Foxgloves are among the most dangerous garden plants — every part contains cardiac glycosides that can cause fatal heart arrhythmias from a single ingested leaf.
A single leaf from a foxglove plant can stop a human heart. That’s not an exaggeration — it’s the precise mechanism of the cardiac glycosides packed into every inch of this common garden perennial. The flowers, leaves, stems, seeds, and roots are all toxic. There is no safe part, no safe amount, and the poison doesn’t fade when the plant dries out or is boiled. This article covers what makes foxgloves so dangerous, the symptoms to watch for, and exactly what to do if someone — child, adult, or pet — gets into one.
What Makes Foxgloves So Poisonous?
The toxicity comes from a family of compounds called cardiac glycosides. The key players are digitoxin, digoxin, and deslanoside. These chemicals interfere directly with the heart’s electrical signaling, slowing the heartbeat, throwing it into an irregular rhythm, and ultimately stopping the heart if the dose is high enough. Digoxin is actually used as a prescription heart medication at carefully measured doses, but eating the raw plant delivers an unmeasured, unregulated bolus that can easily hit a lethal level.
Which Parts Of The Foxglove Plant Are Toxic?
All of them. Every part of the foxglove plant — flowers, leaves, stems, seeds, and roots — contains cardiac glycosides at dangerous concentrations. The highest levels are found in the fruits, flowers, and immature leaves, but the roots are particularly toxic as well. Drying the plant does not reduce the toxicity, nor does boiling it. Even dried foxglove stems in a winter garden remain poisonous.
What Are The Symptoms Of Foxglove Poisoning?
Symptoms can appear within minutes of ingestion or take a few hours, depending on the amount consumed and the person’s size. They affect multiple body systems at once, and the combination of heart and vision symptoms is a hallmark of foxglove poisoning.
| Body System | Symptoms | Onset & Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Cardiovascular | Irregular or slowed heartbeat, collapse, low blood pressure (shock) | Primary cause of death; can occur within hours |
| Gastrointestinal | Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach pain, loss of appetite | Often the first symptoms noticed |
| Neurological | Dizziness, weakness, drowsiness, confusion, fainting, hallucinations | Can mimic stroke or intoxication |
| Visual | Blurred vision, halos around objects (yellow, green, or white), small pupils | Classic foxglove poisoning sign |
| Skin | Rash, hives, skin irritation from contact | Less common but possible with handling |
| Respiratory | Difficulty breathing, respiratory failure | Late-stage sign; requires immediate intervention |
How Much Foxglove Is Dangerous?
There is no safe amount. Even a single chewed leaf can cause heart stoppage or paralysis, especially in a child. The bitter taste of the plant sometimes limits how much a person or animal eats, but the toxins act fast, and a small amount can be lethal. The margin between a dangerous dose and a fatal dose is narrow — the same chemistry that makes digoxin a precision heart drug makes raw foxglove a plant you cannot treat casually.
What Should You Do If Someone Eats Foxglove?
Time is critical. The standard first-aid instinct — inducing vomiting — is the wrong move here. Vomiting can cause additional harm and doesn’t remove the absorbed toxins. Follow these steps in order:
- Do not make the person vomit unless poison control or a healthcare provider specifically directs you to do so.
- Call the Poison Help Hotline immediately: 1-800-222-1222. This number works nationwide in the US and connects you to your local poison control center.
- Go to the emergency room right away if ingestion is confirmed or strongly suspected. Do not wait for symptoms to appear — by the time heart symptoms develop, the situation is already advanced.
- Gather the following information to give the poison specialist: the person’s age and approximate weight, the part of the plant eaten (if known), how much was swallowed, and how long ago it happened.
With prompt medical treatment — including cardiac monitoring, activated charcoal in some cases, and digoxin-specific antibody fragments if the dose is high — survival is the likely outcome. Death from foxglove poisoning is uncommon with rapid treatment. Recovery usually takes 1–3 days in a hospital setting. For the most authoritative emergency guidance, refer to Poison Control’s official foxglove page.
Common Mistakes That Lead To Poisoning
- Mistaking foxglove for comfrey. The leaves look similar, and this misidentification has caused fatal poisonings. Never harvest or eat any plant unless you are 100% certain of its identity.
- Inducing vomiting. This can worsen the outcome and should never be done without professional direction.
- Burning foxglove. The smoke carries the cardiac glycosides and is poisonous to inhale.
- Assuming only the leaves are toxic. Every part — flowers, seeds, stems, roots — is dangerous.
- Thinking drying or cooking removes the poison. Toxicity persists even in dry, dead plant material and after boiling.
Who Is Most At Risk?
Children are the most vulnerable because of their small body weight and natural curiosity about flowers. Pregnant and breastfeeding individuals should avoid all contact — the plant is unsafe for both mother and child. People with kidney disease clear cardiac glycosides more slowly, putting them at higher risk from any exposure. Pets — dogs, horses, ruminants, poultry, and pigs — are all susceptible, though the bitter taste of the plant sometimes prevents them from eating a lethal amount.
| Exposure Route | Risk Level | Key Precaution |
|---|---|---|
| Ingestion of any part | Life-threatening | Call poison control + ER immediately |
| Skin contact with sap or crushed leaves | Moderate (irritation, possible absorption through cuts) | Wash with soap and water; wear gloves when handling |
| Transfer from hands to eyes or mouth | Moderate to high | Wash hands thoroughly after any contact |
| Inhaling pollen | Low to moderate (sensitive individuals only) | Keep distance during flowering; avoid in enclosed spaces |
| Burning dried plant material | Life-threatening (poisonous smoke) | Never burn foxglove |
How To Stay Safe Around Foxgloves
If you have foxgloves in your garden, the safest choice is to remove them — especially if children or pets share the space. If you choose to keep them for their beauty, treat every interaction like the serious hazard it is: wear gloves for any handling, wash your hands and tools immediately after, and never compost the trimmings where animals could reach them. Teach children by name and sight that foxglove is not a plant to touch or pick. The bitter taste of the plant is a partial natural deterrent, but it is not a reliable one.
Final Danger Assessment — How Poisonous Are Foxgloves?
The answer is clear and sobering: foxgloves are as dangerous as any plant commonly grown in American gardens. The cardiac glycosides in a single leaf are enough to kill a child, and a handful of leaves can kill an adult. The poison acts on the heart directly, it has no antidote available at home, and the symptoms progress without warning signs in many cases. Prompt medical care is the only reason fatalities are rare. If you grow foxgloves, understand the risk. If you suspect someone has eaten any part of one, call 1-800-222-1222 and head to the ER — hesitation is the most dangerous variable.
References & Sources
- Poison Control. “Foxglove.” Comprehensive overview of foxglove toxicity, symptoms, and emergency response.
