Claviceps purpurea
Ergot fungus that parasitises rye and other cereals, producing ergotamine, ergometrine, and other ergot alkaloids. The source of ergotism ("St. Anthony's Fire") — a devastating historical disease causing gangrene and convulsions. Pharmaceutical derivatives used for migraine (ergotamine) and postpartum haemorrhage. Raw ergot is extremely dangerous.
How it works (mechanism of action)
Acts on cellular signalling pathways relevant to the documented clinical indications. Contains bioactive compounds with enzyme-modulating, receptor-binding, or antioxidant properties studied in peer-reviewed literature.
HIGHLY TOXIC raw or as crude extract. Ergot alkaloids cause intense vasoconstriction leading to dry gangrene of extremities, seizures, and psychiatric disturbances. CONTRAINDICATED: pregnancy (causes uterine contractions), vascular disease, hypertension. Drug interactions with CYP3A4 inhibitors cause ergot toxicity. Only pharmaceutical-grade purified derivatives are acceptable.
