| Literature DB >> 21961025 |
Gustavo Taboada Soldati1, Ulysses Paulino de Albuquerque.
Abstract
We analyzed the Fulni-ô medical system and introduced its intermedical character based on secondary data published in the literature. Then we focused on the medicinal plants known to the ethnic group, describing the most important species, their therapeutic uses and the body systems attributed to them. We based this analysis on the field experience of the authors in the project Studies for the Environmental and Cultural Sustainability of the Fulni-ô Medical System: Office of Medicinal Plant Care. This traditional botanical knowledge was used to corroborate the hybrid nature of local practices for access to health. We show that intermedicality is a result not only of the meeting of the Fulni-ô medical system with Biomedicine but also of its meeting with other traditional systems. Finally, we discuss how traditional botanical knowledge may be directly related to the ethnogenesis process led by the Fulni-ô Indians in northeastern Brazil.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21961025 PMCID: PMC3180078 DOI: 10.1155/2012/648469
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1Fulni-ô Indigenous land, Águas Belas (NE Brazil). (a) “Main Village”; (b)–(d) “Ouricuri Village”.
Figure 2Fulni-ô Indigenous land, Águas Belas (NE Brazil). (a) Overall view of Fulni-ô Indigenous land; (b) road through the “Ouricuri Forest”; (c)-(d) bark extraction of medicinal plants in the “Ouricuri Forest” and its vegetation structure.
Figure 4Use of medicinal plants in Fulni-ô Indigenous land, Águas Belas (NE Brazil). (a) A healer showing some medicinal plants collected in native forests; (b) a Fulni-ô indicating the part of the “urtiga” that is used in treatments; (c) “menstruz” leaves; (d) “pereiro”, a medicinal plant collected in native forests.
Bodily systems addressed by the Fulni-ô medical system and the wealth of plants cited. Indigenous Land of the Fulni-ô, Águas Belas (PE).
| Bodily system (WHO) | Wealth of ethnospecies |
|---|---|
| Undefined problems or pains (AND) | 120 |
| Categories without biomedical correlation (CSB) | 23 |
| Diseases of the endocrine glands, of nutrition and metabolism (DGE) | 58 |
| Infectious and parasitical diseases (DIP) | 64 |
| Mental and behavioral disorders (DMC) | 37 |
| Diseases of the skin and subcutaneous cellular tissue (DPS) | 42 |
| Diseases of the blood and hematopoietic organs (DSH) | 11 |
| Diseases of the osteomuscular system and connective tissue (DSO) | 32 |
| Pregnancy, birth, and puerperium (GPP) | 23 |
| Injuries, poisonings, and other occurrences from external causes (LEO) | 60 |
| Neoplasias (NEO) | 13 |
| Disorders of the sensory system (TOL) | 5 |
| Disorders of the sensory system (TOU) | 14 |
| Disorders of the circulatory system (TSC) | 51 |
| Disorders of the digestive system (TSD) | 98 |
| Disorders of the genitourinary system (TSG) | 68 |
| Disorders of nervous system (TSN) | 22 |
| Disorders of the respiratory system (TSR) | 91 |
| Not possible to report* | 1 |
| General Total** | 843 |
*The information cannot be provided, especially due to cultural norms. **Refers to the set of all of the citations and not the total species cited, as it considers plants that were indicated for more than one system.
Figure 3Base pole in Fulni-ô Indigenous land, Águas Belas (NE Brazil). (a) Base pole; (b) store of medications in the Base pole.
Figure 5Fulni-ô office of Medicinal Plant Care in Fulni-ô Indigenous land, Águas Belas (NE Brazil). (a) Bark of “Aroeira,” a medicinal plant; (b) equipment for the production of herbal remedies; (c) bed and a nursery for the cultivation of medicinal plants; (d) herbal remedies.