| Literature DB >> 28115974 |
Abstract
Lippia javanica occurs naturally in central, eastern, and southern Africa and has also been recorded in the tropical Indian subcontinent. The potential of L. javanica as herbal or recreational tea and herbal medicine and its associated phytochemistry and biological properties are reviewed. The extensive literature survey revealed that L. javanica is used as herbal tea and has ethnomedicinal applications such as in colds, cough, fever, malaria, wounds, diarrhoea, chest pains, bronchitis, and asthma. Multiple classes of phytochemicals including volatile and nonvolatile secondary metabolites such as alkaloids, amino acids, flavonoids, iridoids, and triterpenes as well as several minerals have been identified from L. javanica. Scientific studies on L. javanica indicate that it has a wide range of pharmacological activities which include anticancer, antiamoebic, antidiabetic, antimalarial, antimicrobial, antioxidant, antiplasmodial, and pesticidal effects. Although many of the traditional uses of L. javanica have been validated by phytochemical and pharmacological studies, there are still some gaps where current knowledge could be improved. Lippia javanica is popular as both herbal and recreational tea, but there is need for more precise studies to evaluate the safety and clinical value of its main active crude and pure compounds and to clarify their mechanisms of action.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28115974 PMCID: PMC5237467 DOI: 10.1155/2017/6746071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1(a) Lippia javanica (Burm.f.) Spreng. flowers and leaves (photo: BT Wursten) and (b) L. javanica herbal tea traded as Zumbani in Zimbabwe (http://specialityfoods.co.zw/product/zumbani/).
Figure 2Lippia javanica naturally occurs in central, eastern, and southern Africa.
Traditional uses of Lippia javanica in central, eastern, and southern Africa.
| Use | Plant part(s) used | Mode of use | Country practised | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Food additive | Leaves, twigs | Leaves and twigs boiled together with maize, cassava, groundnuts, and common tea ( | Kenya | [ |
| Herbal tea | Leaves | Leaves can be sun dried for later use | Botswana, South Africa, and Zimbabwe | [ |
| Leafy vegetable | Leaves | Eaten as vegetable with meat or fish | India | [ |
|
| ||||
| Asthma | Leaves, twigs | Decoction taken orally or smoke inhaled | South Africa, Zimbabwe | [ |
| Blocked nose | Leaves | Leaf decoction of | South Africa | [ |
| Bronchitis | Leaves, roots, and stems | Leaf infusion of | Botswana, South Africa | [ |
| Chest pains | Leaves, roots | Leaves and roots of | Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and South Africa | [ |
| Colds | Leaves, twigs | Leaf infusion of | Botswana, Kenya, South Africa, and Zimbabwe | [ |
| Cough | Leaves, stems, and twigs | Leaves of | Botswana, Ethiopia, South Africa, and Zimbabwe | [ |
| Influenza | Leaves, roots | Decoction taken orally | Mozambique, South Africa | [ |
| Lung infections | Leaves | Infusions taken orally | South Africa | [ |
| Measles | Leaves, stems | Leaf decoction of | Kenya, South Africa, and Zimbabwe | [ |
| Pneumonia | Leaves | Ointment rubbed on chest and abdomen | Zimbabwe | [ |
| Respiratory disorders | Leaves | Decoction taken orally | India, South Africa | [ |
| Runny nose | Leaves, roots | Leaf and root decoction of | South Africa | [ |
| Shortness of breath (dyspnoea) | Leaves | Decoction taken orally or body washed with decoction | Zimbabwe | [ |
| Sore throat | Leaves | Leaf decoction of | South Africa | [ |
| Tonsillitis | Leaves | Leaf decoction of | South Africa | [ |
| Tuberculosis | Leaves | Leaf decoction of | South Africa, Uganda | [ |
|
| ||||
| Amoebiasis | Leaves, twigs | Decoction taken orally | Kenya | [ |
| Anthelmintics | Leaf | Infusions taken orally | South Africa | [ |
| Diarrhoea | Leaves, roots | Decoction taken orally | Kenya, Mozambique, South Africa | [ |
| Gangrenous rectitis | Leaves | Infusions taken orally | South Africa | [ |
| Prophylactic against diarrhoea | Leaves | Infusion taken orally | South Africa | [ |
| Vomiting | Leaves | Decoction taken orally | Zanzibar, Tanzania | [ |
|
| ||||
| Fever | Leaves, stems, and twigs | Leaf and twig decoction of | South Africa, Zimbabwe | [ |
| Getting rid of lice, insects, and lice and as mosquito repellent | Leaves, twigs, and whole plant | Used in washes and poultices or as steam or sprayed or burnt to chase away mosquitoes | Ethiopia, South Africa, and Zimbabwe | [ |
| Malaria | Leaves, roots | Decoction taken orally | Mozambique, South Africa | [ |
| Prophylactic against malaria | Leaves | Infusion taken orally | South Africa | [ |
|
| ||||
| Abdominal pains | Leaves | Leaves chewed and juice swallowed | Zimbabwe | [ |
| Acne | Leaves | Not specified | Botswana | [ |
| Antidotes | Roots | Used as antidote for food poisoning | Botswana | [ |
| Backache | Roots | Infusion taken orally | South Africa, Zimbabwe | [ |
| Bleeding from the nose (epistaxis) | Leaves | Fresh leaves inserted into nose or powdered leaves sniffed | South Africa, Zimbabwe | [ |
| Boils | Leaves | Infusion taken orally | South Africa | [ |
| Chicken pox | Leaves | Used in washes and poultices or as steam | South Africa | [ |
| Earache | Leaves | Decoction taken orally mixed with leaves of | South Africa | [ |
| Febrile rashes | Leaves | Infusions taken orally | South Africa | [ |
| Headache, migraine | Leaves, roots | Leaf and root decoction of | Kenya, South Africa, and Zimbabwe | [ |
| Inflammation | Leaves | Not specified | South Africa | [ |
| Pubic sores | Leaves | Decoction taken orally mixed with leaves of | Swaziland | [ |
| Scabies | Leaves, roots | Infusion taken orally or used in washes and poultices or as steam | South Africa, Zimbabwe | [ |
| Shingles | Leaves, twigs, and roots | Applied as an ointment | South Africa | [ |
| Skin disorders, such as heat rash scratches, stings, and bites | Leaves, twigs | Applied as an ointment or “imbiza,” decoction prepared from | South Africa | [ |
| Sores | Leaves | Decoction of | South Africa | [ |
| Sore eyes, cataracts | Leaves, roots | Juice squeezed into eyes | Botswana, Zimbabwe | [ |
| Sprained joints | Roots | Root powder applied to scarifications around sprained joints | South Africa | [ |
| Ulcers | Leaves | Juice taken orally with cloves of | Bangladesh | [ |
| Wounds | Leaves | Fresh leaves wrapped around wound to enhance healing or infusion taken orally | Kenya, South Africa | [ |
|
| ||||
| Disinfecting suspected anthrax-infested meat | Whole plant | Whole plants used to disinfect suspected anthrax-infested meat | South Africa | [ |
| Getting rid of ticks and other ectoparasites | Leaves, twigs, and whole plant | Crushed leaves mixed with water and sprayed, twigs used as bedding in fowl runs | South Africa, Zimbabwe | [ |
| Lice repellant | Whole plant | Whole plant used to repel lice in poultry | India | [ |
| Milk preservative | Stem | Stem applied to milk gourd before milk fermentation | Kenya | [ |
|
| ||||
| Anaemia in pregnancy | Leaves | Decoction taken orally | Zanzibar, Tanzania | [ |
| Broom | Whole plant | Whole plants cut and tied together to make rough brooms | South Africa | [ |
| Cancer | Leaves | “Imbiza,” decoction prepared from | South Africa | [ |
| Ceremonial | Leaves, whole plant | Used before and after funerals or placed on patients' bed after circumcision | Kenya, South Africa | [ |
| Convulsions | Leaves | Leaves rubbed on face | Zimbabwe | [ |
| Diabetes | Leaves | “Imbiza,” decoction prepared from | South Africa | [ |
| Fatigue or tiredness | Leaves | Leaf decoction of | South Africa | [ |
| Fence | Whole plant | Planted around homesteads | Ethiopia | [ |
| Fodder | Leaves | Leaves eaten by goats | Kenya | [ |
| Fuelwood | Whole plant | Whole plant used as fuelwood | Zanzibar, Tanzania | [ |
| Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) symptoms | Leaves | “Imbiza,” decoction prepared from | South Africa | [ |
| Kidney problems | Root | 50 g root powder boiled in 2 litres of water; patient takes a cup of this mixture once per day for 3 days | Swaziland | [ |
| Madness | Leaves, whole plant | Body washed with leaf infusion | Malawi, Zimbabwe | [ |
| Marasmic infants | Roots | Infusions used to bath infants | South Africa, Zimbabwe | [ |
| Night blindness | Leaves | Face washed with infusion | Zimbabwe | [ |
| Nightmares | Not specified | Not specified | Zimbabwe | [ |
| Pre-, intra-, and postpartum complications | Stem, roots | Smear powder of root or stem | Kenya | [ |
| Preventing odours or being used indoors to freshen air | Leaves, whole plant | Leaves sprinkled in toilets to prevent odours or whole plant placed in vase or room | Kenya, South Africa | [ |
| Protection against dogs and crocodiles | Leaves | Leaves smeared on body | South Africa | [ |
| Psychotropic behaviour | Leaves | Infusion taken orally | Swaziland | [ |
| Removing bad luck | Leaves | Face and hands washed with infusion of | Swaziland | [ |
| Sleepless nights | Leaves | Leaf decoction of | South Africa | [ |
| To drive away bad spirits | Leaves | Body washed with infusion | Zimbabwe | [ |
| To prevent infants from contracting illness caused by father or mother committing adultery | Leaves | Leaves rubbed on forehead, elbows, and knees after committing adultery | Zimbabwe | [ |
| Venereal diseases | Roots | Decoction taken orally | Mozambique | [ |
| Weak joints | Leaves | Decoction taken orally | Zimbabwe | [ |
Figure 3Main ethnobotanical applications of Lippia javanica in central, eastern, and southern Africa. An ethnobotanical use is counted only once per publication.
Nutritional composition of Lippia javanica leaves.
| Caloric and nutritional composition | Values | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Ash | 1.60 ± 0.001 g | [ |
| Calorific value | 50.64 ± 5.63 kcal | [ |
| Crude fat | 0.16 ± 0.001 g | [ |
| Crude fibre | 2.63 ± 0.002 g | [ |
| Crude protein | 1.22 ± 0.0004 g | [ |
| Dry matter | 15.46 ± 1.40 g | [ |
| Moisture | 90.44 ± 0.26 g | [ |
| Total carbohydrate | 6.55 ± 0.26 g | [ |
| Vitamin C | 22.42 ± 0.001 mg | [ |
| Ca | 2856–9225 | [ |
| Mg | 1598–5619 | [ |
| Fe | 75–750 | [ |
| Mn | 40.1 ± 1.16 | [ |
| Zn | 15.6–27.3 | [ |
| Cu | 3.0–8.5 | [ |
| Cr | 0–2.7 | [ |
| Se | 2.57 ± 0.19 | [ |
| Pb | 0.38–1.19 | [ |
| Cd | 0.53 ± 0.05 | [ |
| Co | 0.19 ± 0.01 | [ |
Total phenolic content (TPC) as gallic acid equivalents (GAE) and tannin content as leucocyanidin equivalents (LE) and free radical scavenging activity (FRSA) of herbal tea extracts (after Bhebhe et al. [10]).
| Plant species | TPC g GAE/100 g | Tannin content of LE/100 g | Percentage FRSA | IC50 g/mL |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 12.46 ± 4.31 | 0.12 ± 0.01 | 83.77 ± 0.8 | 0.016 |
|
| 6.69 ± 0.83 | 0.94 ± 0.04 | 67.27 ± 0.25 | 0.053 |
|
| 0.79 ± 0.28 | 1.69 ± 0.01 | 43.07 ± 1.0 | 0.132 |
|
| 2.88 ± 0.48 | 0.20 ± 0.12 | 70.0 ± 0.40 | 0.051 |
|
| 14.02 ± 0.01 | 1.98 ± 0.12 | 86.13 ± 0.85 | 0.009 |
|
| 4.75 ± 0.33 | 1.04 ± 0.01 | 80.93 ± 0.75 | 0.019 |
Summary of pharmacological activities of the extracts isolated from different parts of Lippia javanica.
| Activity tested | Extract | Plant part | Model | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antiamoebic | Piperitenone | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active with IC50 value of 25 | [ |
|
| |||||
| Antibacterial | Piperitenone | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active with MIC value of 50 | [ |
|
| |||||
| Antibacterial (Antiproteus) | Methanol | Leaves | Disc diffusion assay | Active withMIC value of 313 | [ |
| Water | Leaves | Disc diffusion assay | Exhibited weak activity against | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Antibacterial | Acetone | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ |
| Acetone | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Hexane | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Essential oil | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Antifungal | Acetone | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ |
| Hexane | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Acetone | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Dichloromethane | Aerial parts | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Hexane | Aerial parts | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Aerial parts | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Aerial parts | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Antimycobacterial | Acetone | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active with MIC value of 0.47 mg/mL and total activity of 10 mL/g against | [ |
| Dichloromethane | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active with MIC value of 1.25 mg/mL and total activity of 23 mL/g against | [ | |
| Hexane | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active with MIC value of 0.62 mg/mL and total activity of 13 mL/g against | [ | |
| Methanol | Leaves | Microdilution assay | Active with MIC value of 1.25 mg/mL and total activity of 7 mL/g against | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Antioxidant | Water | Leaves | DPPH assay | Exhibited activity with EC50 value of 358 | [ |
| Water | Leaves | — | Exhibited activity with 209 ascorbic acid equivalent (mg/g dry weight) | [ | |
| Water | Leaves | ABTS assay | Active with TEAC value of 1.5 mmol/100 g | [ | |
| Water | Leaves | DPPH assay | Active with TEAC value of 1462.54 mmol/100 g | [ | |
| Water | Leaves | FRAP assay | Active with TEAC value of 2.38 mmol/100 g | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Antiplasmodial | Hexane, chloroform | Roots | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ |
| Ethyl acetate | Roots | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Roots | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Hexane, chloroform | Roots | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate | Roots | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Roots | Microdilution assay | Active against | [ | |
| Dichloromethane | Roots | pLDH assay | Active against | [ | |
| Dichloromethane/methanol | Roots | pLDH assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Roots | pLDH assay | Active against | [ | |
| Water | Roots | pLDH assay | Active against | [ | |
| Dichloromethane | Stems | pLDH assay | Active against | [ | |
| Dichloromethane/methanol | Stems | pLDH assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Stems | pLDH assay | Active against | [ | |
| Water | Stems | pLDH assay | Active against | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Free radical scavenging activity | Water | — | DPPH assay | Active with IC50 value of 0.059 ± 0.02 g/mL | [ |
| 50% methanol | — | DPPH assay | Active with IC50 value of 0.04 ± 0.001 g/mL | [ | |
| Ethanol | — | DPPH assay | Active with IC50 value of 0.025 ± 0.001 g/mL | [ | |
| 50% ethanol | — | DPPH assay | Active with IC50 value of 0.027 ± 0.005 g/mL | [ | |
| Acetone | — | DPPH assay | Active with IC50 value of 0.057 ± 0.004 g/mL | [ | |
| 50% acetone | — | DPPH assay | Active with IC50 value of 0.022 ± 0.001 g/mL | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate | — | DPPH assay | Active with IC50 value of 0.066 ± 0.001 g/mL | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Toxicity | Methanol | Leaf | Brine shrimp lethality assay | 40% mortality recorded after 48 h exposure towards | [ |
| Methanol | Roots | Brine shrimp lethality assay | Active against | [ | |
| Methanol | Roots | Brine shrimp lethality assay | Active against | [ | |
| Chemical compound | Reference(s) |
|---|---|
|
| |
| Coumarin | [ |
| Verbascoside | [ |
| Isoverbascoside | [ |
| Theveside-Na | [ |
| Theveridoside | [ |
| 4-ethylnonacosane | [ |
| Apigenin | [ |
| Cirsimaritin | [ |
| 6-Methoxy luteolin 4′-methyl ether | [ |
| 6-Methoxy luteolin 3′,4′,7-trimethyl ether | [ |
| Crassifolioside | [ |
| Luteolin | [ |
| Diosmetin | [ |
| Chrysoeriol | [ |
| Tricin | [ |
| Isothymusin | [ |
| Eupatorin | [ |
| 5-Dimethyl noboletin | [ |
| Genkwanin | [ |
| Salvigenin | [ |
| Lippialactone | [ |
|
| |
| Xanthine | [ |
|
| |
|
| [ |
| Valine | [ |
| Isoleucine | [ |
| Asparagine | [ |
| Phenylalanine | [ |
|
| [ |
| Lysine | [ |
| Histidine | [ |
| Tyrosine | [ |
| Tryptophan | [ |
| Alanine | [ |
| Glycine | [ |
| Proline | [ |
| Serine | [ |
| Glutamine acid | [ |
|
| [ |
| Glutamine | [ |
|
| [ |
| 4-hydroxyproline | [ |
|
| |
| (E)-2(3)-tagetenone epoxide | [ |
| 4-Methyl-2-pentanone | [ |
|
| [ |
| 1,3-5-Cycloheptatriene | [ |
| (+)-2-Carene | [ |
| 3-Carene | [ |
| Eucalyptol | [ |
| 1.8 myrcene | [ |
| Ipsdienone | [ |
| Caryophyllene | [ |
| Geranial | [ |
| 2,6-Dimethylstyrene | [ |
| Geraniol | [ |
| Octen-3-one | [ |
| 6-Methyl-5-hepten-2-one | [ |
|
| [ |
| Artemisia ketone | [ |
| Linalool oxide | [ |
| Terpinen-4-ol | [ |
| (Z)- | [ |
| (E)- | [ |
| Carvyl acetate | [ |
|
| [ |
| Sesquithujene | [ |
| Acora-3,5-diene | [ |
|
| [ |
| Trans-calamenene | [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
| Cis-calamenene | [ |
| Nerolidol | [ |
|
| [ |
| Spathulenol | [ |
| Epi- | [ |
|
| [ |
| Chrysanthenone | [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
| Linalool acetate | [ |
| Bicyclosesquiphellandrene | [ |
| Camphene | [ |
|
| [ |
| Sabinene | [ |
| Myrcene | [ |
|
| [ |
| 2-Methylbutyl isobutyrate | [ |
| Limonene | [ |
| 1,8-Cineole | [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
| Isomyrcenol | [ |
|
| [ |
| 2-Methylbutyl-2-methyl butyrate | [ |
| Terpinolene | [ |
| Dihydrotagetone | [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
| 6,7-Epoxymyrcene | [ |
| Nonanal | [ |
| Perillene | [ |
| Ipsenone | [ |
|
| [ |
| 1-Octen-3-ol | [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
| Camphor | [ |
|
| [ |
| Benzaldehyde | [ |
| Linalool | [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
| Myrcenone | [ |
|
| [ |
| 2-Methyl-6-methylene-3,7-octadien-2-ol | [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
| Alloaromadendrene | [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
| Ipsdienol | [ |
|
| [ |
| Isovaleric acid | [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
| Borneol | [ |
| Verbenone | [ |
| Germacrene-D | [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
| Carvone | [ |
| Bicyclogermacrene | [ |
|
| [ |
| Ar-curcumene | [ |
|
| [ |
| 2-Methyl-2-butenoic acid | [ |
|
| [ |
|
| [ |
| 2,6-Dimethyl-3 | [ |
|
| [ |
| Calamenene | [ |
| Carvone oxide | [ |
| Isopiperitenone | [ |
|
| [ |
| Piperitenone | [ |
| Isocaryophyllene oxide | [ |
| Caryophyllene oxide | [ |
| Humulene epoxide II | [ |
| Hexahydrofarnesyl acetone | [ |
| Spathulenol | [ |
| Eugenol | [ |
| Germacrene-D-4-ol | [ |
| Caryophylla-2(12),6(13)-dien-5 | [ |
| Caryophylla-2(12),6(13)-dien-5 | [ |
| Euscaphic acid | [ |
| Icterogenin | [ |