| Literature DB >> 25002902 |
Juliana Félix-Silva1, Raquel Brandt Giordani2, Arnóbio Antonio da Silva1, Silvana Maria Zucolotto2, Matheus de Freitas Fernandes-Pedrosa1.
Abstract
Jatropha gossypiifolia L. (Euphorbiaceae), widely known as "bellyache bush," is a medicinal plant largely used throughout Africa and America. Several human and veterinary uses in traditional medicine are described for different parts and preparations based on this plant. However, critical reviews discussing emphatically its medicinal value are missing. This review aims to provide an up-to-date overview of the traditional uses, as well as the phytochemistry, pharmacology, and toxicity data of J. gossypiifolia species, in view of discussing its medicinal value and potential application in complementary and alternative medicine. Pharmacological studies have demonstrated significant action of different extracts and/or isolated compounds as antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, antidiarrheal, antihypertensive, and anticancer agents, among others, supporting some of its popular uses. No clinical trial has been detected to date. Further studies are necessary to assay important folk uses, as well as to find new bioactive molecules with pharmacological relevance based on the popular claims. Toxicological studies associated with phytochemical analysis are important to understand the eventual toxic effects that could reduce its medicinal value. The present review provides insights for future research aiming for both ethnopharmacological validation of its popular use and its exploration as a new source of herbal drugs and/or bioactive natural products.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25002902 PMCID: PMC4070477 DOI: 10.1155/2014/369204
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1Jatropha gossypiifolia L. (a) aerial parts of plant. (b) flowers detail. Photography by Juliana Félix-Silva.
Chemical constituents of Jatropha gossypiifolia L. described in the literature.
| Plant part | Classification | Compound | Extract type and/or preparation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whole plant | Coumarin-lignoids | Propacin | Isolated from dichloromethane : methanol (1 : 1, v/v) extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ |
| Venkatasin | Not specified* | [ | ||
| Diterpenes | Citlalitrione | Isolated from dichloromethane : methanol (1 : 1, v/v) extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | |
| Jatrophenone | Isolated from dichloromethane : methanol (1 : 1, v/v) extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | ||
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| Stem, roots, and seeds | Coumarin-lignoids | Arylnaphthalene lignan | Isolated from petrol ether extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ |
| Gadain | Isolated from petrol ether extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | ||
| Jatrophan | Isolated from petrol ether extract | [ | ||
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| Aerial parts | Flavonoids | — | Detected by phytochemical screening reactions of ethanol extract | [ |
| Lignans | Gossypifan | Isolated from petrol ether extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | |
| Gossypiline | Isolated from dichloromethane : methanol (1 : 1, v/v) extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | ||
| Phenols | — | Quantitative analysis showed that the petrol ether, chloroform, ethyl acetate, and | [ | |
| Steroids | — | Detected by phytochemical screening reactions of ethanol extract | [ | |
| Tannins | — | Detected by phytochemical screening reactions of ethanol extract | [ | |
| Triterpenoids | — | Detected by phytochemical screening reactions of ethanol extract | [ | |
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| Leaves | Alkaloids | Ricinine | Compound isolated from ethyl acetate extract from senescent leaves | [ |
| — | Detected by phytochemical screening reactions of chloroform and methanol extracts | [ | ||
| — | Quantitative analysis showed 2.81% on leaves | [ | ||
| — | Not specified | [ | ||
| Cardiac glycosides | — | Identified on leaves by qualitative phytochemical screening reactions | [ | |
| Flavonoids | Apigenin | Identified in ether fraction from ethanol extract | [ | |
| Isovitexin | Identified in ethyl acetate and methyl ethyl ketone fractions from ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Orientin/isoorientin | Isomers identified in different types of extracts from leaves | [ | ||
| Schaftoside/isoschaftoside | Isomers identified in different types of extracts from leaves | [ | ||
| Vitexin | Identified in ethyl acetate fraction from ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Vitexin/isovitexin | Isomers identified in different types of extracts from leaves | [ | ||
| — | Identified on leaves by qualitative phytochemical screening reactions | [ | ||
| — | Quantitative analysis showed 7.4% on leaves | [ | ||
| — | Quantitative analysis showed 2.41% on leaves | [ | ||
| Phenols | — | Quantitative analysis showed 8.6% on leaves | [ | |
| — | Quantitative analysis showed 0.26% on leaves | [ | ||
| Phlobotannins | — | Detected by phytochemical screening reactions of chloroform and methanol extracts | [ | |
| Proteins | — | Identified on leaves by qualitative phytochemical screening reactions | [ | |
| — | Leaves obtained by micropropagation were macerated in liquid nitrogen and extracted at 4°C for 6 h with 0.1 M NaCl. The material was centrifuged and the limpid supernatant was dialyzed against water at low temperature in a cellulose membrane to remove nonprotein compound with molecular mass below 3.5 kDa | [ | ||
| Reducing sugars | — | Identified on leaves by qualitative phytochemical screening reactions | [ | |
| Saponins | — | Identified on leaves by qualitative phytochemical screening reactions | [ | |
| — | Quantitative analysis showed 4.15% on leaves | [ | ||
| Steroids | — | Identified on leaves by qualitative phytochemical screening reactions | [ | |
| Tannins | — | Detected by phytochemical screening reactions of methanol extract | [ | |
| — | Detected on leaves by qualitative phytochemical screening reactions | [ | ||
| — | Quantitative analysis showed 5.14% on leaves | [ | ||
| Terpenoids | — | Detected on leaves by qualitative phytochemical screening reactions | [ | |
| Triterpenes | (2 | Isolated from the ethanol extract after successive partitions procedures and column chromatography on silica gel and preparative TLC | [ | |
| (13 | Isolated from the ethanol extract after successive partition procedures and column chromatography on silica gel and preparative TLC | [ | ||
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| Stems | Alkaloids | — | Quantitative analysis showed 2.16% of alkaloid on stems | [ |
| Coumarin-lignoids | 4′- | Not specified | [ | |
| Cleomiscosin A | Compound isolated from ethyl acetate fraction stems after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | ||
| Gossypidien | Compound isolated from hexane extract from dried stems after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | ||
| Isogadain | Not specified* | [ | ||
| Jatrodien | Compound isolated from petrol ether extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | ||
| Prasanthaline | Not specified* | [ | ||
| Flavonoids | — | Quantitative analysis showed 1.2% on stems | [ | |
| Phenols | — | Quantitative analysis showed 0.13% on stems | [ | |
| Saponins | — | Quantitative analysis showed 2.18% on stems | [ | |
| Tannins | — | Quantitative analysis showed 1.36% on stems | [ | |
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| Roots | Alkaloids | — | Quantitative analysis showed 1.6% on roots | [ |
| Diterpenes | 2 | Isolated from petrol ether extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | |
| 2 | Isolated from petrol ether extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | ||
| 2 | Isolated from petrol ether extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | ||
| Citlalitrione | Isolated from petrol ether fraction from the methanol extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | ||
| Falodone | Isolated from petrol ether fraction from the methanol extract after successive column chromatography on silica gel | [ | ||
| Jatropholone A | Not specified* | [ | ||
| Jatropholone B | Not specified* | [ | ||
| Jatrophone | Isolated from ethanol extract | [ | ||
| Flavonoids | — | Quantitative analysis showed 1.75% on roots | [ | |
| Phenols | — | Quantitative analysis showed 0.24% on roots | [ | |
| Saponins | — | Quantitative analysis showed 2.83% on roots | [ | |
| Tannins | — | Quantitative analysis showed 2.73% on roots | [ | |
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| Seeds | Alkaloids | — | Quantitative analysis showed 2.36% on seeds | [ |
| Amino acids | — | Not specified* | [ | |
| Carbohydrates | — | Quantitative analysis showed 30.32% on seeds | [ | |
| — | Not specified* | [ | ||
| Esters | 12-Deoxy-16-hydroxylphorbol | Isolated from hydrophilic fraction from the ether extract, by countercurrent chromatography | [ | |
| Fatty acids | Arachidic acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | |
| Caprilic acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | ||
| Lauric acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | ||
| Lignoceric acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | ||
| Linoleic acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | ||
| Myristic acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | ||
| Oleic acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | ||
| Palmitic acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | ||
| Palmitoleic acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | ||
| Ricinoleic acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | ||
| Stearic acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | ||
| Vernolic acid | Identified in petrol ether extract | [ | ||
| Fibers | — | Quantitative analysis showed 9.25% on seeds | [ | |
| Flavonoids | — | Quantitative analysis showed 2.26% on seeds | [ | |
| Phenols | — | Quantitative analysis showed 0.18% on seeds | [ | |
| Proteins | — | Quantitative analysis showed 13.40% on seeds | [ | |
| Saponins | — | Quantitative analysis showed 2.37 on seeds | [ | |
| Quantitative analysis showed 6 g/kg on seeds | [ | |||
| Tannins | — | Quantitative analysis showed 3.52% on seeds | [ | |
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| Latex | Proteins | Cyclogossine A | Not specified | [ |
| Cyclogossine B | Isolated from ethyl acetate extract by gel filtration column chromatography | [ | ||
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| Not specified | Alkaloids | Imidazole alkaloid | Isolated from the plant exudates* | [ |
| Piperidine | Isolated from the plant exudates* | [ | ||
| Diterpenoids | Abiodone | Not specified* | [ | |
*The complete version of the paper was not accessible, so the information was obtained from its abstract.
Main isolated compounds from Jatropha gossypiifolia L. described in the literature.
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Popular medicinal uses of Jatropha gossypiifolia L. described in the literature.
| Plant part | Popular use | Preparation and/or mode of use | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whole plant | Analgesic (headache) | Leaves anointed with “ | [ |
| Analgesic (toothache) | Not specified | [ | |
| Antimicrobial | Not specified | [ | |
| Antipyretic | Decoction | [ | |
| Dyscrasia | Not specified | [ | |
| Dysphonia | Not specified | [ | |
| Wound healing | Not specified | [ | |
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| Aerial parts | Antianemic (malaria treatment) | Decoction, used by oral route | [ |
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| Leaves | Abscess | Bath | [ |
| Alopecia | Ash leaves | [ | |
| Analgesic (eye pain) | Not specified | [ | |
| Analgesic (headache) | Not specified | [ | |
| Analgesic (headache and otitis) | Not specified | [ | |
| Analgesic (pain in general) | Decoction or infusion | [ | |
| Analgesic (toothache) | Decoction or infusion | [ | |
| Antianemic | Decoction | [ | |
| Decoction by oral route | [ | ||
| Anticancer | Ash of leaves | [ | |
| Decoction of the association of leaves of | [ | ||
| Not specified | [ | ||
| Anticonvulsivant | Not specified | [ | |
| Antidiabetic | Decoction | [ | |
| Decoction by oral route | [ | ||
| Antidiarrheal | Decoction by oral route | [ | |
| Not specified | [ | ||
| Antihemorrhagic | Decoction by oral route | [ | |
| Fresh crushed leaves are used in cases of cutaneous and nasal bleeding | [ | ||
| Anti-infective | Decoction by oral route | [ | |
| Not specified | [ | ||
| Anti-inflammatory | Not specified | [ | |
| Antipyretic | Decoction | [ | |
| “Tea” | [ | ||
| Not specified | [ | ||
| Antiseptic | Bath prepared from the leaves | [ | |
| Antithrombotic | Decoction or infusion | [ | |
| Antiulcerogenic | Decoction by oral route | [ | |
| Leaf juice | [ | ||
| Boils | Application of the pounded leaves | [ | |
| Burns | Ash of leaves | [ | |
| Used in association with seeds of | [ | ||
| Contraceptive and oxitotoxic | Not specified | [ | |
| Depurative | Squeezed, the juice obtained is drunk | [ | |
| Detoxificant | Not specified | [ | |
| Eczema | Ash of leaves | [ | |
| Emetic | Squeezed, the juice obtained is drunk | [ | |
| Gastrointestinal disorders | Not specified | [ | |
| Gingivitis | Leaf juice | [ | |
| Gonorrhoea | Ash of leaves | [ | |
| Healing | Bath prepared from the leaves | [ | |
| Decoction | [ | ||
| Decoction or infusion | [ | ||
| Hemorrhoids | Used in association with leaves of | [ | |
| Hemostatic | Decoction or infusion | [ | |
| Hepatitis | Not specified | [ | |
| Itching skin | Application of the pounded leaves | [ | |
| Leprosy | Leaf juice | [ | |
| Malaria | Decoction | [ | |
| Decoction by oral route | [ | ||
| Used in association with leaves of | [ | ||
| Used in association with leaves of | [ | ||
| Mastitis | Pounded leaves applied on swollen breasts | [ | |
| Mycosis | Ash of leaves | [ | |
| Psychoactive | Not specified | [ | |
| Purgative | Not specified | [ | |
| Rheumatism | Ash of leaves | [ | |
| Scabies | Ash of leaves | [ | |
| Skin diseases | Not specified | [ | |
| Stomachic | Decoction by oral route | [ | |
| Not specified | [ | ||
| Syphilis | Ash of leaves | [ | |
| Thrush (oral candidiasis) | Ash of leaves | [ | |
| Treatment of “cultural syndromes,” “ | Not specified | [ | |
| Vaginal infection | Slightly boiled, used as vaginal wash | [ | |
| Veneral diseases | Not specified | [ | |
| Vermifuge | Ash of leaves | [ | |
| Vertigo | Not specified | [ | |
| Wounds and rashes | Bath of the leaves | [ | |
| Decoction by oral route | [ | ||
| Decoction used as baths for cleaning wounds in dogs | [ | ||
| Wound disinfectant | Slightly boiled, used as wound wash | [ | |
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| Stem | Analgesic (toothache) | Not specified | [ |
| Antianemic | Decoction by oral route | [ | |
| Anticancer | Decoction by oral or topical route | [ | |
| Emmenagogue | Decoction of barks | [ | |
| Malaria | Decoction by oral route | [ | |
| Rheumatism | Not specified | [ | |
| Thick blood | Not specified | [ | |
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| Roots | Anticancer | Decoction by oral or topical route | [ |
| Root bark used for cancer of the lungs | [ | ||
| Anticonvulsivant | Not specified | [ | |
| Antidiarrheal | Not specified | [ | |
| Antimicrobial | Root bark used in bacterial infections | [ | |
| Impotence | Decoction of the association of roots of | [ | |
| Leprosy | Not specified | [ | |
| Snakebites | Not specified | [ | |
| Urinary pain | Not specified | [ | |
| Uterus diseases | Decoction by oral route | [ | |
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| Seeds | Analgesic (body pain) | Not specified | [ |
| Analgesic (headache) | Not specified | [ | |
| Antigripal | Used in strong colds | [ | |
| Antihemorrhagic | Not specified | [ | |
| Antiulcerogenic | Seed oil | [ | |
| Contraceptive and oxitotoxic | Not specified | [ | |
| Depurative | Not specified | [ | |
| Emetic | Not specified | [ | |
| Gastrointestinal disorders | Not specified | [ | |
| Leprosy | Seed oil | [ | |
| Mycosis | Seed oil | [ | |
| Psychoactive | Not specified | [ | |
| Purgative | Not specified | [ | |
| Treatment of “cultural syndromes,” “ | Not specified | [ | |
| Vaginal infection | Slightly boiled, used as vaginal wash | [ | |
| Wound infection | Slightly boiled, used as wound wash | [ | |
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| Fruits | Analgesic | Massaging pregnant women's bellies with tea or | [ |
| Analgesic (headache) | Tea or | [ | |
| Analgesic (toothache) | Tea or | [ | |
| Laxative | Ingestion | [ | |
| Numbness after bug stings | Tea or | [ | |
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| Latex | Alopecia | Not specified | [ |
| Analgesic (eye pain) | Not specified | [ | |
| Analgesic (pain in general) | Drink or massage the affected area with latex | [ | |
| Analgesic (toothache) | Cotton soaked with latex kept in contact with the sore tooth | [ | |
| Drink or massage the affected area with latex | [ | ||
| Anticancer | Not specified | [ | |
| Antihemorrhagic | Not specified | [ | |
| Antithrombotic | Oral route | [ | |
| Antiulcerogenic | Not specified | [ | |
| Bite of venomous animals | Application of fresh latex at the affected site | [ | |
| Diuretic | A few drops of fresh latex in water | [ | |
| Eczema | Not specified | [ | |
| Gingivitis | Not specified | [ | |
| Gonorrhea | Not specified | [ | |
| Hemostatic | Not specified | [ | |
| Infected wounds | Application of fresh latex at the affected site | [ | |
| Leprosy | Not specified | [ | |
| Mycosis | Not specified | [ | |
| Purgative | A few drops of fresh latex in water | [ | |
| Not specified | [ | ||
| Rheumatism | Not specified | [ | |
| Scabies | Not specified | [ | |
| Skin burns | Application of fresh latex at the affected site | [ | |
| Not specified | [ | ||
| Stop of itching of cuts and scratches | Not specified | [ | |
| Syphilis | Not specified | [ | |
| Thrush (oral candidiasis) | Not specified | [ | |
| Vermifuge | Not specified | [ | |
| Wound healing | Application of latex at the affected site | [ | |
| Drink or massage the affected site with latex | [ | ||
| Not specified | [ | ||
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| Resin | Toothache | Toothpowder | [ |
| Wounds in lips and tongue | Topical application | [ | |
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| Oil | Arthritis | Applied locally | [ |
| Purgative | Not specified | [ | |
| Skin disease | Applied locally | [ | |
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| Not specified | Alopecia | Tea applied locally in dogs | [ |
| Analgesic | Not specified | [ | |
| Poultices | [ | ||
| Anticancer | Not specified | [ | |
| Antidiarrheal | Not specified | [ | |
| Antihypertensive | Not specified | [ | |
| Anti-inflammatory | Not specified | [ | |
| Antipyretic | Not specified | [ | |
| Antiseptic | Not specified | [ | |
| Antiulcerogenic | Not specified | [ | |
| Coughs and colds | Bark juice (4 spoonfuls, 3 times a day) by oral route | [ | |
| Detoxication | Not specified | [ | |
| Diuretic | Not specified | [ | |
| Eczema | Not specified | [ | |
| Gum infection | Not specified | [ | |
| Healing | Not specified | [ | |
| Hydropsy | Not specified | [ | |
| Leprosy | Not specified | [ | |
| Obstructions of the abdominal tract | Not specified | [ | |
| Purgative | Not specified | [ | |
| Regulate menses | Not specified | [ | |
| Rheumatism | Not specified | [ | |
| Snake and scorpion bites | Not specified | [ | |
| Stomach pain | Not specified | [ | |
| Venereal diseases | Not specified | [ | |
| Wounds | Poultices | [ | |
| Used as bath | [ | ||
*Garrafada: preparation done by macerating plant parts in alcohol or hydroalcoholic mediums, in general, brandies.
Pharmacological studies of Jatropha gossypiifolia L. described in the literature.
| Pharmacological activity | Plant part | Extract/compounds | Detail | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Analgesic | Aerial parts | Methanol and petrol ether extracts | At 100 and 200 mg/kg/day, over 7 days, by oral route in mice, only the methanol extract presented significant analgesic activity in Eddy's hot plate and tail-flack models | [ |
| Fruits | Methanol extract | At 200 and 400 mg/kg, by oral route in mice, highly significantly inhibited the writhing responses induced by acetic acid | [ | |
| Leaves | Methanol extract | At 200 and 400 mg/kg, by oral route in mice, significantly inhibited the writhing responses induced by acetic acid | [ | |
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| Antibacterial | Latex | Crude latex | At 100 | [ |
| Latex | Not specified | Presented bactericidal effect | [ | |
| Leaves | Fractions obtained by sequential extraction of the vegetal material with petrol ether, benzene, chloroform, acetone, ethanol, methanol, and water | Petrol ether fraction was inactive against | [ | |
| Methanol, chloroform, and water extracts | All extracts were active | [ | ||
| Petrol ether and ethyl acetate fractions from ethanol : dichloromethane (1 : 1, v/v) extract | The petrol ether fraction (1 mg/mL) inhibited | [ | ||
| Whole plant | Jatrophenone | Presented | [ | |
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| Antibacterial and antifungal | Aerial parts | Water and ethyl acetate fractions from methanol extract | Both fractions, at 1 mg, did not produce zones of inhibition for | [ |
| Leaves | Chloroform extract | Presented antibacterial activity against | [ | |
| Leaves | Dichloromethane : methanol (1 : 1, v/v) extract | At 0.5 and 1 mg/mL, showed significant antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Methanol extract | Presented antibacterial activity against | [ | ||
| Not specified | Extracts obtained by sequential extraction of the vegetal material with |
| [ | |
| Methanol and petrol ether extracts from bark | At 200 | [ | ||
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| Anticholinesterase | Latex | Lyophilized latex | Inhibited time- and dose-dependently the acetylcholinesterase enzyme in nervous tissue of freshwater air breathing fish | [ |
| Leaves | Fractions obtained by sequential extraction of the vegetal material with ethyl acetate and methanol | At 2 mg/mL concentration, the ethyl acetate and methanol fractions presented inhibitory activities | [ | |
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| Antidiarrheal | Fruits | Methanol extract | At 200 and 400 mg/kg, by oral route in mice, inhibited the castor oil induced diarrhea | [ |
| Leaves | Methanol extract | At 200 and 400 mg/kg, by oral route in mice, inhibited the castor oil induced diarrhea | [ | |
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| Antifungal (antidermatophytic fungi) | Aerial parts | Water and ethyl acetate fractions from methanol extract | The minimal concentration producing 75% of inhibition or higher against | [ |
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| Anti-inflammatory | Aerial parts | Methanol and petrol ether extracts | At 100 and 200 mg/kg/day, over 7 days, by oral route in mice, only the methanol extract presented significant anti-inflammatory activity on carrageenan-induced paw edema | [ |
| Leaves | Aqueous extract | At 100 and 200 | [ | |
| Ethanol extract | At 100 | [ | ||
| Methanol extract and leaf paste | At 500 and 1000 mg/kg, by oral route in rats, inhibited the carrageenan-induced paw edema. At 50 and 100 mg/kg, by oral route in rats, inhibited the cotton pellet induced granuloma formation in rats. At 0.5 and 1 mg/ear, the leaf paste reduced the inflammation response in mouse ear edema model | [ | ||
| Not specified | Methanol and petrol ether extracts from bark | At 200 mg/kg, by oral route in rats, both extracts reduced the carrageenan-induced paw edema | [ | |
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| Antimalarial | Leaves | Aqueous extract | 30 | [ |
| Dichloromethane extract | Active | [ | ||
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| Antineoplasic | Roots | Ethanolic extract and jatrophone | The ethanol extract, as well as jatrophone, exhibited significant inhibitory activity | [ |
| Falodone | Showed potent proliferation inhibitory activity against A-549 human cancer cell line, with IC50 of 120 | [ | ||
| 2 | Presented antineoplasic activity upon P-388 lymphocytic leukemia test system both | [ | ||
| Not specified | Abiodone | Not specified* | [ | |
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| Antioxidant | Leaves | Methanol, ethyl acetate, and aqueous extract | All extracts showed significant antioxidant activity | [ |
| Whole plant | Petrol ether, chloroform, ethyl acetate, and | All extracts showed only poor DPPH scavenging activity. The total antioxidant capacity was higher in ethyl acetate and | [ | |
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| Antispasmodic | Aerial parts | Ethanol extract, fractions, and subfractions | At 500, 1000, and 2000 mg/kg, by oral route in mice, showed significant antispasmodic activity in mouse intestinal transit model and at 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0 mg/mL inhibited | [ |
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| Antiviral | Aerial parts | Water and ethyl acetate fractions from methanol extract | At 1, 10, and 100 | [ |
| Not specified | Methanol extract from barks | Partially active against | [ | |
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| Bronchodilator | Stems | Aqueous extract | The extract was inactive in bronchodilator activity in guinea pigs | [ |
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| Contraceptive | Leaves | Ethanol extract | At 450 mg/kg/day, over 21 days, by oral route, caused an antifertility activity in female mice | [ |
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| Healing | Aerial parts | Ethanol 70% extract | At 1 mL/kg dose, by intraperitoneal route in rats, presented beneficial activity in healing process of colonic anastomosis | [ |
| Aerial parts | Ethanol 70% extract | At 200 mg/kg, by intraperitoneal route in rats, favored the healing process of gastrorrhaphies and reduced the acute inflammatory reaction | [ | |
| Leaves | Hydroethanol extract | At 200 mg/kg, by intraperitoneal route, decreased the inflammation and increased vascular neoformation and collagen deposition when compared to the control group in healing process of sutures performed on the bladder of rats. However, in general, no favorable healing effect was observed. | [ | |
| Not specified | Ethanolic extract | Although some improvement could be observed in suture healing of ventral abdominal wall of rats treated with 100 mg/kg of extract (intraperitoneal instillation intraperitoneal cavity), in general, only a poor healing activity was observed. | [ | |
| Not specified | At 0.1 mL volume, by topical application, the crude extract presented significant differences concerning the macroscopic and microscopic aspects of healing process occurring in open skin lesions in rats | [ | ||
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| Hemostatic | Latex | Crude fresh latex | Decreased clotting and bleeding time in healthy subjects | [ |
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| Hepatoprotective | Aerial parts | Petrol ether, methanol, and water extracts | At 200 mg/kg/day, over 7 days, by oral route in rats, both extracts presented hepatoprotective activity in carbon tetrachloride induced liver damage, with the petrol ether being the most active and the methanol being the least | [ |
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| Hypotensive and vasorelaxant | Aerial parts | Ethanolic extract | At 125 and 250 mg/kg/day, over 4 weeks, by oral route in rats, in a dose-dependent manner, reduced the systolic blood pressure and produced a concentration-dependent relaxant effect in rat isolated ( | [ |
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| Immunomodulatory | Whole plant | Petrol ether extract | At 100, 200, and 400 | [ |
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| Local anesthetic | Not specified | Methanol and aqueous extracts | Both extracts presented significant local anesthetic activity by plexus anesthesia in frogs* | [ |
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| Relaxant effect on uterine smooth muscle (tocolytic activity) | Aerial parts | Ethanolic extract and chloroformic and aqueous fractions | At 0.5 and 1.0 mg/mL, the ethanolic extract reduced the calcium-evoked contractile response of the uterine smooth muscle, as well as the chloroformic fraction. The aqueous fraction presented only slight effect | [ |
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| Sedative and anxiolytic | Fruits | Methanol extract | At 200 and 400 mg/kg, by oral route in mice, presented sedative effect in the hole cross test; At 200 mg/kg, presented anxiolytic activity in hole board test; At 400 mg/kg, presented anxiolytic activity in elevated plus-maze test | [ |
| Leaves | Methanol extract | At 200 and 400 mg/kg, by oral route in mice, presented sedative effect in the hole cross test; At 200 mg/kg, presented anxiolytic activity in hole board test; At 400 mg/kg, presented anxiolytic in elevated plus-maze test | [ | |
*The complete version of the paper was not accessible, so the information was obtained from its abstract.
IC50: concentration that inhibits 50% of the referred activity.