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Artemisia annua - photo by kind permission of Professor Lin Yu-Lin, Institute of Medicinal Plant Development, China

Artemisia annua - photo by kind permission of Professor Lin Yu-Lin, Institute of Medicinal Plant Development, China

 

 

Sweet Wormwood

Artemisia annua

Sweet wormwood is an annual plant, native to Eurasia and widely naturalised in North America. At Kew it can be found seasonally in the Order Beds. Other artemisias can always be seen in the Queen's Garden and at King William's Temple.

Ancient Greeks thought wormwood was a remedy for sea dragon bites. Chinese herbal medicine uses the leaves of sweet wormwood for treating fevers.

In the last 40 years the active ingredient – artemisinin or qinghaosu – has been isolated from the leaves and shown to be a potent antimalarial drug.

Resistance to many other antimalarial drugs is now widespread, so artemisinin derivatives have become extremely important in the “Roll Back Malaria” programme of the World Health Organisation. Riamet is the trade name of a combination malaria treatment. It contains artemether and another antimalarial agent called lumefantrine not related to Artemisia.

Find out more

places linkYou can see sweet wormwood seasonally in the Order Beds at Kew

places linkYou can see other perennial artemisias at Kew in the Queen's Garden and at King William's Temple

kew linkSearch Kew's electronic Plant Information Centre for scientific information about Artemisia annua

external linkExternal link: Roll Back Malaria programme of the World Health Organisation

external linkExternal link: guidance over the safe use of herbal medicines

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