Mistletoe

← Herb Library / Mistletoe
Santalaceae

Mistletoe

Viscum album
⚠ Use with Caution Avoid in Pregnancy
Native to: Europe, Western Asia, Northern Africa
Also known as: European Mistletoe, All-heal, Golden Bough, Witch's Broom
Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

🌱 Parts Used

LeafStem

💊 Therapeutic Uses

Cancer (adjunct — Iscador/Helixor clinical trials improve quality of life, NK cell activity), hypertension, tachycardia, anxiety. Primarily used as oncology adjunct in integrative medicine.


Herbal Actions

Immunomodulator, anticancer (lectins — apoptosis induction), hypotensive, antispasmodic, nervine

🔬 Active Constituents

Lectins (ML-I, II, III — primary anticancer actives), viscotoxins, flavonoids, polysaccharides, acetylcholine

⚗️ Preparation Methods

🏺 Tincture💊 Capsule

📐 Traditional Preparation Notes

Herbal TeaNOT recommended internally — berries and high doses toxic
Tincture0.5–1 ml (1:5, 40% ethanol), 2–3x daily — LOW DOSE
NotesBERRIES TOXIC — do not use. Leaf tincture in low doses safe. Clinical use as Iscador (mistletoe extract) injected subcutaneously — requires medical supervision. Oral preparations less studied than injectable.

⚠️ Safety Information

Safety Rating ⚠ Use with Caution
Pregnancy Avoid in Pregnancy
Drug Interactions ⚠ Known interactions

Contraindications: Berries toxic. Avoid in pregnancy. Avoid with immunosuppressants. Caution with antihypertensives (additive effect). Medical supervision recommended for cancer adjunct use.

Side Effects: Berries: severe toxicity. Herb at low doses: GI discomfort, allergic reactions. Chills, fever from injectable form (immunostimulation).

← Back to Herb Library
Scroll to Top