| Literature DB >> 21772820 |
Andreas Lardos1, José Prieto-Garcia, Michael Heinrich.
Abstract
This study explores historical iatrosophia texts from Cyprus from a botanical and medico-pharmacological point of view focusing on remedies containing resins and gums. The iatrosophia are a genre of Greek medical literature of Byzantine origin and can be described as medicine handbooks which serve as therapeutic repositories containing recipes or advice. To extract and analyze information on plant usage in such sources - which are largely unedited texts and so far have not been translated - we investigate (i) the relationship of the iatrosophia to Dioscorides' De Materia Medica as well as historic pharmaceutical books or standard texts on modern phytotherapy and (ii) the validity of the remedies by comparing them to modern scientific data on reported biological activities. In the six texts investigated 27 substances incorporating plant exudates are mentioned. They are obtained from over 43 taxa of higher plants and in particular are used to treat dermatological, gastrointestinal, and respiratory tract conditions. The comparison to historic pharmaceutical books and phytotherapy texts reflects the gradual decline of the use of plant exudates in Western medicine. While remarkable parallels to Dioscorides' text exist, the non-Dioscoridean influence suggests a complex pattern of knowledge exchange. Overall, this resulted in an integration of knowledge from so far poorly understood sources. The comparison with bioscientific data reveals a fragmentary picture and highlights the potential of these unexplored substances and their uses. Where relevant bioscientific data are available, we generally found a confirmation. This points to a largely rational use of the associated remedies. Taken together, the iatrosophia are a valuable resource for ethnopharmacological and natural product research. Most importantly they contribute to the understanding of the development of herbal medicines in the (Eastern) Mediterranean and Europe.Entities:
Keywords: Cyprus; Eastern Mediterranean; gums; historical texts; iatrosophia; resins
Year: 2011 PMID: 21772820 PMCID: PMC3130153 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2011.00032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
The six investigated .
| Text-code | Original manuscript | Working copy | Rec. |
|---|---|---|---|
| GP | Print edition | 143 | |
| Agapios Landos (1585–1656) | D. D. Kostoula ( | +64 | |
| Crete GR, edit. Venice, 1643 | Volos GR | ||
| IM | Print edition | 493 | |
| Mitrophanous (1790–1867) | Filaretos ( | ||
| Mon. of Makhairas CY, 1849 | Makhairas CY | ||
| IPM | Print edition | 39 | |
| ? Michaïlis | G. Petridis ( | ||
| ? Vasa (Koilani) CY, undated | Limassol CY | ||
| IPP | Print edition | 13 | |
| Anonymous | G. I. Spanopoulos ( | ||
| ? Petra CY, ca. eighteenth century | Nicosia CY | ||
| KI | Print edition | 67 | |
| Anonymous | K. Chrysanthis ( | ||
| ? CY, undated | Nicosia CY | ||
| KYP | Manuscript (copy) | 24 | |
| Velephantou ( | Anonymous (1978), | ||
| Lefkosia (Nicosia) CY | Athens GR | ||
| Total number of recipes containing plants as ingredients | 779 |
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*In addition to the 143 recipes, 64 chapters dealing with plants and their virtues were counted.
Figure 1Flowchart of the 10 steps in the analysis of the . Steps 3 and 6 were also applied on other texts (i.e., Dioscorides’ De Materia Medica, historic pharmaceutical books and standard texts of modern phytotherapy) and served to establish a separate inventory of resins and gums of their owns.
Identification of the substance names mentioned in the .
| Name in iatrosophia | Correspondent name | Cent. | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16 | ölker and Direkçi ( | Storax, liquid (exotic grade) | ||
| 19 | Hanbury ( | |||
| 19 | Hanbury ( | |||
| 20 | Viney ( | |||
| 10 | Tschirch and Lippmann (1933, p. 1361) | (1) Cedar tar | ||
| 11–13 | Lev and Amar ( | |||
| ≤19 | Lev ( | |||
| 21 | Lev and Amar ( | |||
| 11–13 | Lev and Amar ( | (2) Pine tar | ||
| 21 | Sezik et al. ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | (3) Wood tar (of conifers) | ||
| ≤21 | Papangellou ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | Amber (fossilized resin) | ||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| 21 | Webster's Online Dictionaryd | |||
| 21 | Webster's Online Dictionaryd | Amber oil | ||
| 03–13 | Langkavel ( | Gum arabic | ||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| 21 | Webster's Online Dictionaryd | |||
| 01 | Berendes ( | Gum of various | ||
| 07 | Adams ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| 20 | Panaretos ( | |||
| 01 | Berendes ( | Cherry gum | ||
| 07 | Adams ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| 01 | Berendes ( | Plum gum | ||
| 07 | Adams ( | |||
| ≤20 | Kostoula ( | |||
| 21 | Webster's Online Dictionaryd | |||
| ≤02 BCE | Arnold-Apostolides ( | Ladanum | ||
| 01 | Berendes ( | |||
| 07 | Aliotta et al., ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | Storax, liquid (local grade) | ||
| 20 | Panaretos ( | |||
| 21 | Hadjikyriakou, ( | |||
| ≤02 BCE | Aliotta et al.,( | Frankincense ( | ||
| 01 | Berendes ( | |||
| 07 | Adams ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| 03–13 | Langkavel ( | Scammony | ||
| 11–13 | Lev and Amar ( | |||
| 16 | ölker and Direkçi ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| 01 | Berendes ( | Mastic | ||
| 07 | Adams ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| ≤20 | Papangellou ( | |||
| ≤02 BCE | Aliotta et al., ( | Galbanum | ||
| 01 | Berendes ( | |||
| 07 | Adams ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | Myrrh | ||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| 21 | Webster's Online Dictionaryd | |||
| 11 | Tschirch and Lippmann (1933, p. 1348), Varella ( | (1) Agar wood, gaharu wood, aloe wood ( | ||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| ≤20 | Hadjiioannou ( | |||
| ≤20 | Papangellou ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | (2) Myrrh | ||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | Pine turpentine oil | ||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| 21 | Webster's Online Dictionaryd | |||
| 01 | Berendes ( | Pine resin ( | ||
| 07 | Adams ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| 20 | Panaretos ( | |||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | Pine resin, cooked | ||
| 20 | Panaretos ( | |||
| ≤20 | Papangellou ( | |||
| 01 | Berendes ( | Bitter almond gum | ||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| ≤20 | Papangellou ( | |||
| 20 | Panaretos ( | |||
| 01 | Berendes ( | Olive resin | ||
| 07 | Adams ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| 11 | Tschirch and Lippmann (1933, p. 1348), Varella ( | (1) Agar wood, gaharu wood, aloe wood ( | ||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| ≤20 | Hadjiioannou ( | |||
| ≤20 | Papangellou ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | (2) Benzoin | ||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| 20 | Arnold-Apostolides ( | (3) Storax, solid ( | ||
| 20 | Panaretos ( | |||
| 11–13 | Lev and Amar ( | Cypress tar | ||
| 20 | Chrysanthis ( | |||
| 20 | Viney ( | |||
| 21 | Hadjikyriakou, ( | |||
| ≤02 BCE | Riddle ( | Myrrh | ||
| 01 | Chrysanthis( | |||
| 07 | Adams ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | |||
| 01 | Wellmann ( | (1) Terebinth resin | ||
| 07 | Adams ( | |||
| 03–13 | Langkavel ( | |||
| 18–19 | Hadjikyriakou ( | |||
| 20 | Chrysanthis ( | |||
| 20 | Panaretos ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | (2) Crude turpentine of the pine ( | ||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( | |||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | Pine resin | ||
| 20 | Honda et al. ( | |||
| 21 | Webster's Online Dictionaryd | |||
| 21 | Webster's Online Dictionaryd | Venice turpentine | ||
| ≤20 | Gennadios ( | Balsam of Mecca | ||
| ≤20 | Myrianthopoulos ( |
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dhttp://websters-online-dictionary.org/
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Botanical sources of the substances and their uses in the .
| Substance | Botanical source | Family | Classification | Stat. | Rec. | Uses | Appl. | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agar wood, gaharu wood, aloe wood ( | Thymelaeaceae | Resinous wood/MR | ex | 9* + 1* | DE (5), EE (1), MS (2), OC (1) + RE (2), VA (1) | o, t | Blaschek et al. ( | |
| Amber | Fossil resins from conifers and angiosperms | n.d. | Fossilized resin | ex | 1 | EE (3), HA (1), RE (3), VA (1) | o, t | Langenheim ( |
| Amber oil | Fossil resins from conifers and angiosperms | Volatile oil | ex | 1 | RE (1) | o | Langenheim ( | |
| Almond gum | Rosaceae | Gum | sp | 2* | Paint for icons (2) | – | Howes ( | |
| Bitter almond gum | Rosaceae | Gum | sp | 2 | DE (2) | t | Howes ( | |
| Balsam of Mecca | Burseraceae | Oleo resin/T | ex | 1 | DE (1) | t | Blaschek et al. ( | |
| Cedar tar | Pinaceae | Wood tar | sp | 3* | DE (1), GI (1), MS (1) | o, t | Arnold-Apostolides ( | |
| Cherry gum | Rosaceae | Gum | sp | 4 + 2* | EE (1), GI (1), RE (2), UG (1), VA (1) + paint for icons (2) | o | Arnold-Apostolides ( | |
| Cypress tar | Cupressaceae | Wood tar | sp | 1 | DE (1) | t | Mills and White ( | |
| Frankincense ( | Burseraceae | Oleo gum resin/T | ex | 28 | DE (20), FV (1), GI (6), MS (1), OC (3), RE (4), UG (6), VA (1), incense (1) | o, t | Blaschek et al. ( | |
| Galbanum | Apiaceae | Gum resin/MR | ex | 1 | GY (1) | o | Blaschek et al. ( | |
| Gum arabic | Fabaceae | Gum | ex | 3 | GI (1), paint for icons (2) | o | Berger ( | |
| Ladanum | Cistaceae | Resin/MR | sp | 7 | DE (3), GI (3), VA (1) | o, s, t | Blaschek et al. ( | |
| Mastic | Anacardiaceae | Resin/T | sp | 42 | DE (17), EE (10), FV (2), GI (14), GY (1), HA (5), OC (4), RE (16), UG (1), VA (5), incense (1) | o, t | Blaschek et al. ( | |
| Myrrh | Burseraceae | Gum resin/T | ex | 8 + 1* | DE (1), EE (3), FV (1), GI (5), GY (1), HA (1), RE (4), VA (1), incense (1) + RE (2), VA (1) | o, s, t | Blaschek et al. ( | |
| Olive resin | Oleaceae | Gum resin | sp | 5 | DE (4), OC (1) | t | Arnold-Apostolides ( | |
| Pine resin ( | Pinaceae | Gum | sp | 23 | DE (17), EE (1), GI (1), GY (1), MS (1), OC (1), RE (1) | o, t | Arnold-Apostolides ( | |
| Pine tar ( | Pinaceae | Oleo resin/T | sp | 3* | DE (1), GI (1), MS (1) | o, t | Arnold-Apostolides ( | |
| Pine turpentine oil | Pinaceae | Wood tar | sp | 4 | DE (1), MS (1), RE (1), UG (1) | o, t | Arnold-Apostolides ( | |
| Plum gum | Rosaceae | Volatile oil | sp | 1 + 2* | UG (1) + paint for icons (2) | o | Arnold-Apostolides ( | |
| Scammony | Convolvulaceae | Gum resin/MR | ex | 2 | FV (2), GI (4), RE (2), VA (1) | o | Blaschek et al. ( | |
| Storax, liquid (exotic) | Altingiaceae | Oleo resin/P | ex | 3 | DE (5), EE (1), MS (2), OC (1) | o, t | Hanbury ( | |
| Storax, liquid (local) | Altingiaceae | Oleo resin/P | cu | 1 | DE (1) | t | Hadjikyriakou ( | |
| Storax, solid ( | Styracaceae | n.c. | sp | 9* | DE (5), EE (1), MS (2), OC (1) | o, t | Hanbury ( | |
| Sumatra or Siam benzoin | Styracaceae | Balsam/P | ex | 9* | DE (5), EE (1), MS (2), OC (1) | o, t | Blaschek et al. ( | |
| Terebinth resin ( | Anacardiaceae | Oleo resin/T | sp | 20 | DE (16), GI (4), RE (1), UG (2), bed bug repellent (1) | o, t | Blaschek et al. ( | |
| Venice turpentine | Pinaceae | Oleo resin/T | ex | 1 | UG (1) | o | Blaschek et al. ( |
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Figure 2Distribution of the use reports (URs) of records referring to resins and gums over the 12 medicinal use groups [key to the abbreviations see .
Comparison of the substances and UGs included in the .
| Substances | Iatros. | Dioscorides’ De Materia Medica | Historic pharmaceutical books | Modern phytotherapy texts | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| #UGs | Incl. | #UGs | #Same UGs | %Same UGs | Incl. | #UGs | #Same UGs | %Same UGs | Incl. | #UGs | #Same UGs | %Same UGs | |
| Agar wood | 6 | Yes | 3 | 2 | 33.3 | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Amber | 4 | Yes | 1 | 0 | 0.0 | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Amber oil | 1 | No | 0 | 0 | – | Yes | 1 | 1 | 100.0 | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Balsam of Mecca | 1 | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Bitter almond gum | 1 | Yes | 4 | 1 | 100.0 | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Cedar tar | 3 | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Cherry gum | 5 | Yes | 5 | 5 | 100.0 | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Cypress tar | 1 | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Frankincense | 8 | Yes | 4 | 3 | 37.5 | Yes | 3 | 2 | 25.0 | Yes | 2 | 2 | 25.0 |
| Galbanum | 1 | Yes | 7 | 1 | 100.0 | Yes | 4 | 1 | 100.0 | Yes | 3 | 0 | 0.0 |
| Gum arabic | 1 | Yes | 2 | 1 | 100.0 | Yes | 1 | 0 | 0.0 | Yes | 2 | 1 | 100.0 |
| Ladanum | 3 | Yes | 7 | 3 | 100.0 | Yes | 3 | 2 | 66.7 | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Mastic | 10 | Yes | 6 | 6 | 60.0 | Yes | 3 | 3 | 30.0 | Yes | 1 | 1 | 10.0 |
| Myrrh | 8 | Yes | 9 | 7 | 87.5 | Yes | 6 | 5 | 62.5 | Yes | 4 | 3 | 37.5 |
| Olive resin | 2 | Yes | 5 | 2 | 100.0 | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Pine resins | 7 | Yes | 5 | 4 | 57.1 | Yes | 4 | 3 | 42.9 | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Pine tar | 4 | Yes | 6 | 3 | 75.0 | Yes | 2 | 2 | 50.0 | Yes | 2 | 2 | 50.0 |
| Pine turpentine oil | 4 | No | 0 | 0 | – | Yes | 7 | 3 | 75.0 | Yes | 2 | 2 | 50.0 |
| Plum gum | 1 | Yes | 2 | 1 | 100.0 | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Scammony | 4 | Yes | 6 | 2 | 50.0 | Yes | 3 | 1 | 25.0 | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Storax, liquid (exotic) | 4 | No | 0 | 0 | – | Yes | 2 | 1 | 25.0 | Yes | 3 | 2 | 50.0 |
| Storax, liquid (local) | 1 | No | 0 | 0 | – | Yes | 2 | 1 | 100.0 | Yes | 3 | 1 | 100.0 |
| Storax, solid | 4 | Yes | 4 | 1 | 25.0 | No | 0 | 0 | – | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Sumatra/siam benzoin | 4 | No | 0 | 0 | – | Yes | 4 | 1 | 25.0 | Yes | 3 | 2 | 50.0 |
| Terebinth resin | 4 | Yes | 5 | 4 | 100.0 | Yes | 1 | 1 | 25.0 | No | 0 | 0 | – |
| Venice turpentine | 1 | Yes | 1 | 0 | 0.0 | Yes | 1 | 0 | 0.0 | Yes | 3 | 0 | 0.0 |
| 93 | 82 | 46 | 47 | 27 | 28 | 16 | |||||||
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Simple remedies in the .
| Recipe | Substance | Mentioned use | Form of Administr. | Interpretation | Deduced pharmacological functions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IM 14.3 | Agar wood, benzoin, or, solid storax | Fracture of the head | Filling for the fracture | Open cranial fracture | Anti-inflammatoryAntimicrobialWound healing promotion |
| IM 63.03 | Agar wood, benzoin, or solid storax | Podalgia | Beverage | Gout and rheumatic conditions (incl. arthritis, athrosis) | AnalgesicAnti-inflammatoryImmunomodulatory |
| GP PME 01 | Cherry gum | It relieves the cough but also the liver, it helps the eyesight and makes your face look bright. | Beverage | Productive or dry cough | AntitussiveBronchodilatatingExpectorant |
| Liver health | Beneficial effect on liver diseases | ||||
| Vision improvement | Vision improving effects | ||||
| Healthy and bright complexion | Beneficial effect on liver or kidney diseases | ||||
| GP PME 02 | Cherry gum | Beneficial in stones | Beverage | Gall, kidney or bladder stones | Stone-dissolving/-expelling |
| GP ?ΞΓ 02 | Frankincense | Every kind of rheumatism | Ointment | Rheumatic conditions | Analgesic |
| Anti-inflammatory | |||||
| Immunomodulatory | |||||
| IM 134.05 | Galbanum | If the child dies in her [the mother's] belly | Beverage | Abortion of a dead fetus | AbortiveAntispasmodic |
| GP PMH.05 | Gum arabic | Concerning the flux of the belly | Snack or beverage | Diarrhea | AntibioticAnti-inflammatoryAntimotilityAntisecretoryBulk-forming effect |
| IM 48.02 | Ladanum | Hemorrhoids and spots inside and outside of the anus | Poultice | Hemorrhoids accompanied by anal excema | AnalgesicAnti-inflammatoryAntimicrobial |
| IM 128.03 | Ladanum | To stop hair loss | Fumigation | Alopecia | AntifungalBeneficial effects on hair cycle5-Alpha-reductase inhibition |
| IM 64.02 | Pine resin | Rheumatic diseases and podalgia | Poultice | Rheumatic conditions and gout | AnalgesicAnti-inflammatoryImmunomodulatory |
| GP PKΘ 06 | Plum gum | It dissolves the stones of dysuria | Beverage | Gall, kidney or bladder stones, dysuria | AntibioticStone-dissolving/-expelling |
| IM 41.05 | Scammony | It purges “depositions and poisons,” keeps off fevers, shivers, quartan fevers. | Beverage | Cathartic, prophylactic against fevers including malaria | AntibacterialAntimalarialAntiviralCathartic |
| IM 89.03 | Terebinth resin | Old ulcers | Poultice | Infected ulcerative wounds | Anti-inflammatoryAntimicrobial |
| IM 137.05 | Terebinth resin | Diarrhea in small children | Fumigation | Diarrhea in infants | AntibioticAnti-inflammatoryAntimotilityAntisecretory |
| IM 149.03 | Terebinth resin | For those who cannot urinate | Snack | Impaired urination possibly related to bladder stones, urinary tract infections, BPH or prostate cancer | Alpha-receptor antagonistic effect5-Alpha-reductase inhibitionAntibioticAnticancerStone-dissolving/-expelling |
| KI 9.01 | Terebinth resin | Deep wounds that need a filling | Ointment | Incisions caused by sharp or cutting implements | AnalgesicAntimicrobialWound healing promotion |
| KI 10.01 | Terebinth resin | Pestilent ulcers and foul ulcers | Ointment | Infected ulcerative or malignant wounds | AnticancerAnti-inflammatoryAntimicrobial |
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Cross-referencing of deduced pharmacological functions to reported biological activities.
| Substance | Deduced pharmacological functions | Matching biological activities reported in the studies | Study typed | Stud. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agar wood | Analgesic | Anti-inflammatory, 1× | 1 | |
| Anti-inflammatory | ||||
| Antimicrobial | ||||
| Immunomodulatory | ||||
| Wound healing promotion | ||||
| Cherry gum | Antitussive | [Indirect hepatoprotective, 1×] | 2 | |
| Beneficial effect on liver or kidney diseases | [Improved metabolic profile in chronic renal failure, 1×] | |||
| Bronchodilatating | ||||
| Expectorant | ||||
| Stone-dissolving/-expelling | ||||
| Vision improving effects | ||||
| Frankincense | Analgesic | Anti-inflammatory, 3× | 3 | |
| Anti-inflammatory | Decrease of cytokine levels (immunomodulatory), 1× | |||
| Immunomodulatory | ||||
| Galbanum | Abortifacient | Spasmolytic | 1 | |
| Effects on uterine contractility | ||||
| Gum arabic | Antibiotic | Improved recovery rates from diarrhea, 1× | 4 | |
| Anti-inflammatory | Proabsorptive (antisecretory), 2× | |||
| Antimotility | No significant antidiarrheal effects, 1× | Clinical2 | ||
| Antisecretory | ||||
| Bulk-forming effect | ||||
| Ladanum | Analgesic | Antibacterial, 2× | 4 | |
| Antifungal | Antioxidant (anti-inflammatory), 1× | |||
| Anti-inflammatory | No significant anti-inflammatory effect, 2× | |||
| Antimicrobial | ||||
| Effects with a beneficial action | ||||
| on the hair cycle | ||||
| 5-Alpha-reductase inhibition | ||||
| Pine resin | Analgesic | Analgesic, 1× | 3 | |
| Anti-inflammatory | Anti-inflammatory, 2× | |||
| Immunomodulatory | ||||
| Plum gum | Antibiotic | No data available | – | 0 |
| Stone-dissolving/-expelling | ||||
| Scammony | Antibiotic | Antibacterial (antibiotic), 1× | 1 | |
| Antimalarial | ||||
| Antiviral | ||||
| Cathartic | ||||
| Solid storax | Analgesic | No data available | – | 0 |
| Anti-inflammatory | ||||
| Antimicrobial | ||||
| Immunomodulatory | ||||
| Wound healing promotion | ||||
| Sumatra or Siam benzoin | Analgesic | Antifungal, 1× | Case reports2,4 | 2 |
| Anti-inflammatory | Phagocytotic (antibacterial), 1× | |||
| Antimicrobial | ||||
| Immunomodulatory | ||||
| Wound healing promotion | ||||
| Terebinth resin | Alpha-receptor antagonistic effect | Antibacterial, 1× | 7 | |
| Analgesic | Antimicrobial (antibiotic), 1× | |||
| Antibiotic | Anti-hypernociceptive (analgesic), 1× | |||
| Anticancer | Anti-inflammatory, 3× | |||
| Anti-inflammatory | Inhibition of LDL oxidation (anti-inflammatory), 1× | |||
| Antimicrobial | Leucotriene inhibition (anti-inflammatory), 1× | |||
| Antimotility | ||||
| Antisecretory | ||||
| Wound healing promotion | ||||
| 5-Alpha-reductase inhibition |
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The study was conducted with: 1gum arabic, 2a compound preparation that included additional further active constituents, 3a different plant part, 4isolated compounds only..