Status condition healing item

A status condition healing item is a type of item from the Pokémon games. They can be used during or outside of a to heal a Pokémon's status condition. They can often be found on the ground, whether readily visible or hidden from sight and requiring an Itemfinder to locate, and can be bought at nearly every Poké Mart.

Since Generation IV, when accessing the Bag during battles, all status condition healing items are categorized under Status Restore.

In the anime
Paralyze Heal was mentioned in A Pokémon Scent-sation. Erika offered to give some of it to Ash's Bulbasaur after it was hit by her 's, but declined the offer.

Old Gateau was first seen in Get Your Rotom Running!. Ash and went to the Old Chateau to try some of the famous treat at the recommendation of. A piece of Old Gateau also appeared in Getting a Jump on the Competition!.

A Lava Cookie appeared in The Brockster Is In!. An elderly passenger gave it to to help cure the ed Pokémon Normajean was taking care of.

Casteliacones were first mentioned in A Venipede Stampede!. While in Castelia City, accidentally led the group to the stand selling the treat, which they realized was closed. The same stand was referred to again in Climbing the Tower of Success!, when Ash, his friends, and Stephan were attempting to solve a quiz at the Wishing Bell Festival. Thankfully, remembered eating a Casteliacone in the past, allowing them to figure out the right answer.

Casteliacones were also sold at the Vertress Conference, as seen in Lost at the League! and A Unova League Evolution!. bought several cones from an ice cream stand and offered some to Ash and his friends.

Antidote was mentioned in An Undersea Place to Call Home!. Lindsey used one off-screen to cure Ash's Pikachu after it had been badly poisoned by a wild 's.

Lumiose Galettes first appeared in Kalos League Passion with a Certain Flare!, where Meyer and Clembot brought Ash, his friends, Sawyer, and their Pokémon two boxes of them to celebrate Ash advancing to the finals of the Lumiose Conference. More Lumiose Galettes appeared in The First Day of the Rest of Your Life!, where Ash and bought themselves some to eat from a bakery in Lumiose City.

Antidotes first appeared in The Sun, the Scare, the Secret Lair!, where Professor Kukui handed one to Ash from his medical kit, for him to cure his from the poison inflicted on it by James's Mareanie attacking it with.

Full Restores debuted in A Mission of Ultra Urgency!, where Ash and received a medical kit containing three of them, among other healing items, to be used during their Ultra Guardian missions. During their first mission, used one to heal a  that had been drained by a. In Full Moon and Many Arms!, Lillie used another Full Restore from the medical kit to help heal.

In Turning Heads and Training Hard!, Ilima was seen serving some Lumiose Galettes he had brought from Kalos to Professor Kukui and Samson Oak.

In the Pokémon Adventures manga
In The Secret of Kangaskhan, used an Antidote to heal a baby  from her ing.

In Weezing Winks Out, Koga healed, who had been paralyzed by Agatha's Gengar's , with a Paralyze Heal sent to him inside one of his shuriken Poké Balls.

In The Final Battle I, was seen eating some Lava Cookies at the Hoenn Battle Frontier. As it was the first time he came to Hoenn, he decided to try the region's famous delicacy, and found them delicious.

In Robust Rotom, served  some Old Gateau for tea time during their stay at the Old Chateau.

In The Final Dimensional Duel VI, Charon mentioned using an Ice Heal on his after it had been hit by Reg's.

In Big City Battles, gave  a box of Casteliacones to use in battle.

In Charizard Transforms, used an Awakening to wake up Croaky after Xerosic's  had put him asleep with.

In the Pokémon Diamond and Pearl Adventure! manga
In The Mystery Boy, Jun!!, used an Awakening to wake up Hareta's Piplup after it had fallen asleep due to Mars's Purugly's.

In the Pokémon Gotta Catch 'Em All manga
In GDZ68, Shu gave his an Antidote to cure the poisoning caused by a Trainer's 's.

In the Pokémon Pocket Monsters manga
used an Ice Heal on in To the Pokémon League!! after he had been frozen by Lorelei's.

Artwork
This is artwork of the items as seen on the Pokémon Global Link.

In the TCG
The Full Heal and Big Malasada have both been featured as TCG Item cards in the Pokémon Trading Card Game.

 was included as a TCG Trainer card in the first release of the TCG, the TCG Base Set (TCG Expansion Pack in Japan), with artwork by Keiji Kinebuchi. It removes all TCG Special Conditions from one of the player's Active Pokémon. After several reprints, it later received new art by Kinebuchi in the Japanese TCG Pokémon-e Starter Deck, which made up part of the English TCG Expedition Base Set. Full Heal wasn't reprinted again until the TCG SoulSilver Collection, when it was reclassified as an Item card; it also featured new artwork by Takashi Yamaguchi. While the print would be included in the English TCG HeartGold & SoulSilver expansion, the Trainer card classifications weren't adopted until the TCG Black & White expansion, which also included a reprint of Full Heal. Originating from the TCG White Collection in Japan, it again features new artwork, this time by 5ban Graphics. 5ban Graphics also created the artwork for the next reprint included in the TCG Furious Fists expansion (Japanese TCG Rising Fist expansion). Finally, the Japanese TCG Expansion Pack 20th Anniversary and English TCG Evolutions expansion, sets celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Pokémon franchise, reprinted the card with its original Kinebuchi artwork.

 heals the player's Active Pokémon of 20 damage and one Special Condition. It was released in the TCG Collection Moon and TCG Sun & Moon Starter Set in Japan, which were combined to form the English TCG Sun & Moon expansion.

In the TFG
The following is a list of cards named Full Heal.

Trivia

 * Old Gateau's name in both English and Japanese is a pun based on the location it is found. In English, the French word gateau ("cake") plays on Chateau. In Japanese, the Chateau's name is "Forest Manor" (Japanese: もりのようかん) while the Gateau's name is "Forest " (Japanese: もりのヨウカン); the two terms are homophones and are pronounced as mori no yōkan.
 * According to the anime, the Old Gateau is also known as the Mirage Gateau.
 * In early appearances, the Antidote and Full Heal were depicted as a vaccine inside of a syringe-type device; this was later changed to being a "spray-type medicine" in.
 * Most "local specialty" items introduced since Generation III — the Lava Cookie, Old Gateau, Casteliacone, Lumiose Galette, Shalour Sable, and Big Malasada — are variants of the Full Heal. The Rage Candy Bar, introduced in Generation II, was a variant of the until Generation VII. The Sweet Heart, introduced in Generation V, is the only "local specialty" item that is still a variant of the Potion.
 * In Pokémon Adventures, is healed with a Paralyze Heal, the first time a status condition healing item besides local specialties is used on a human.
 * In the games, "Old Gateau" is usually pluralized as "Old Gateaux". However, the description of the Souvenir Set in Join Avenue says "A set of two Old Gateaus. The cake heals all the status problems of one Pokémon."
 * Although Shalour Sables aren't obtainable in Pokémon X and Y, they're mentioned by a female standing near the Galette Stand in Lumiose City.
 * Shalour Sable is the only "local specialty" not found in its home region.

Heilitems Restaurador de estado Strumenti per curare problemi di stato 状态治愈道具