| Literature DB >> 17825094 |
Raynner R D Barboza1, Wedson de M S Souto, José da S Mourão.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The present work addresses the use of zootherapy in folk veterinary medicine (ethnoveterinary) by the residents of the municipal district of Cubati, microregion of Seridó, Paraíba State, Brazil. It sought to identify the principal animals used as medicinal sources for zootherapeutics and to contribute to the preservation and sustainability of this traditional knowledge.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17825094 PMCID: PMC2008192 DOI: 10.1186/1746-4269-3-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ethnobiol Ethnomed ISSN: 1746-4269 Impact factor: 2.733
Figure 1Map of the Localization of Cubati Town. Adapted of Rodriguez et al. [11]
Animals used in the Popular Veterinary Medicine in Cubati – PB
| Animal | Percentage of Citation | Used Part | Indications | |
| Popular Vernacular | Species | |||
| Fox | 31.25% (n = 5) | Fat | Uterus prolapse | |
| Ram | 62.5% (n = 10) | Castrated Ram Suet | Arthritis, Bovine Gangrenous Coryza (hollow of the ox horny), rheumatism, woundy, edema, wounds, pointed stakes, fractures, swellings, furunculosis. | |
| Cattle | 37.5% (n = 6) | Butter of the milk cream | Pits, mastitis | |
| Butter of the curdled milk cream | peri-oculars Irritations | |||
| Milk | Fractures | |||
| Suet | Bovine Gangrenous Coryza (hollow of the ox horny) | |||
| Pig | 43.75% (n = 7) | Fat | Pits, mastitis, burns, wounds, furunculosis. | |
| Fat of the pig scrotum | Pits, pointed stakes, fractures, furunculosis, mastitis, torsion | |||
| Male goat | 12.5% (n = 2) | Castrated Male Goat Fat | General wounds | |
| Feces | pointed stakes | |||
| Armadillo- Peba | 18.75% (n = 3) | Fat | Pits, pointed stakes, wounds, furunculosis | |
| 18.75% (n = 3) | Urine | Intoxication of the cattle when the ones feed of cassava ( | ||
| Rattlesnake | 31.25% (n = 5) | Fat | Wounds, Arthritis | |
| Chameleon | 75% (n = 12) | Leather | Pits, pointed stakes, furunculosis. | |
| Fat | Pointed stakes, General wounds | |||
| Turtle of water | 25% (n = 4) | Fat | Swellings | |
| Lizard-Teju | 18.75% (n = 3) | Fat | Pits, pointed stake, wounds, furunculosis | |
| Hens | 43.75% (n = 7) | Fat | Mastitis, furunculosis | |
| Egg | Uterus prolapse | |||
| Feces | Mastitis | |||
| Gizzard skin | Burns | |||
| Peru | 18.75% (n = 3) | Fat | Furunculosis | |
| Quail | 18.75% (n = 3) | feathers | Snakes bites | |
| Hornet-mestizo | 12.5% (n = 2) | Sting | Cattle pits | |
Figure 2Percentage of the groups used with zootherapics in the veterinary medicine in Cubati in relation of the mentioned species type. Probably mammals and reptiles stand out due the characteristics of the local fauna and the agricultural activity.
Figure 3Groups representation in relation to the species citation frequency. For instance, the 7 found zootherapics mammals species are mentioned 36 times, or 48% of the total zootherapics citations. Reptiles and Mammals represents 80% of the citations.
Preparation and application manners of the cited zootherapics in the text
| After the animal slaughter, it takes out the fatty tissue below the skin – the "suet" – which is referred as medically important for humans and animals. After the extraction, it is putted down to dry in the sun for approximately two days or until it acquires a hard consistence. For a better conservation, it should be kept in a dry place, inside a glass or plastic recipients. | |
| After the fatty tissue has been removed, melts it in order to obtain a sharp fat (process known by the local inhabitants as "condensation"). The fat is conserved in a glass or plastic recipient and whenever need it is necessary to melt again, once it rigidifies inside the recipient after a certain period of time. | |
| The suet, extracted, stored and applied exactly the same way it does on the castrated ram ( | |
| The humans' urine is used for cattle detoxication after the feed of cassava ( | |
| The Peba is a type of armadillo known in a large part of the Northeast region, used gastronomically and medically. In Cubati's popular veterinary medicine the peba's fat is an important tool for the treatment of pits, pointed stakes, wounds and furunculosis in any animal. In all the cases, this fat is applied daily on the illness attacked area until its total cicatrization. In pointed stakes' cases, the application should persist until the complete exit of the strange body. | |
| According to the informers, the pig's fat is an excellent medicinal-veterinary resource. It is used for the treatment of pits, furuncles, wounds, burns and mastitis. In the first four cases, it is applied on the illness, once a day, until the cicatrization be completed. For the mastitis, in any mammal, emphasizing the bovine, bovid and sheep, the pig's fat is applied on the mammary glands in the same way that does with the cattle curdled milk cream, previously mentioned. | |
| The fat of the fox ( | |
| The fat of the rattlesnake follows the same extraction procedure and conservation of the other mentioned animals. Such for arthritis and wounds it is applied on the sicken area until the cure is obtained. It was not mentioned a daily frequency of application. According to the informers, for any animal type, besides for the man, this fat is useful. | |
| The chameleon's leather is used for treating pits, furuncles and pointed stakes' removing, such in animals and humans. In the first two cases, after the leather been extracted, it is toasted, triturated and the powder, mixed with food oil. After that is passed daily on the harmed area, until obtaining the cure. For the pointed stakes removing, the leather of the chameleon is placed on the area where the pointed stake is. The method of utilization is tying the harm area with a cloth and, after some hours, takes out the cloth pulling the leather of the chameleon in order to expel the pointed stake. | |
| In animals, the fat of the turtle of water ( | |
| The teju's fat is used and applied daily in the treatment of pits, wounds, furuncles and pointed stakes. According to the informers, the use of that fat is made until the total cicatrization of the affected area or the strange body (pointed stake) removal. The extraction and conservation follows the same procedures mentioned previously for the zootherapics animals. | |
| The chicken's fat (see the extraction and preparation of the male goat fat, | |
| The peru's fat (see the extraction and preparation of the male goat's fat, | |
| It was reported that the quail's feather, after being toasted and smashed into a powder, is useful in a tea preparation with antiophidic properties, given to the animals to drink (mainly the cattle) after bites of snakes. | |
| The sting of this animal is used on cattle's pits in order to have a fast inflammation, followed by a quickly heal. | |
Animals' diseases or illnesses popular names comparison, according to the inhabitants of Cubati, with the respective technical terms
| Swelling joints | Arthritis |
| Pits | Pits |
| Hollow of the ox horny | Bovine Gangrenous Coryza (Horns drill) |
| Big swell | Edema |
| Pointed stake | Thorns |
| Woundy | Wounds |
| Wounds | Wounds or Cuts |
| Fractures | Fractures |
| Furunculosis | Furunculosis |
| Swellings | Swellings |
| Intoxication | Alimentary intoxication |
| Irritation near of the eye | Peri-ocular Irritation |
| "Rocky nipples" | Mastitis |
| Snake bites | Snake bites |
| "Mother's body" | Uterus prolapse |
| Burns | Burns |
| Hard joints | Rheumatism |
| Torsions | Torsions |
Note: The technical terms were obtained comparing the symptoms supplied by the residents of the studied area with Andrei [51] and Kelly [52]
Figure 4Comparison of the zootherapic number for each mentioned disease.