising.”

Broom was the emblem of those of the Norman sovereigns of England descended from Geoffry the “Handsome,” or “Plantagenet,” count of Anjou (obiit A.D. 1150), who was in the habit of wearing the common broom of his country, the “planta genista,” in his helmet. (Pharmacographia, Fluckiger & Hanbury, 1879)