“…The species has thin, brown roots; petiolated lower leaves; crenate–serrate margins; and sessile upper leaves with spiny-serrate edges and is straight, reddish, and strongly branched at the base stem. The corolla of flowers is usually purple–blue and, less frequently, light blue or white, and the fruits are brown, ovoid, and tetranucleate [ 3 , 4 ]. Its aerial parts are traditionally used for the treatment of stomach and liver pathologies, headaches, snake bites, stomatitis, or fungal infections [ 2 , 5 , 6 , 7 ].…”