study of how people in traditional societies use plants the general pattern of ethnobotanical drug...
TRANSCRIPT
Study of how people in traditional societies use plants
The general pattern of ethnobotanical drug discovery programs follows these broad steps [1]◦ Interview indigenous healers to learn about their
specialized healing knowledge.◦ Collect and identify the plant materials used by
indigenous healers.◦ Screen these plant materials for pharmacological
activity.◦ Isolated molecular entities responsible for the
observed pharmacological activity using bioassay-guided fractionation.
◦ Determine the structures of the purified materials.
White Pine (Pinus strobus) Canadian Hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) American Beech (Fagus grandifolia) Red Oak (Quercus rubra) Flowering Dogwood (Cornus florida) Witch Hazel (Hamamelis virginiana)
[2]
American Indians used the twigs to make tea to treat kidney and lung ailments
Pitch poulticed for rheumatism, broken bones, sores, bruises, and inflammation
Bark and leaf tea used to treat coughs and sore throats [2 & 3]
http://www.botany.wisc.edu/courses/botany_100/images/whitepine.jpg
White Pine- Pinus strobus
American Indians used the leafy twig tips to make tea to treat kidney ailments and in steam baths for rheumatism, colds, and coughs
The inner bark was used to make a tea to treat colds, fevers, diarrhea, and scurvy [2 & 3]http://biology.missouristate.edu/herbarium/treesoncampus/images/Tsugacanadensis.jpg
American Indians ◦ Chewed its nuts as a
worm repellent◦ Used bark tea for
lung ailments◦ Used leaf tea as a
wash for burns, frost-bite, and poison-ivy rash [2]
http://www.missouriplants.com/Greenalt/Fagus_grandifolia_plant.jpg
Medicinal claims of the tree’s uses include [2]◦ Inner bark tea used as an
astringent and as a gargle for soar throats and as a wash for skin rashes and burns. The inner barks is considered hemostatic (stops bleeding)
◦ The red oak contains tannins. Experimentally, tannic acid has been show to have antiviral, antiseptic, and anticancer properties. Warning!!- Tannic acid is potentially toxic
http://www.duke.edu/~cwcook/trees/quru5752.jpg
Astringent root bark tea used for malarial fevers and for chronic diarrhea
Root bark poulticed onto external ulcers
Scarlet berries soaked in brandy as a bitter digestive tonic and for stomach ailments
Twigs chewed as toothbrushes [2 & 4]
http://www.sbs.utexas.edu/bio406d/images/pics/crn/cornus_florida.htm
http://lasonline.iastate.edu/isu_trees/CornusFlorida/CornusFlor_bark.html
Flowering Dogwood – Cornus florida
American Indians drank the leaf tea for colds and soar throats
Twig tea rubbed on athlete’s legs to keep muscles limber
Astringent bark tea used internally for lung ailments and externally for bruises [2]
http://www.sassiherbalist.co.uk/tips/spots-acne-skin-3
Witch Hazel – Hamamelis virginiana
There is a continual search for plants in biological communities that could help fight human disease – bioprospecting [5]
The US National Cancer Institute is testing extracts of thousands of wild species for their anti-cancer properties [5]
Screening of natural products is often done in collaboration with local healers [2]
It is essential to protect our local and global biodiversity!!!
The tropical rain forests are home to about half of the world’s plants and deforestation rates are alarmingly high. If the destruction rate does not decrease, almost all rainforests will be lost in the next few decades [5]
Coupled with exploitation, this destruction is putting plants at risk of decreased genetic variability and even extinction [5]
Therefore, there is strong reason for broad sampling of species across all taxonomic divisions and identifying and preserving as many plant species as possible [6]
Do preliminary research to find additional examples of plants that have anti-microbial properties
Conduct an experiment to test for the presence of the properties
Go back to ‘Medical Plants’ – Class Discussion and Experiment for complete information
1) Cox, P. 1995. Shaman as scientist: indigenous knowledge systems in pharmacological research and conservation. In Phytochemistry of Plants Used in Traditional Medicine (eds. K. Hostettman, et al), Clarendon Press, Oxford.
2) Foster, S. and Duke, J. 1990. Eastern/Central Medicinal Plants. Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston, MA.
3) Dwyer, J. and Rattray, D. eds. 1986. Magic and Medicine of Plants. Reader’s Digest Association, Inc., Pleasantville, NY.
4) Duke, J. 1991. CRC Handbook of Medicinal Herbs. CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL.
5) Primack, R. 2010. Essentials of Conservation Biology. 5th edition. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, MA.
6) Cardellina II, J. and Boyd, M. 1995. Pursuit of new leads to antitumor and anti-HIV agents from plants. In Phytochemistry of Plants Used in Traditional Medicine (eds. K. Hostettman, et al), Clarendon Press, Oxford.