Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
There isn't enough information to know how lungwort might work.
More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of lungwort for these uses.
It is not known if lungwort is safe or what the potential side effects might be.
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for lungwort.
Be careful not to confuse lungwort with lungmoss.
The appropriate dose of lungwort depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
Both are sometimes called lungwort.
After getting the eyebright, they discover that the lungwort is on a giant cliff making it inaccessible by foot.
Lobaria quercizans, commonly known as the smooth lungwort, is a macrolichen.
Lungwort is a plant.
Lungwort is also used in cough medicines, to relieve fluid retention, and to treat lung diseases such as tuberculosis.
The trunks and branches of large trees are an important lichen habitat, Tree Lungwort being particularly conspicuous.
Other lichens commonly featured in folk medicines include Iceland moss and Lungwort.
For brand-conscious sweethearts, there is the lungwort Pulmonaria Milky Way.
As a result, I have a nice menagerie of roses, and an expanding collection of lungwort (Pulmonaria).
Pregnancy and breast-feeding: Not enough is known about the use of lungwort during pregnancy and breast-feeding.
A leaf that was shaped and colored like a lung became lungwort, not because it actually cured sick lungs but because it should.
Lobaria scrobiculata, commonly known as the textured lungwort, is a large foliose, epiphytic lichen.
Mertensia bella is a species of flowering plant in the borage family known by the common names beautiful bluebells and Oregon lungwort.
Lungwort (Pulmonaria)
Bloom starts in April with the bloodroot, the blue and pink of the lungwort and the yellow of corydalis.
The Furlings manage to get the lungwort after a dangerous flight up the cliff, then steer their airship back for Dapplewood.
Lungwort (Sticta pulmonaria)
It is a rhizomatous herbaceous perennial which is closely related to the common lungwort (Pulmonaria officinalis).
The common name in many languages also refers to lungs, as in English "lungwort" and German Lungenkraut.
In the laboratory, L. pulmonaria has been grown on nylon microfilaments.
Pulmonaria seems to behave the same way.
It could also be going dormant, the pulmonaria's fallback response to heat, dry soil or other stress.
Pulmonaria species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species.
Both pulmonaria and daffodil flowers are over.
The foliage of the pulmonaria should be cut back in winter to allow its new flowers to come through unconcealed in spring.
Its population has declined across Europe and L. pulmonaria is considered endangered in many lowland areas.
L. pulmonaria has the ability to form both vegetative propagation and sexual propagules at an age of about 25 years.
The other photobiont of L. pulmonaria is the green algae Dictyochloropsis reticulata.
Pulmonaria excalibur, left, a shade lover with leaves colored almost platinum, turns away not only deer but also slugs.
For brand-conscious sweethearts, there is the lungwort Pulmonaria Milky Way.
Lobaria pulmonaria has been found to have moderate anti-inflammatory effects, and strong anti-ulcerative effects in rats.
The epiphytic lichen flora is also typical of ancient woodland and includes species such as Lobaria pulmonaria.
Lungwort (Sticta pulmonaria)
Due to declining population, L. pulmonaria is considered to be rare or threatened in many parts of the world, especially in lowland areas of Europe.
Lobaria pulmonaria (lungwort lichen)
Lichens include (Lobaria pulmonaria) and (Teleoschistes flavicans).
Dispersal by vegetative propagules (via soredia or isidia) has been determined as the predominant mode of reproduction in L. pulmonaria.
The thallus of L. scobiculata has broad, concave and rounded lobes, rather wider than in Lobaria pulmonaria.
Lichens, Lobaria pulmonaria, may have potential for reducing the number of prions because some species contain proteases that show promise in breaking down the prion.
But the richly spotted leaves of the pulmonaria have expanded gracefully to make a dense ground cover which hides most of the remains of the daffodils.
Pulmonaria angustifolia (narrow-leaved lungwort, blue cowslip) is a species of flowering plant in the family Boraginaceae, native to central and north eastern Europe.
Gerard's book The Herball or General Historie of plants (1597) recommends L. pulmonaria as medicinally valuable.
Pulmonaria are used as ornamental garden plants, particularly P. saccharata, P. angustifolia and P. longifolia.
Perennials for shade: European ginger, black snakeroot, hosta, bleeding heart, ajuga, sweet woodruff, epimedium, pulmonaria, ferns, mint.