Warfarin - Courmain
Home ] Up ] Antibiotics ] Alpha-lipoic acid ] Artemesia ] Ashwagandha ] Aspirin ] B Vitamins ] Bee Venom ] Benicar ] Boron ] Butcher's Broom ] Calcium ] Cat's Claw ] Cephalosporins ] Choline ] Chromium ] [ Warfarin - Courmain ] Danshen ] Devil's Claw ] Dong Quai ] Enzyemes ] Evening Primrose Oil ] Fluorides ] Garlic ] Ginkgo Biloba ] Ginseng ] Glutathione ] Grapeseed ] Guaifenesin ] Herbals ] Heparin ] Honey ] Hydroxychloroquine ] Isoprinosine ] Isoprinosine ] Kutapressin ] Licorice ] Manganese ] Melatonin ] Molybdenum ] Nitric Oxide ] Olestra ] Olive Leaf ] Omega 3 Fatty Acid ] Passion Flower ] Pantothenic Acid ] Pentoxifylline ] Pine Cone Extract ] Piracetam ] Policosanol ] Quercetin ] Quercetin ] Recuperat-ion ] Red Yeast Rice ] R-Lipoic Acid ] Rosavin ] Rutin ] Rutin ] Saponins ] Saventaro ] Selenium ] Serotonin ] Spices ] St. John's Wort ] Statins ] Sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim ] Sulfonamides ] Telmisartan ] Transfer Factor ] Turmeric ] Urokinase ] Valerian ] Vitamin A ] Vitamin D ] Vitamin 1,25D ] Vitamin K ] Whey ] Xylitol ] Vitamin C ]

 

Courmain, a vitamin K-antagonist, and includes Dicumarol (a courmain glycoside a.k.a. warfarin). Courmain is found in a variety of plants such as Tonka bean, lavender, sweet clover grass, and licorice, but also occurs in food plants such as strawberries, apricots, cherries, and cinnamon.

Benefits

  • Affects protein C activity

Risks

  • Osteoporosis risk
  • Does not effect fibrinogen, activated thromboplastin, TAT, PPIC, D-dimer, sFM, protein S and thrombomodulin

Sources

  • Prescription - See MD

See

Google

Home

Original 2001 WebSite as PDF for download

Looking for something, look in the Contents or do a Site Search