Herbal Medicines Blog

Pennyroyal

American pennyroyal, European pennyroyal, lurk-in-the-ditch, Mentha pulegium, mosquito plant, piliolerial, pudding grass, pulegium, run-by-the-ground, squaw balm, squawmint, tickweed

The leaves and flowering tops of Mentha pulegium contain pennyroyal oil. The oil contains D-pulegione (60% to 90%), methone, isomethone, tannins, and flavonoids. Pulegione depletes glutathione in the liver. In high doses, it has abortifacient properties. Pennyroyal is available as a tea, tincture, loose dried herb, and capsules.

Reported uses

In the past, pennyroyal was used to treat digestive disorders, liver and gallbladder disorders, bowel disorders, pneumonia, gout, and colds. It’s currently used topically for skin diseases. It’s also used as an abortifacient, insect repellent, antiseptic, flavoring agent, and fragrance in detergents, soaps, and perfumes.

Administration

Hazards

Adverse effects associated with the use of pennyroyal include lethargy, delirium, unconsciousness, seizures, hallucinations, hypertension, tachycardia, respiratory failure, anesthetic-like paralysis, shock, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, miscarriage, irreversible renal damage, hepatotoxicity, severe liver damage, and dermatitis. Herbal products that contain alcohol may cause a disulfiram-like reaction.

Safety Risk Severe poisoning has been reported after consumption of 5 g of pennyroyal oil as an abortifacient. Overdose may cause vomiting, hypertension, anesthetic-like paralysis, and respiratory failure.

Safety Risk Pennyroyal has toxic effects on the liver and isn’t recommended for internal use.

Clinical considerations

Research summary

The concepts behind the use of pennyroyal and the claims made regarding its effects haven’t yet been validated scientifically.