Search results for "medicinal plants"

showing 10 items of 108 documents

Medicinal Plants in the Treatment of Depression: Evidence from Preclinical Studies.

2021

AbstractMedicinal plants and their extracts are natural remedies with enormous potential for treating various diseases, including depression and anxiety. In the case of depression, hundreds of plants have traditionally been used in folk medicine for generations. Different plant extracts and natural products have been analyzed as potential antidepressant agents with validated models to test for antidepressant-like effects in animals, although other complementary studies have also been employed. Most of these studies focus on the possible mediators implicated in these potential effects, with dopamine, serotonin, and noradrenaline being the principal neurotransmitters implicated, both through …

Pharmaceutical ScienceAnalytical Chemistrylaw.invention03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinelawDrug DiscoveryMedicineAnimalsHumansMedicinal plantsDepression (differential diagnoses)PharmacologyFolk medicineKavaPlants MedicinalTraditional medicinebusiness.industryDepressionPlant ExtractsOrganic ChemistryAntidepressive AgentsComplementary and alternative medicine030220 oncology & carcinogenesisMolecular MedicineAntidepressantNarrative reviewPhytotherapybusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryHypericumPhytotherapyPlanta medica
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2017

A new isoflavone, 8-prenylmilldrone (1), and four new rotenoids, oblarotenoids A–D (2–5), along with nine known compounds (6–14), were isolated from the CH2Cl2/CH3OH (1:1) extract of the leaves of Millettia oblata ssp. teitensis by chromatographic separation. The purified compounds were identified by NMR spectroscopic and mass spectrometric analyses, whereas the absolute configurations of the rotenoids were established on the basis of chiroptical data and in some cases by single-crystal X-ray crystallography. Maximaisoflavone J (11) and oblarotenoid C (4) showed weak activity against the human breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231 with IC50 values of 33.3 and 93.8 μM, respectively.

PharmacologyChromatographybiology010405 organic chemistryChemistryChemical structureOrganic ChemistryPharmaceutical ScienceIsoflavones010402 general chemistrybiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesMass spectrometric0104 chemical sciencesAnalytical ChemistryMillettiachemistry.chemical_compoundChromatographic separationComplementary and alternative medicineDrug DiscoveryIc50 valuesMolecular MedicineCancer cell linesMedicinal plantsJournal of Natural Products
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Biopiracy of medicinal plants: Finding fair solutions for the use of natural resources.

2019

PharmacologyComplementary and alternative medicineAgroforestryDrug DiscoveryPharmaceutical ScienceMolecular MedicineBusinessMedicinal plantsNatural resourcePhytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology
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Medicinal plants and antimicrobial activity.

2005

In the present paper, we analyze the past, present and future of medicinal plants, both as potential antimicrobial crude drugs as well as a source for natural compounds that act as new anti-infection agents. In the past few decades, the search for new anti-infection agents has occupied many research groups in the field of ethnopharmacology. When we reviewed the number of articles published on the antimicrobial activity of medicinal plants in PubMed during the period between 1966 and 1994, we found 115; however, in the following decade between 1995 and 2004, this number more than doubled to 307. In the studies themselves one finds a wide range of criteria. Many focus on determining the antim…

PharmacologyFloraPlants MedicinalTraditional medicinebusiness.industryPharmacognosyBiologySesquiterpeneAntimicrobialIsolation (microbiology)BiotechnologyAnti-Bacterial AgentsTerpenechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryDrug DiscoveryEthnopharmacologyMedicine TraditionalbusinessMedicinal plantsAntibacterial agentJournal of ethnopharmacology
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A review of some antimicrobial compounds isolated from medicinal plants reported in the literature 1978–1988

1989

This paper reviews the literature on recent antimicrobial plant products (1978–1988) and medicinal plants used for the treatment of infectious diseases. The review includes accounts of extracts, essential oils and other active principles isolated from plants that have been used in folk medicine as antimicrobial agents. The name and part of the plants studied, the spectrum of activity, type of active compounds and methods used are discussed, as are their mechanisms of action.

PharmacologyFolk medicineTraditional medicinebusiness.industryfungifood and beveragesBiologyAntimicrobialbusinessMedicinal plantsBiotechnologyPhytotherapy Research
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Screening of antiinflammatory medicinal plants used in traditional medicine against skin diseases

1998

The antiinflammatory activity of twelve medicinal plants used against skin disorders were tested in different experimental models of topical inflammation and one in vitro inhibitory test against phospholipase A2 (PLA2) from Naja naja venom. Forsythia suspensa was the most active species on the arachidonic acid (AA) topical test. This last species together with Astragalus membranaceus and Ranunculus sceleratus were the most active on the 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) acute ear oedema test. Scrophularia auriculata was the most active on multiple topical applications of TPA and on the oxazolone-induced delayed type hypersensitivity (DTH). Santolina chamaecyparissus was the only sp…

PharmacologyForsythia suspensaintegumentary systemTraditional medicinebiologybusiness.industryScrophularia auriculatabiology.organism_classificationlaw.inventionSantolina chamaecyparissusAstragaluschemistry.chemical_compoundPhospholipase A2chemistrylawbiology.proteinMedicineArachidonic acidPhytotherapyMedicinal plantsbusinessPhytotherapy Research
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Ethnopharmacology, phytochemistry, chemical ecology and invasion biology of Acanthus mollis L.

2022

Abstract Ethnopharmacological relevance Acanthus mollis L. (Bear's Breeches) is a wide-spread medicinal and ornamental plant and is particularly suited to exemplarily illustrate the diverse aspects of invasion biology by neophytes. Since ancient times, it has been a popular Mediterranean ornamental plant in horticulture and served as model for the decoration of column capitals in architecture. Aim of the study In the present review, we aimed to give an overview about ethnopharmacology, phytochemistry, chemical ecology, and invasion biology of A. mollis. Thus, the importance of plantation cultivation in the presence of ecologically problematic species and environmental protection were emphas…

PharmacologyHerbivoreEcologyPhytochemicalsBiodiversityEthnobotanyBiodiversityBiologyHorticulturebiology.organism_classificationInvasive speciesChemical ecologyPhytochemicalAcanthaceaeDrug DiscoveryOrnamental plantEthnopharmacologyHumansMedicinal plantsAcanthus mollisJournal of ethnopharmacology
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Effects of triterpenes on the immune system.

2010

Ethnopharmacological relevance: Triterpenes, which comprise a broad chemical group of active principles, are implicated in the mechanisms of action and pharmacological effects of many medicinal plants used in folk medicine against diseases in which the immune system is implicated. They have been described as anti-inflammatory, antiviral, antimicrobial, and antitumoral agents, as well as being immunomodulator compounds. Several of them are implicated in the resolution of immune diseases, although their effects have not always been clearly correlated. Aim of the review: The aim of this review is to compile relevant data on the mechanisms of action of triterpenes isolated from active ethnomedi…

PharmacologyMechanism (biology)Anti-HIV AgentsInflammationNF-κBComputational biologyBiologyAntimicrobialMajor histocompatibility complexTriterpeneschemistry.chemical_compoundImmune systemCucurbitacinschemistryAdjuvants ImmunologicImmune SystemDrug DiscoveryImmunologymedicinebiology.proteinAnimalsHumansmedicine.symptomMedicinal plantsTranscription FactorsJournal of ethnopharmacology
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Cameroonian Medicinal Plants: Pharmacology and Derived Natural Products

2010

Many developing countries including Cameroon have mortality patterns that reflect high levels of infectious diseases and the risk of death during pregnancy and childbirth, in addition to cancers, cardiovascular diseases and chronic respiratory diseases that account for most deaths in the developed world. Several medicinal plants are used traditionally for their treatment. In this review, plants used in Cameroonian traditional medicine with evidence for the activities of their crude extracts and/or derived products have been discussed. A considerable number of plant extracts and isolated compounds possess significant antimicrobial, anti-parasitic including antimalarial, anti-proliferative, a…

PharmacologyTraditional medicineDrug discoverybusiness.industryethnophamacologylcsh:RM1-950Review ArticleAntimicrobialTerpenoidlcsh:Therapeutics. PharmacologyAfricaMedicineRather poorPharmacology (medical)Risk of deathethnopharmacologyMedicinal plantsbusinessmedicinal plantsFrontiers in Pharmacology
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An Update Review of Saffron and its Active Constituents

1996

This paper reviews the literature on recent research on the chemical composition and pharmacological activities of saffron (Crocus sativus) and its active constituents, mainly as antitumoral, hypolipidemic and tissue oxygenation enhancement agents.

PharmacologyTraditional medicineved/biologyved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesCrocetinfood and beveragesBiologyPicrocrocinSafranalIridaceaeCrocinchemistry.chemical_compoundTissue oxygenationchemistryCrocus sativusMedicinal plantsPhytotherapy Research
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