| Literature DB >> 30424560 |
William N Setzer1,2.
Abstract
Background: Native Americans have had a rich ethnobotanical heritage for treating diseases, ailments, and injuries. Cherokee traditional medicine has provided numerous aromatic and medicinal plants that not only were used by the Cherokee people, but were also adopted for use by European settlers in North America.Entities:
Keywords: Cherokee; Native American; chemical constituents; pharmacology; traditional herbal medicine
Year: 2018 PMID: 30424560 PMCID: PMC6313439 DOI: 10.3390/medicines5040121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicines (Basel) ISSN: 2305-6320
Figure 1Cherokee territorial lands [26]. (A) ′′Map of the former territorial limits of the Cherokee ′Nation of′ Indians′′, i.e., prior to displacement of Euro-Americans. (B) ′′Map showing the territory originally assigned Cherokee ′Nation of′ Indians′′, i.e., after the forcible relocation known as the ′′Trail of Tears”.
List of Cherokee aromatic medicinal plants, their traditional uses, and phytochemical constituents and biological activities.
| Scientific Name | Family | Common Name | Cherokee Use | Part Used | Chemical Constituents and Activities | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sapindaceae | Red maple | analgesic (cramps), eye soreness | bark | [ | ||
| Leaves: 1- | [ | |||||
| Leaves: gallic acid, methyl gallate, ethyl gallate, | [ | |||||
| Leaves: major gallotannins: maplexin B, ginnalin B, ginnalin C, ginnalin A, maplexin F and a pair of isomers, 6- | [ | |||||
| Bark: catechin, epicatechin, epicatechin gallate, procyanidin A6, procyanidin A2, quercetin-3- | [ | |||||
| Bark: gallotannins, named maplexins A–E; showed α-glucosidase inhibitory activity | [ | |||||
| Bark: gallotannins, maplexins F–I; phenolic glycosides, rubrumosides A–B. The maplexins showed α-glucosidase inhibitory activity | [ | |||||
| Bark: Maplexins C and D showed cytotoxic activity on HCT-116 and MCF-7 cells | [ | |||||
| Leaves and flowers: 2-methoxyl-1- | [ | |||||
| Sapindaceae | Silver maple | analgesic (cramps), eye soreness | bark | [ | ||
| Leaves: methyl gallate; cytotoxic to B16 melanoma in mice | [ | |||||
| Leaves: glucitol-core containing gallotannins (GCGs), ginnalins A–C, maplexins B, D, and F; phenolics, methyl syringate, methyl gallate, and 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenol-1-β- | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Yarrow | hemorrhages (leaves), fever (infusion) | leaves | [ | ||
| Herb: 5-hydroxy-3,6,7,4′-tetramethoxyflavone, artemetin, casticin | [ | |||||
| Herb: chlorogenic acid, vicenin-2, luteolin-7- | [ | |||||
| Herb: apigenin, luteolin, centaureidin, β-sitosterol, 3β-hydroxy-11α,13-dihydro-costunolide, desacetylmatricarin, leucodin, achillin, 8α-angeloxy-leucodin and 8α-angeloxy-achillin | [ | |||||
| Herb: chlorogenic acid, rutin, luteolin 7- | [ | |||||
| Herb: 5- | [ | |||||
| Herb: chlorogenic acid, 3,5-dicaffeoyl quinic acid, 4,5-dicaffeoyl quinic acid, apigenin 7- | [ | |||||
| Flowers: methyl achimillate A, methyl achimillate B, methyl achimillate C; all three compounds active against P-388 leukemia in vivo (mouse) | [ | |||||
| Herb: dihydrodehydrodiconiferyl alcohol 9- | [ | |||||
| Herb: hydroalcoholic extract showed antinociceptive activity | [ | |||||
| Herb: rutin, schaftoside, isoschaftoside, luteolin-7- | [ | |||||
| Herb: five flavonoids (apigenin, luteolin, centaureidin, casticin and artemetin) and five sesquiterpenoids (paulitin, isopaulitin, psilostachyin C, desacetylmatricarin and sintenin); centaureidin, casticin, and paulitin showed good in vitro cytotoxic activity on HeLa, MCF-7, and A-431 cells | [ | |||||
| Herb EO: 1,8-cineole (24.6%), camphor (16.7%), α-terpineol (10.2%); weak antimicrobial activity on | [ | |||||
| Herb EO: germacrene D (6.1%), chamazulene (48.3%); shows antitrypanosomal activity ( | [ | |||||
| Herb EO: α-pinene (0.6–10.0%), camphene (0.4–15.4%), β-pinene (1.9–38.7%), limonene (1.4–3.8%), γ-terpinene (3.5–13.1%), β-caryophyllene (4.4–13.8%), germacrene D (1.7–10.7%), cadinene (0.7–32.2%) | [ | |||||
| Herb supercritical CO2 extract: myrcene (4.9%), | [ | |||||
| Herb EO: β-pinene (4.3%), 1,8-cineole (15.2%), β-cubebene (4.0%), germacrene D (14.1%), τ-cadinol (4.4%) | [ | |||||
| Herb EO: sabinene (5.4%), 1,8-cineole (24.5%), trans-sabinene hydrate (10.2%), cis-sabinene hydrate (4.6%), camphor (4.9%), terpinen-4-ol (5.6%), bornyl acetate (4.0%), germacrene D (7.2%) | [ | |||||
| Sapindaceae | Red buckeye | tumors, infections (poultice of nuts) | nuts | [ | ||
| Fruits: polyhydroxyoleanene triterpenoid saponins (aesuliosides Ia–Ie, IIa–IId, and IVa–IVc) | [ | |||||
| Fruits: 13 polyhydroxyoleanene pentacyclic triterpenoid saponins, aesculiosides IIe–IIk, and IIIa–IIIf, together with 18 known compounds: aesculiosides Ia–Ie, IIa–IId, IVa–IVc, 3- | [ | |||||
| Fruits: oleane saponins (vaccaroside A, vaccaroside B); showed in vitro cytotoxic activity on FL normal human amniotic cells and A-549 human lung carcinoma cells | [ | |||||
| Leaves: prenylated coumarin pavietin; flavonol glycosides quercetin 3- | [ | |||||
| Leaves: oleane saponins (escins Ia, Ib, IIa, IIb, IIIa) | [ | |||||
| Leaves: oleane saponins (paviosides A–H); all show in vitro cytotoxic activity on J-774 murine macrophage and WEHI-164 murine fibrosarcoma | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | White snakeroot | fever, tonic, urinary diseases | root | [ | ||
| Aerial parts: tremetone, 6-hydroxytremetone, dehydrotremetone; tremetone cytotoxic on murine melanoma (B16F1) cells | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: tremetone, dehydrotremetone | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: tremetone, 6-hydroxytremetone, dehydrotremetone, dehydrotremetone, 2-senecioyl-4-acetylphenol, 2-senecioyl-4-(1-methoxyethyl)phenol, 6-acetyl-2,2-dimethylchroman-4-one, 6-acetyl-7-methoxy-2,2-dimethylchromene, 6-acetyl-8-methoxy-2,2-dimethylchromene, 6-acetyl-5-hydroxy-8-methoxy-2,2-dimethylchromene, 6,7-dimethoxy-2,2-dimethylchromene, and 6-(1-hydroxyethyl)-7-methoxy-2,2-dimethylchromene. Tremetone, hydroxygremetone, dehydrotremetone toxic in goldfish assay | [ | |||||
| Amarylli-daceae | Meadow garlic | cathartic, diuretic | entire plant | [ | ||
| Herb: cysteine sulfoxides: methiin, alliin, propiin | [ | |||||
| Amarylli-daceae | Nodding onion | fever | entire plant | [ | ||
| Herb: diosgenin | [ | |||||
| Herb: cysteine sulfoxides: methiin, alliin, isoalliin | [ | |||||
| Amarylli-daceae | Wild leek | tonic (entire plant) | entire plant | [ | ||
| Herb: methanesulfinothioic acid | [ | |||||
| Amarylli-daceae | Wild garlic | carminative, cathartic, diuretic | entire plant | [ | ||
| Herb: molluscicidal saponins (nuatigenin 3- | [ | |||||
| Herb: diosgenin saponins: diosgenin 3- | [ | |||||
| Herb: flavones: chrysoeriol-7- | [ | |||||
| Herb EO: methyl ( | [ | |||||
| Araliaceae | Wild sarsaparilla | root infusion taken as a blood tonic | root | [ | ||
| Rhizome: diacetylenes falcarinol and panaxydol; showed antimycobacterial activity | [ | |||||
| Araliaceae | Devil′s walking stick | root (poisonous) used for emetic, venereal diseases | root | [ | ||
| Leaf EO: (2 | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Arnica | pain reliever, anti-inflammatory | flowers | [ | ||
| Aerial parts: flavonoids: hispidulin, genkwanin, quercetin 3-methyl ether, quercetin 3-gentiobioside, quercetin 3-diglucoside, 6-methoxykaempferol 3-glucoside, isoquercitrin, astragalin, nepitrin, and glucoluteolin | [ | |||||
| Leaves: pseudoguaianolide sesquiterpenoids carabrone, 2,3-dihydroaromaticin, 2,3-dihydroaromatin | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Biennial wormwood | poultice used on sores and wounds | plant | [ | ||
| Aerial parts EO: camphor (24.6%), artemisia ketone (11.4%), α-pinene (10.2%), 1,8-cineole (10.1%), germacrene D (5.3%) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: ( | [ | |||||
| Rosaceae | Goatsbeard | beaten root applied to bee stings | root | Phytochemistry of Eurasian varieties studied, but not North American varieties | [ | |
| Aerial parts: aruncin A, aruncin B, aruncide A, aruncide B, aruncide C; aruncin B showed cytotoxic activity on Jurkat T cells | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: aruncin B; cytotoxic to Jurkat T cells (apoptosis, microtubule damage) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: palmitic acid, 10-nonacosanol, pentacosan-1-ol, phytol, β-sitosterol, β-sitosterol-3- | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: sambunigrin, prunasin, aruncide A, aruncide C, 1- | [ | |||||
| Young shoots: 4- | [ | |||||
| Aristolochi-aceae | Wild ginger | vermifuge (root), wounds (poultice of leaves) | root, leaves | [ | ||
| Leaves: chalcone glycosides (chalcononaringenin 2′,4′-di- | [ | |||||
| Rhizome EO: methyleugenol (44.5%), linalyl acetate (41.1%), geraniol (7.4%), linalool (5.3%) | [ | |||||
| Rhizome EO: linalool (5.0%), linalyl acetate (28.0%), methyleugenol (36.1%) | [ | |||||
| Rhizome EO: methyleugenol (53.6%), linalool (12.5%), α-terpineol (6.6%) | [ | |||||
| Rhizome EO: Linalool (19.4%), α-terpineol (5.9%), methyleugenol (38.5%) | [ | |||||
| Apocyn-aceae | Butterfly weed | cough | root | [ | ||
| Roots: steroids (ascandroside, Δ5-calotropin, Δ5-calotropin 3′- | [ | |||||
| Roots: Pregnane steroid (ikemagenin, lineolon, pleurogenin) glycosides | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: Pregnane steroid glycosides (tuberosides A1–L5) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: Pregnane steroid glycosides (tuberosides B7 and B8) | [ | |||||
| Roots: Pregnane steroid glycosides (tuberosides A2, B1, B2, C2, D1, D2, E2, F2, G1, H1, H2, I2, I3, J3, K3, M1, N1, O1, P1, and Q1) | [ | |||||
| Fabaceae | Wild indigo | cold infusion purgative/emetic | plant | [ | ||
| Flavonoids: afrormosin 7- | [ | |||||
| Isoflavonoid: texasin 7- | [ | |||||
| Alkaloids: (+)-sparteine and (–)- | [ | |||||
| Berberi-daceae | American barberry | bark infusion for diarrhea | bark | [ | ||
| Callus culture: isoquinoline alkaloid jatrorrhizine | [ | |||||
| Betulaceae | River birch | dysentery, colds | leaves | [ | ||
| Bud EO: benzyl alcohol (2.4–5.0%), nonanal (0.7–6.6%), eugenol (28.7–55.7%), tricosane (1.6–8.0%), pentacosane (1.3–8.8%), heptacosane (6.2–39.1%) | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: linalool (9.8–19.2%), eugenol (6.7–13.5%) | [ | |||||
| Bark EO: hexanal (0.8–5.8%), (3 | [ | |||||
| Bark: betulonaldehyde, lupeol, betulin, betulinic acid, betulin caffeate | [ | |||||
| Buds: combretol, 5-hydroxy-3,4′,7-trimethoxyflavone | [ | |||||
| Buds: 3,5-dihydroxy-4′,7-dimethoxyflavone | [ | |||||
| Lamiaceae | American beautyberry | Alabama tribe of Native Americans (not Cherokee) used a decoction of roots/branches sweat bath for rheumatism, fever | roots, branches | [ | ||
|
| Leaf EO: 1-octen-3-ol (8.5%), β-pinene (8.8%), α-humulene (10.1%), humulene epoxide II (13.9%), intermediol (9.5%), callicarpenal (4.3%); the EO was selectively toxic toward the cyanobacterium | [ | ||||
| Leaf EO: α-humulene, humulene epoxide II, intermediol, callicarpenal; intermediol and callicarpenal showed mosquito repellent activity ( | [ | |||||
| Leaves: callicarpenal and intermediol; both showed tick repellent activity | [ | |||||
| Fruiting branches: clerodane diterpenoids: 12( | [ | |||||
| Calycanth-aceae | Eastern sweetshrub | bark sap used on sores; bark infusion used on hives. Root strong emetic. | bark/root | [ | ||
| Flowers: anthocyanin pigments: cyanidin-3-glucoside, cyanidin-3-rutinoside | [ | |||||
| Herb EO: α-pinene, 1,8-cineole (major), borneol, bornyl acetate | [ | |||||
| Herb EO: ( | [ | |||||
| Floral EO: α-pinene (10.2%), β-pinene (8.6%), 1,8-cineole (33.1%), bornyl acetate (14.1%), α-terpinyl acetate (5.8%), elemol (8.2%) | [ | |||||
| Stem EO: α-pinene (10.0%), β-pinene (7.2%), 1,8-cineole (31.7%), bornyl acetate (12.6%), α-terpinyl acetate (6.8%), elemol (9.0%) | [ | |||||
| Berberi-daceae | Blue cohosh | root decoction given as sedative and anticonvulsive; root taken internally to treat rheumatism | root | [ | ||
| Roots: alkaloids: | [ | |||||
| Roots: quinolizidine alkaloids: | [ | |||||
| Roots: alkaloids: thalictroidine, taspine, magnoflorine, anagyrine, baptifoline, 5,6-dehydro-α-isolupanine, α-isolupanine, lupanine, | [ | |||||
| Roots: piperidine alkaloids (caulophyllumine A, caulophyllumine B), quinolizidine alkaloids (anagyrine, lupanine, | [ | |||||
| Roots: alkaloids, | [ | |||||
| Roots: oleanane saponins: caulosides A, B, C, D, G; leonticin D, and 3- | [ | |||||
| Roots: 22 oleanane saponins; several showed cytotoxicity on HL-60 cells | [ | |||||
| Roots: oleanane saponins caulosides A–D exert anti-inflammatory effects by inhibiting expression of iNOS and proinflammatory cytokines | [ | |||||
| Rhamnaceae | New Jersey tea | root infusion taken for ′′bowel complaints′′ | root | [ | ||
| Root bark: peptide alkaloids (ceanothine A, B, C; ceanothamine A, B) | [ | |||||
| Root bark: peptide alkaloid americine | [ | |||||
| Root bark: peptide alkaloids (ceanothine D, E; frangulanine, adouetine-X, adouetine-Y) | [ | |||||
| Fabaceae | Redbud | bark infusion used for severe coughs | inner bark | [ | ||
| Bark EO: 1-hexanol (23.3%), hexanoic acid (18.2%), (2 | [ | |||||
| Plantagin-aceae | Balmony | herb used to treat skin problems; herb infusion taken as a digestive tonic | herb | [ | ||
| Leaves: iridoid glycoside catalpol | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Chickory | infusion of root as tonic | root | [ | ||
| Sesquiterpene lactones (8-deoxylactucin, lactucin, lactupicrin) | [ | |||||
| Leaves and roots: sesquiterpene lactones (lactucin, 11β,13-dihydrolactucin, jacquinelin, 8-desoxylactucin, lactucopicrin, crepidiaside B, loliolide), p-hydroxyphenylacetic acid methy and ethyl esters, cichoriside B, sonchuside A, ixerisoside D, magnolialide | [ | |||||
| Root: sesquiterpene lactones (lactucin, lactucopicrin) | [ | |||||
| Leaves and roots: sesquiterpene lactones (guaianolides, lactucin, lactucopicrin, 11β,13-dihydrolactucin) | [ | |||||
| Flowers: anthocyanin pigments: delphinidin 3,5-di- | [ | |||||
| Ranuncu-laceae | Black cohosh | root used to stimulate menstruation; root infusion used for rheumatism, coughs, colds | root | [ | ||
| Rhizome: triterpene glycosides (actein, 27-deoxyactein, cimicfugoside M, and cimicifugoside) | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: triterpene glycosides (cimiaceroside A, 25- | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: triterpene glycosides (12β-acetoxycimigenol-3- | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: triterpene glycosides (cimiracemosides A–H, 27-deoxyactein, 26-deoxycimicifugoside, actein, acetyl shengmanol xyloside, cimicifugoside (cimigenol-3- | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: triterpene glycosides (cimigenol 3- | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: triterpene glycosides (cimiracemoside H, 26-deoxyactein, 23- | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: triterpene glycosides (actein, 23-epi-26-deoxyactein, 23- | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: triterpene xyloside, 9,10-seco-9,19-cyclolanostane xyloside (cimipodocarpaside) | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: triterpene xylosides (cimigenol xyloside, 26-deoxyactein, cimicifugoside H-1, and 24-acethylhydroshengmanol xyloside) | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: triterpene xylosides (isocimipodocarpaside, 23- | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: Cimicidol-3- | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: fukiic and piscidic acid esters: (2- | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: phenylpropanoid esters (cimicifugic acid D, petasiphenone, cimiciphenol, cimiciphenone | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: phenylpropanoid esters (cimiracemates A–D) | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: phenylpropanoids (caffeic acid, isoferulic acid, ferulic acid), triterpene xylosides (cimicifugoside H-1, cimiracemoside A, cimicifugoside H-2, (26 | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: polyphenolics (actaealactone, cimicifugic acid G, protocatechuic acid, protocatechualdehyde, p-coumaric acid, caffeic acid, methyl caffeate, ferulic acid, ferulate-1-methyl ester, isoferulic acid, 1-isoferuloyl-â- | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: alkaloids (cyclocimipronidine, cimipronidine methyl ester, cimipronidine, dopargine, salsolinol, 3-hydroxytyrosol 3- | [ | |||||
| Lamiaceae | Heal-all | decoction taken as emetic | leaves | [ | ||
| Leaf EO: germacrene D (46.0%), β-caryophyllene (5.3%), elemicin (3.6%), β-elemene (3.3%) | [ | |||||
| Roots: triterpene glycosides, hederagenin-3- | [ | |||||
| Leaf and stem exudates: flavonoids, 2,5-dihydroxy-6,7-dimethoxyflavanone, baicalein-6,7-dimethyl ether, norwogenin-7,8-dimethyl ether, and tectochrysin (5-hydroxy-7-methoxyflavone) | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Horseweed | leaves used for toothache | leaves | [ | ||
| decoction of herb used to treat diarrhea | herb | [ | ||||
| Mikasuki and Seminole Native Americans used the plant to treat sore throats and respiratory complaints | [ | |||||
| Whole plant: β-sitosterol, stigmasterol, β-sitosterol 3- | [ | |||||
| Whole plant: sphingolipids, 1,3,5-trihydroxy-2-hexadecanoylamino-(6 | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: triterpenoid erigeronol (showed potent anti-melanoma cytotoxicity) | [ | |||||
| Whole plant: conyzolide, conyzoflavone (both showed antimicrobial activities) | [ | |||||
| Whole plant: 8 | [ | |||||
| Whole plants: phenylprobanoyl esters ( | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: enyne derivatives, (2 | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: (4 | [ | |||||
| Flowering parts: polyphenolic-polysaccharide (anticoagulant, antiplatelet activity) | [ | |||||
| Roots: dihydropyranones conyzapyranone A and B; 4 | [ | |||||
| Roots: triterpenoid 3β-erythrodiol (inhibits MKN-45 gastric cell proliferation) | [ | |||||
| Roots: salicylic acid, methyl gallate | [ | |||||
| Roots: lanostane triterpenoids conyzagenin-A, conyzagenin-B | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: limonene (76.0%), α-santalene (5.8%), δ-3-carene (3.9%), myrcene (3.6%) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: limonene (57.9–81.1%), ( | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: limonene (50.0–70.3%) and ( | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: limonene (70.0%), | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: limonene (77.7–89.4%), | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: ( | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: limonene (31.2%), camphene (14.2%) and germacrene D (11.3%) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: limonene (68.3%), δ-3-carene (15.9%) | [ | |||||
| Root EO: (2 | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Tickseed | root tea for diarrhea | root | [ | ||
| Plant: polyacetylenes, (2 | [ | |||||
| Plant: seven compounds made up the major contributions of antioxidant activity in | [ | |||||
| Flowers: C14 polyacetylene glycosides coreosides A–D | [ | |||||
| Buds: C14 polyacetylene glycosides coreosides E and F | [ | |||||
| Flowers: C14 polyacetylene glycosides coreosides A, B, D, and E | [ | |||||
| Flowers: chalcone marein, flavanone flavanomarein | [ | |||||
| Flowers: chalcone okanin-4′- | [ | |||||
| Flowers: flavonoids (flavanomarein, flavanokanin, quercetagitin-7- | [ | |||||
| Flowers: flavonoids ((+)-catechin, kaempferol-3- | [ | |||||
| Flowers: flavonoids (taxifolin, taxifolin-7- | [ | |||||
| Flowers: quercetagitin-7- | [ | |||||
| Flowers: taxifolin-7- | [ | |||||
| Flowers: chlorogenic acid, ( | [ | |||||
| Fruits: flavonoids (marein, flavanomarein, quercetagetin-7- | [ | |||||
| Floral EO: limonene (11.3%), α-bergamotene (7.3%) | [ | |||||
| Cornaceae | Dogwood | bark chewed for headache | bark | [ | ||
| bark decoction used for fevers, body aches; bark poultice used on sores/ulcers | bark | [ | ||||
| Bark: saponins (sarsapogenin- | [ | |||||
| Solanaceae | Jimson weed | leaf poultice applied to boils; leaves smoked for asthma | leaves | [ | ||
| Root culture: tropane alkaloid (−)-hyoscyamine | [ | |||||
| Root culture: tropane alkaloids (hyoscyamine and scopolamine) | [ | |||||
| Seeds: tropane alkaloid (−)-hyoscyamine | [ | |||||
| Leaves: tropane alkaloids (hyoscyamine and scopolamine) | [ | |||||
| Ebenaceae | Persimmon | bark infusion for venereal diseases, sore throat and mouth; syrup for oral thrush, bloody discharge from bowels | bark | [ | ||
| Bark: binaphthoquinone isodiospyrin | [ | |||||
| Fruits: polyphenolics (methyl gallate, gallic acid, luteolin, quercetin, myricetin, yricetin 3- | [ | |||||
| Roots: 4-hydroxy-5,6-dimethoxynaphthalene-2-carbaldehyde, 12,13-didehydro-20,29-dihydrobetulin, 7-methyljuglone, diospyrin, isodiospyrin, shinanolone, lupeol, betulin, betulinic acid, betulinaldehyde, and ursolic acid | [ | |||||
| Onagraceae | Fireweed | eye conditions due to asthma, allergies | herb | [ | ||
| Herb: quercetin 3- | [ | |||||
| Herb: oenothein B (a dimeric macrocyclic ellagitannin) inhibits proliferation of SK-N-SK and PC-3 cells | [ | |||||
| Herb: oenothein B enhances IFNγ production by lymphocytes | [ | |||||
| Herb: ellagitannins (oenothein B, oenothein A, tetramer, pentamer, hexamer, heptamer) | [ | |||||
| Flowers and leaves: ellagitannins (oenothein B, oenothein A, tetramer, pentamer, hexamer, heptamer) | [ | |||||
| Equiset-aceae | Horsetail | infusion taken for kidneys | plant | [ | ||
| Stems: ( | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: 2-(sophorosyl)-1-(4-hydroxyphenyl)ethenone | [ | |||||
| Apiaceae | Baneberry, Rattlesnake master | remedy for snakebites | root | [ | ||
| remedy for snakebites | Plant extracts showed inhibition of | [ | ||||
| urinary-tract inflammation modulator | root | [ | ||||
| Aerial parts EO: polyacetylenes (falcarinone, falcarinol, yuccifolol, 1,8-heptadecadiene-4,6-diyne-3,9-diol) | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: α-pinene (7.6%), terpinolene (17.8%), β-caryophyllene (6.2%), germacrene D (18.3%), bicyclogermacrene (8.8%), falcarinol (9.6%) | [ | |||||
| Root EO: α-pinene (4.7%), terpinolene (25.8%), 2,3,6-trimethylbenzaldehyde (13.9%), | [ | |||||
| Whole plant: triterpenoid saponins (eryngiosides A–L, saniculasaponin III); flavonoid (kaempferol) glycosides; polyphenolics (caffeates) | [ | |||||
| Root: Triterpenoid saponins | [ | |||||
| The phytochemistry of | [ | |||||
| Liliaceae | Troutlily | leaves crushed and juice poured over wounds | leaves | [ | ||
| α-Methylenebutyrolactone | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Joe-Pye weed | root infusion for kidney, dropsy | root | [ | ||
| Roots: pyrrolyzidine alkaloids (echinatine, trachelanthamidine) | [ | |||||
| Leaves: pyrrolizidine alkaloid (lycopsamine) and guaianolide sesquiterpene lactone (cumambrin B) | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Boneset | infusion of the plant taken as a tonic, for colds, sore throat, and influenza | plant | [ | ||
| Aerial parts: guianolide and germacranolide sesquiterpene lactones; flavonoids (eupafolin, hispidulin, patuletin, and kaempferol) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: guianolide and germacranolide sesquiterpene lactones | [ | |||||
| Leaves: polyphenolics (protocatechuic acid, hyperoside, quercetin, rutin) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: extracts show anti-inflammatory activity, but not immunostimulatory activity | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: caffeic acid derivatives (5-caffeoylquinic acid (chlorogenic acid), 3-caffeoylquinic acid (neochlorogenic acid) and 3,5-dicaffeoylquinic acid, 2,5-dicaffeoylglucaric acid, 3,4-dicaffeoylglucaric acid, and 2,4- or 3,5-dicaffeoylglucaric acid) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: glycosides of kaempferol and quercetin; quaianolides | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: ( | [ | |||||
| Fagaceae | American beech | nuts chewed for worms | nuts | [ | ||
| Bark: monolignols [( | [ | |||||
| Gentian- aceae | American Columbo | root used to treat dysentery | root | [ | ||
| Root: xanthones (1-hydroxy-2,3,4,7-tetramethoxyanthone, 1-hydroxy-2,3,4,5-tetramethoxyxanthone, 1-hydroxy-2,3,7-trimethoxyxanthone, 1-hydroxy-2,3,5-trimethoxyxanthone, swerchirin, 1,3-dihydroxy-4,5-dimethoxyxanthone) | [ | |||||
| Plant: iridoid (loganic acid), secoiridoid (gentiopicroside), and xanthones [1,3-diOH-4,5-diMeO-xanthone, 1-OH-2,3,5-triMeO-xanthone, 1-OH-2,3,4,5-tetraMeO-xanthone, 1-OH-2,3,4,7-tetraMeO-xanthone, 1,8-diOH-3,5-diMeO-xanthone (swerchirin)] | [ | |||||
| Oleaceae | American ash | tonic of inner bark taken for liver and stomach problems | bark | [ | ||
| Bark: oleoside, syringin, hydroxypinoresinol glycoside, verbascoside, ligustroside | [ | |||||
| Leaves: secoiridoid glucosides (demethylligstroside, (2″ | [ | |||||
| Seeds: catechins (epicatechin, catechin-3- | [ | |||||
| Geraniaceae | Wild geranium | cuts, sores, oral thrush | plant | |||
| Plant EO: citronellol (38%), geraniol (16%), citronellyl formate (10.4%), and linalool (6.45%) | [ | |||||
| Hamameli-daceae | Witch hazel | bark infusion used on sores | bark | [ | ||
| Bark: hamamelitannin cytotoxic to HT-29 colon tumor cells | [ | |||||
| Leaves: gallotannins (hydrolyzable tannins: monogalloyl, heptagalloyl, octagalloyl, and nonagalloyl hexoses), caffeoylquinic acids (3-, and 5-), kaempferol glycoside | [ | |||||
| Bark: polymeric proanthocyanidins (condensed tannins). | [ | |||||
| Bark: tannins, antioxidant, cytotoxic to SK-Mel-28 melanoma cells | [ | |||||
| Bark: condensed (proanthocyanidins) and hydrolyzable (galloylhamameloses) tannins | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Sneezeweed | root infusion used to prevent menstruation after childbirth; dried leaves used to induce sneezing | roots, leaves | Apparently the root extract has not been examined | [ | |
| Aerial parts: dihydromexicanin E | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: flexuosin A | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: helenalin | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: tenulin | [ | |||||
| Helenalin is cytotoxic (human epithelial type 2, HEp-2, cells) | [ | |||||
| Whole plant: carolenin and carolenalin | [ | |||||
| Flowers: helenalin, autumnolide, mexicanin I; helenalin is cytotoxic | [ | |||||
| Plant: dihydroflorilenalin | [ | |||||
| Plant: 4- | [ | |||||
| Ranuncu-laceae | Goldenseal | sedative, anti-inflammatory; sores, wounds, cancer | root | [ | ||
| Rhizomes: alkaloids (berberine, 8-oxotetrahydrothalifendine, canadine, and β-hydrastine); berberine shows antitubercular activity | [ | |||||
| Rhizomes: berberine alkaloids (berberine, β-hydrastine, canadine and canadaline); berberine is antibacterial. | [ | |||||
| Rhizomes: alkaloids (berberine, canadaline, canadine, β-hydrastine, and isocorypalmine) | [ | |||||
| Rhizomes: alkaloids (hydrastinine, hydrastine, canadaline, berberine, canadine) | [ | |||||
| Leaves: 3,4-dimethoxy-2-(methoxycarbonyl)benzoic acid, 3,5,3′-trihydroxy-7,4′-dimethoxy-6,8- | [ | |||||
| Leaves: flavonoids (sideroxylin, 8-desmethyl-sideroxylin, and 6-desmethyl-sideroxylin); inhibit N or A multidrug resistance pump; synergistic antibacterial activity with berberine | [ | |||||
| Hyperic-aceae | St. John′s wort | root poultice used for stakebite | root | [ | ||
| Aerial parts: acyl-phloroglucinols (saroaspidin A, uliginosin A, hyperbrasilol C) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: acyl-phloroglucinols (3′-prenyl-phlorisobutyrophenone, saroaspidin A, uliginosin A, hyperbrasilol C) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: chlorogenic acid, hyperoside, isoquercitrin, quercitrin, quercetin, at least 9 acyl-phloroglucinols (not identified). The acyl-phloroglucinols fraction reduced prostaglandin E2 synthesis in mammalian macrophages | [ | |||||
| Hypericaceae | St. John′s wort | root poultice used for stakebite | root | [ | ||
| Roots: prenylated benzophenones (clusianone, 7- | [ | |||||
| Iridaceae | Blue flag, Snake lily | eyewash | root | [ | ||
| powerful cathartic | rhizome | [ | ||||
| root poultice used to treat sores | rhizome | [ | ||||
| Rhizomes: iridals (17,26-dihydroxyiridal, 16-hydroxyiridal, 17-hydroxyiridal, 26-hydroxyiridal, 10-deoxy-17-hydroxyiridal, iriversical) | [ | |||||
| Jugland-aceae | Black walnut | bark infusion used on sores | bark | [ | ||
| Bark: juglone, α-hydroxyjuglone-4-glucoside, myricetin, myricitrin, sakuranetin, sakuranin, and neosakuranin | [ | |||||
| Unripe fruit: naphthoquinones (dihydroplumbagin, 3-methylplumbagin, isoplumbagin) | [ | |||||
| Husk: naphthoquinones (juglone, plumbagin, regiolone), sterols (stigmasterol, β-sitosterol), flavonoids (taxifolin, kaempferol, quercetin, myricetin) | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: α-Pinene (6.3–11.4%), β-caryophyllene (17.3–20.4%), germacrene D (7.1–22.5%), juglone (1.0–8.8%) | [ | |||||
| Juncaceae | Common rush | plant decoction used as emetic | plant | [ | ||
| Medullae: | [ | |||||
| Plant: cinnamoylglycerols (1- | [ | |||||
| Plant: 8-dihydroxy-1,7-dimethyl-6-vinyl-10,11-dihydro-dibenz[ | [ | |||||
| Stems: cycloartane glucosides (juncosides II–V) | [ | |||||
| Plant: cycloartane triterpenoids (lagerenol, cycloartane-3β,24,25-triol, cycloart-22Z-ene-3β,25-diol, sterculin A, cycloart-25-ene-3β,24-diol, 3-hydroxycycloart-25-ene-24-one, 24,25-epoxycycloartan-3β-ol) | [ | |||||
| Plant: cycloartane glucoside juncoside I | [ | |||||
| Medullae: phenanthrenes (junceunins E–G, dehydrojuncuenins D–E); junceunin E cytotoxic to MCF-7 and HeLa cells | [ | |||||
| Underground parts: phenanthrenes (dehydroeffusol, juncusol); compounds showed UVA light-enhanced antimicrobial activities due to DNA binding | [ | |||||
| Plant: phenanthrenes (4-ethenyl-9,10-dihydro-1,8-dimethyl-2,7-phenanthrenediol, 4-ethenyl-9,10-dihydro-7-methoxy-1,8-dimethyl-2-phenanthrenol, 4-ethenyl-9,10-dihydro-3,8-dimethyl-1,7-phenanthrenediol, 4-ethenyl-9,10-dihydro-7-methoxy-3,8-dimethyl-1-phenanthrenol, 4-ethenyl-9,10-dihydro-7-hydroxy-8-methyl-2-phenanthrenecarboxylic acid) | [ | |||||
| Plant: phenanthrenes (junceunin F 2-methyl ether, 4-formyl-9,10-dihydro-3,7-dihydroxy-2,8-dimethylphenanthrene, 5-ethenyl-9,10-dihydro-1,7-dimethyl-2,3-phenanthrenediol, 9,10-dihydro-1,7-dihydroxy-4-(1-hydroxyethyl)-2,8-dimethylphenanthrene, 9,10-dihydro-6,6-dihydroxy-5-(1-hydroxyethyl)-1,7-dimethylphenanthrene, 9,10-dihydro-2,6-dihydroxy-5-(1-methoxyethyl)-1,7-dimethylphenanthrene, 4-ethenyl-9,10-dihydro-7-hydroxy-8-methyl-1-phenanthrenecarboxylic acid) | [ | |||||
| Plant: phenanthrenes (2-hydroxy-7-(hydroxymethyl)-1-methyl-5-vinyl-9,10-dihydrophenanthrene, 2-hydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl)-1-methyl-5-vinyl-9,10-dihydrophenanthrene, 2-hydroxy-5-(hydroxymethyl)-1,7-dimethyl-9,10-dihydrophenanthrene, 2,7-dihydroxy-5-(hydroxymethyl)-1,8-dimethyl-9,10-dihydrophenanthrene, 2-hydroxy-5-(hydroxymethyl)-7-methoxy-1,8-dimethyl-9,10-dihydrophenanthrene, 5-(1-ethoxy)-2,7-dihydroxy-1,8-dimethyl-9,10-dihydrophenanthrene, 2-hydroxy-1,7-dimethyl-9,10-dihydrophenanthro-[5,6-b]-4′,5′-dihydro-4′,5′-dihydroxyfuran) | [ | |||||
| Plant: phenanthrene glucosides (Effusides I–V) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: phenanthrenes (7-carboxy-2-hydroxy-1-methyl-5-vinyl-phenanthrene, 2,7-dihydroxy-1-methyl-5-aldehyde-9,10-dihydrophenanthrene, dehydroeffusol, dehydrojuncusol, 7-carboxy-2-hydroxy-1-methyl-5-vinyl-9,10-dihydrophenanthrene, 8-carboxy-2-hydroxy-1-methyl-5-vinyl-9,10-dihydrophenanthrene, effusol, and juncusol; effusol and juncusol showed anxiolytic and sedative activities) | [ | |||||
| Medullae: diterpenoid effusenone A, phenanthrene 5-(hydroxymethyl)-1-methylphenanthrene-2,7-diol, pyrenes 1-methylpyrene-2,7-diol and 7-methoxy-8-methylpyren-2-ol | [ | |||||
| Medullae: phenanthrenes (effusol, dehydroeffusol, dehydroeffusal) | [ | |||||
| Medullae: phenanthrenes (effusol, dehydroeffusol, juncusol, dehydrojuncusol, juncuenin B, dehydrojuncuenin B, juncuenin D, and effususol A), flavonoids (luteolin and luteolin 5-methyl ether), and 4-hydroxy-2,3-dimethyl-2-nonen-4-olide | [ | |||||
| Plant: tetrahydropyrene glucosides (4,5,9,10-tetrahydro-2,7-dihydroxy-1,6-dimethylpyrene monoglucoside and diglucoside) | [ | |||||
| Medullae: phenanthrene dimers (effususins A–D); effususins A and B showed cytotoxic activity against several tumor cell lines; effususin B showed inflammatory activity (inhibition of NO production in LPS-stimulated RAW 264.7 cells) | [ | |||||
| Phenanthrenes from medullae of | [ | |||||
| The phenanthrene dehydroeffusol shows anxiolytic and sedative effects (mouse model) | [ | |||||
| The phenanthrenes effusol and dehydroeffusol activate GABAA receptors, explaining the traditional Chinese use of the plant as a sedative and anxiolytic agent | [ | |||||
| Cupress-aceae | Eastern red cedar | decoction of berries given for worms; infusion of some part taken for colds; ointment used on skin diseases | various | [ | ||
| Bark EO: α-pinene (77.5%) | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: α-pinene (2.3–6.5%), sabinene (2.8–8.7%), limonene (4.1–5.0%), safrole (18.8–22.3%), methyl eugenol (11.9–13.8%), elemol (10.6–13.6%), elemicin (6.8–7.1%) | [ | |||||
| Berry EO: limonene (63.1%), elemol (18.4%) | [ | |||||
| Wood EO: α-cedrene (27.2–35.0%), β-cedrene (7.7%), thujopsene (27.6–30.0%), cuparene (2.0–6.3%), cedrol (4.0–15.8%), widdrol (1.0–2.0%) | [ | |||||
| Wood EO: α-cedrene (4.0%), β-cedrene (2.0%), thujopsene (30.1%), cedrol (38.8%), widdrol (5.6%) | [ | |||||
| Wood EO: α-cedrene (41.4%), β-cedrene (7.5%), | dT b | |||||
| Leaves: podophyllotoxin | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Canada lettuce | infusion taken for pain and calming nerves | plant | [ | ||
| Roots: sesquiterpene lactones (3-epizaluzanin C glucoside, 9-hydroxydehydroleucodin glucoside, zaluzanin C, 11β,13-dihydrozaluzanin C, 3-epizaluzanin C, 11β,13-dihydro 3-epizaluzanin C, vernoflexuoside, 11β,13-dihydro vernoflexuoside, macrocliniside A, ixerin F, picriside B, santamarin, 11β,13-dihydro santamarin, armexifolin, 1-epidehydroisoerivanin, armefolin, 1-epiisoerivanin, 3α-hydroxyreynosin and 1-epierivanin) | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Blazing star | tonic, tincture used on pains | root | [ | ||
| Flavonoid glycosides: quercetin 3-glucoside, quercetin 3-rutinoside, and quercetin 3-glucoside-7-rhamnoside | [ | |||||
| Leaf: major volatiles: α-pinene, mesityl oxide, β-pinene, myrcene, 2,4-heptadienal, β-caryophyllene, germacrene D, caryophyllene oxide | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: guaianolide sesquiterpenoid spicatin | [ | |||||
| Corms (underground stems): sterols (stigmasterol and its 3- | [ | |||||
| Lauraceae | Spicebush | infusion taken for measles, cough | bark | [ | ||
| infusion of leaves taken for coughs, colds, flu | leaves | [ | ||||
| Leaf EO: 6-methyl-5-hepten-2-one (42.9%), β-caryophyllene (7.7%), bicyclogermacrene (5.1%), δ-cadinene (4.9%), and ( | [ | |||||
| Twigs EO: α-pinene (5.9%), sabinene (6.8%), α-phellandrene (4.2%), 1,8-cineole (45.4%), α-terpineol (6.8%) | [ | |||||
| Fruit EO: myrcene (4.7%), α-phellandrene (64.6%), β-phellandrene (11.2%) | [ | |||||
| Fruit: (6 | [ | |||||
| Altingiaceae | Sweet gum | inner bark for diarrhea, externally for wounds, sores, ulcers | bark | [ | ||
| Bark: shikimic acid | [ | |||||
| Bark: pentacyclic triterpenoids (25-acetoxy-3α-hydroxyolean-12-en-28-oic acid, 3α,25-dihydroxyolean-12-en-28-oic acid, 6β-hydroxy-3-oxolup-20(29)-en-28-oic acid, and 3,11-dioxoolean-12-en-28-oic acid); 25-acetoxy-3α-hydroxyolean-12-en-28-oic acid showed broad cytotoxic activity against a panel of human tumor cell lines | [ | |||||
| Bark: polyphenolics (shikimic acid, gallic acid, vanillic acid) | [ | |||||
| Cones: pentacyclic triterpenoids (6β,30-dihydroxy-3-oxolup-20(29)-en-28-oic acid, 3α-hydroxy-11-oxoolean-12-en-28-oic acid, and massagenic acid G) | [ | |||||
| Leaves: polyphenolics (gallic acid, isorugosin, casuarictin, quercetin-3- | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: β-sitosterol, lupeol, oleanolic acid, ursolic acid, luteolin, orientin, isoorientin, kaempferol 3- | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: α-Pinene (26.2–28.0%), β-pinene (10.1–11.3%), Limonene (20.7–22.3%) | [ | |||||
| Stem EO: α-Pinene (11.1–16.0%), β-pinene (4.4–8.6%), Limonene (11.2–12.9%), β-caryophyllene (5.4–6.9%), germacrene D (6.7–10.9%) | [ | |||||
| Magnoli-aceae | Tulip tree | bark infusion taken for pinworms, cholera, coughs, rheumatism | bark | [ | ||
| Bark: lignans (lirionol, syringic acid methyl ester, pinoresinol, syringaresinol), aporphine alkaloids ( | [ | |||||
| Bark: aporphine alkaloids (asimilobine, norushinsunine, norglacine, liriodenine, anonaine, oxoglaucine); the aporphine alkaloids showed antiplasmodial activity | [ | |||||
| Leaves: germacranolide sesquiterpenoids (peroxyferolide, lipiferolide); showed antiplasmodial and cytotoxic activities | [ | |||||
| Leaves: aporphine alkaloids (anonaine, norstephalagine, liridinine, nornuciferine, caaverine, lirinidine, lysicamine), a coumarin (scopoletin), a germacranolide (epitulipinolide diepoxide), polyphenolics (β-orcinol carboxylate, syringaldehyde, syringic acid, vanillic acid), sterols (β-sitosterol, stigmasterol); anonaine, liridinine, lysicamine, and epitulipinolide diepoxide significantly inhibited prolifertion of A375 melanoma cells | [ | |||||
| Leaves: germacranolide (dihydrochrysanolide, 11,13-dehydrolanuginolide, laurenbiolide) and guaianolide (β-cyclolipiferolide) sesquiterpenoids | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: lignans (sesamin, syringaresinol, dihydrodehydrodiconiferyl alcohol, salvinal, guaicylglycerol-8- | [ | |||||
| Roots: germacranolides (tulipinolide, epitulipinolide) | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: ( | [ | |||||
| Bark EO: α-Pinene (6.7–11.3%), camphene (1.1–5.0%), β-pinene (6.9–19.1%), myrcene (2.4–11.7%), limonene (4.5–12.0%), β-phellandrene (up to 13.7%), ( | [ | |||||
| Campanu-laceae | Cardinal flower | root infusion for worms, rheumatism; leaf infusion for colds, fever; root poultice for sores | root, leaves | [ | ||
| Aerial parts: alkaloid lobinaline | [ | |||||
| Hairy root culture: diacetylene triol lobetyol + glucosides lobetyolin and lobetyolinin | [ | |||||
| Leaves: anthocyanin cyanidin-3- | [ | |||||
| Campanu-laceae | Indian tobacco | root poultice used on pains; root/leaf poultice used on ringworm, insect bites | root, leaves | [ | ||
| Hairy root culture: diacetylene triol lobetyol + glucosides lobetyolin and lobetyolinin | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: piperidine alkaloids (lobeline, lobelanine, norlobeline, norlobelanine, lobelanidine, norallosedamine, 8-ethyl-10-phenylnorlobelionol, 8-ethyl-10-phenyllobelionol) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: piperidine alkaloids (8,10-diethyllobelidione, 8,10-diethyllobelidione, 8-ethyl-10-phenyl-norlobelionol, 8-ethyl-10-phenyl-dehydrolobelionol, 8-ethyl-10-phenyl-dehydrolobelionol, lobeline, lobelidine, lobelanine) | [ | |||||
| Campanu-laceae | Great blue lobelia | root infusion for worms; leaf infusion for colds, fever | root, leaves | [ | ||
| Aerial parts: piperidine alkaloids (lobeline, cis-8,10-diphenyllobelidiol, ( | [ | |||||
| Lamiaceae | Virginia bugleweed | tea; root applied to snakebite | plant, root | [ | ||
| Aerial parts: flavone glucuronides (7- | [ | |||||
| Magnoli-aceae | Cucumber magnolia | bark infusion for toothache | bark | [ | ||
| Root bark: lignans (calopiptin, galgravin, veraguensin, and acuminatin) | [ | |||||
| Root bark: alkaloids (anolobine, | [ | |||||
| Leaves: alkaloids (asimilobine, liriodenine, norarmepavine, roemerine, armepavine, magnocurarine, magnoflorine) | [ | |||||
| Menisperm-aceae | Common moonseed | root used for skin diseases | root | [ | ||
| Roots: alkaloid dauricine | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: alkaloid acutumine | [ | |||||
| Roots: alkaloids (acutumine, acutumidine, dauricine, daurinoline, | [ | |||||
| Lamiaceae | Scarlet beebalm | infusion abortifacient; poultice for colds, headache | leaves | Several essential oil chemotypes are known | [ | |
| Floral EO: sabinene (5.0%), γ-terpinene (5.3%), | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: linalool (74.2%), bornyl acetate (5.7%), germacrene D (5.3%) | [ | |||||
| Commercial EO (Pam′innov, Le Chaffaut-Saint-Jurson, Provence, France): geraniol (89.5%) | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: δ-3-carene (4.5%), | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: γ-terpinene (7.0%), α-terpinene (7.0%), | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: γ-terpinene (6.6%), | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO ( | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: δ-3-carene (4.1–4.5%), | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: | [ | |||||
| Leaves and flowers: flavonoids (rutin, hyperoside, quercitrin, luteolin, quercetin) | [ | |||||
| Lamiaceae | Wild bergamot | fevers, colds | plant | Several subspecies are known | [ | |
| Aerial parts EO: geraniol (86.8%) | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: myrcene (8.1%), α-phellandrene (13.7%), β-phellandrene (17.0%), | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: myrcene (8.6–8.7%), α-phellandrene (13.7–14.0%), | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: α-terpineol (35.9%, 99% | WNS c | |||||
| Onagraceae | Evening primrose | eye conditions due to asthma, allergies; poultice on boils | root | [ | ||
| poultice used on hemorrhoids | leaves | [ | ||||
| Roots: oenotheralanosterol A, oenotheralanosterol B | [ | |||||
| Roots: oenotheralanosterol A, oenotheralanosterol B | [ | |||||
| Roots: gallic acid (antifungal) | [ | |||||
| Roots: 6-(13,14-ciacetyloxyprenyl)-1,3,7-trimethoxyxanthone, eicos-9-enoyl-α-d-glucopyranosyl-(6→1′′)-α-d-glucopyranoside | [ | |||||
| Roots: oleanolic acid, maslinic acid, β-sitolsterol, gallic acid, 2,7,8-trimethylellagic acid, tetramethylellagic acid, 2-methyl-7-oxotritetracont-1,5,dien-21ol, 18-hydroxypentacos-21-enoic acid, 5-methyl-27-oxotriacont-4-en-24-ol, and 3,5-dihydroxy-4-pent-4′-enoyl-1′-oxymethylbenzoic acid | [ | |||||
| Seed oil: linoleic acid, sterols (campesterol, β-sitosterol, Δ5-avenasterol) | [ | |||||
| Seeds: catechin, epicatechin, gallic acid | [ | |||||
| Seeds: protocatechuic acid | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: phenolics (galloylglucose, gallic acid, oenothein B, quercetin 3- | [ | |||||
| Araliaceae | American ginseng | root used as tonic | root | [ | ||
| Root (wild): ginsenosides [Rb1 (2.81%), Rb2 (0.09%), Rc (0.42%), Rd (0.29%), Re (1.42%), and Rg1 (0.94%)] | [ | |||||
| Root: ginsenosides (Rb1, Rb2, Rc, Rd, Re, Rf and Rg1) | [ | |||||
| Root (cultivated): ginsenosides [Rb1 (3.70%), Rb2 (0.05%), Rc (0.41%), Rd (0.42%), Re (0.50%), and Rg1 (0.13%)] | [ | |||||
| Root (cultivated): ginsenosides [Rb1 (1.85%), Rb2 (0.04%), Rb3 (0.04%), Rc (0.29%), Rd (0.29%), Re (2.05%), Rg1 (0.25%), and F11 (0.20%)] | [ | |||||
| Root (cultivated): polyacetylenes (falcarinol, panaxydol) | [ | |||||
| Root (cultivated): ginsenosides [Rb1 (4.94%), Rb2 (0.04%), Rc (0.39%), Rd (0.60%), Re (1.75%), and Rg1 (0.13%)] | [ | |||||
| Leaves (wild): ginsenosides [Rb1 (0.17%), Rb2 (1.04%), Rc (0.18%), Rd (1.08%), Re (0.93%), and Rg1 (0.14%)] | [ | |||||
| Leaves (cultivated): ginsenosides [Rb1 (0.28%), Rb2 (1.82%), Rb3 (4.64%), Rc (0.56%), Rd (2.82%), Re (3.42%), Rg1 (0.96%), and F11 (1.94%)] | [ | |||||
| Review of chemical analysis of | [ | |||||
| Review of pharmacology and toxicology of | [ | |||||
| Review of ginsenosides in | [ | |||||
| Review of pharmacology of | [ | |||||
| Araliaceae | Dwarf ginseng | root used as tonic | root | [ | ||
| Leaves: flavonoids (kaempferol-3,7-dirhamnoside and kaempferol-3-gluco-7-rhamnoside), ginsenosides (ginsenoside-Rd, -Rc, -Rb3 and notoginsenoside-Fe) | [ | |||||
| Leaves: ginsenosides (Ro, Rb1, Rb2, Rc) | [ | |||||
| Vitaceae | Virginia creeper | infusion taken for jaundice | [ | |||
| Stem: resveratrol oligomers, parthenocissins A and B, were isolated in addition to three known stilbenes (resveratrol, piceatannol, resveratrol 3-glucoside) | [ | |||||
| Stem: oligostilbenes, parthenocissins M and N, together with two known compounds, miyabenol C and ϵ-viniferin | [ | |||||
| Leaves: β-amyryl palmitate; shows thrombin inhibitory activity | [ | |||||
| Passiflor- aceae | Passion flower | root infusion used for boils, earache, to wean babies; poultice for wounds | root | [ | ||
| Plant: | [ | |||||
| Plant: flavonoid glycosides (vicenin-2. schaftoside, isoschaftoside isoorientin-2′′- | [ | |||||
| Plant: flavonoid glycoside (isoscoparin-2′′- | [ | |||||
| Plant: | [ | |||||
| The phytochemistry of | [ | |||||
| Phytolac-caceae | Pokeweed | poultice used for ulcers; root infusion used for eczema | root | [ | ||
| Roots: triterpenoid saponins (phytolaccosides A, D, E) | [ | |||||
| Roots: triterpenoid saponin (phytolaccoside B) | [ | |||||
| Roots: triterpenoid saponins (phytolaccasaponins B, E, G) | [ | |||||
| Roots: triterpenoid saponins (phytolaccasaponins N1–N5; esculentoside H, esculentoside A = phytolaccoside E, esculentoside M, esculentoside B = phytolaccoside B, esculentoside S, esculentoside R-28- | [ | |||||
| Roots: phytosterol α-spinasterol | [ | |||||
| Pinaceae | Pine | wash for skin ulcers/sores; sap used on stubborn sores; syrup from inner bark for coughs/congestion; inner bark used for intestinal worms and parasites. | bark | [ | ||
| Bark EO: α-pinene (43.1%), β-pinene (24.8%), β-phellandrene (13.9%) | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: α-pinene (22.8%), β-pinene (25.1%), β-phellandrene (14.3%), α-terpineol (8.7%) | [ | |||||
| Plantagin-aceae | Narrowleaf plantain | infusion or poultice used for bites and stings | plant | [ | ||
| Herb: purpureaside A, lavandulifolioside B, acteoside, luteolin-3′,7-diglucuronide, isoacteoside, luteolin-7-glucuronide, and luteolin | [ | |||||
| Herb: phenolic acids: | [ | |||||
| Herb: iridoid glycosides: aucubin and catapol | [ | |||||
| Herb: iridoid glycosides: aucubin and catapol | [ | |||||
| Herb: acteoside, aucubin, catalpol | [ | |||||
| Herb: acteoside, aucubin, catalpol | [ | |||||
| Plantagin-aceae | Common plantain | infusion or poultice used for bites and stings | plant | [ | ||
| Review, Herb: aucubin, melittoside, asperuloside, melampyroside, plantarenaloside, ixoroside, majoroside, 10-hydroxymajoroside, 10-acetoxymajoroside, acteoside, plantamajoside | [ | |||||
| Review, Herb: caffeic acid derivatives (caffeic acid, chlorogenic acid, plantamajoside, acteoside), flavonoids (apigenin 7-glucoside, baicalein, hispidulin, hispidulin 7-glucuronide, homoplantaginin, luteolin 7-glucoside, luteolin 7-diglucoside, luteolin 6-hydroxy-4′-methoxy-7-galactoside, nepetin 7-glucoside, plantaginin, scutellarein), iridoid glycosides (asperuloside, aucubin, catapol, gardoside, geniposidic acid, majoroside, 10-acetoxymajoroside, 10-hydroxymajoroside, melittoside), triterpenoids (oleanolic acid, ursolic acid, 18β-glycyrrhetinic acid). Bioactivities of extracts includes wound healing activity, anti-inflammatory, analgesic, antioxidant, weak antibiotic, immuno modulating and antiulcerogenic activity | [ | |||||
| [ | ||||||
| Herb: ursolic acid, oleanolic acid | [ | |||||
| Herb: ursolic acid, oleanolic acid | [ | |||||
| Herb: isomarynoside, 10-hydroxymajoroside, β-sitosterol, ursolic acid | [ | |||||
| Herb: ursolic acid, oleanolic acid | [ | |||||
| Herb: α-linolenic acid, ursolic acid, oleanolic acid; SFE extract showed COX-2 inhibitory activity | [ | |||||
| Platanaceae | American sycamore | infusion of inner bark for cough, measles, urinary infection | bark | [ | ||
| Bark: anti-MRSA flavonoids (kaempferol 3- | [ | |||||
| Berberi-daceae | Mayapple | anthelmintic, sores | root | [ | ||
| warts | resin | [ | ||||
| Roots: aryltetralin lignans (podophyllotoxin, picropodophyllotoxin, α-peltatin, β-peltatin, desoxypodophyllotoxin) | [ | |||||
| Roots: aryltetralin lignans (podophyllotoxin, 4′-demethylpodophyllotoxin, α-peltatin, β-peltatin, desoxypodophyllotoxin, podophyllotoxone, isopicropodophyllone, 4′-demethyldesoxypodophyllotoxin, 4′-demethylpodophyllotoxone and 4′-demethylisopicropodophyllone | [ | |||||
| Plants: aryltetralin lignans (podophyllotoxin 4- | [ | |||||
| Polygalaceae | Seneca snakeroot | snakebite | root | [ | ||
| Root: triterpenoid saponin senegin-II | [ | |||||
| Root: triterpenoid saponins (senegin III, senegin IV) | [ | |||||
| Root: oligosaccharide esters (senegose A, senegose B, senegose C, senegose D, senegose E) | [ | |||||
| Root: oligosaccharide esters (senegose F, senegose G, senegose H, senegose I) | [ | |||||
| Root: oligosaccharide esters (senegose J, senegose K, senegose L, senegoseM, senegose N, senegose O) | [ | |||||
| Root: triterpenoid saponins (senegin II, senegin III, | [ | |||||
| Root: essential oil [hexanoic acid (33.6%), methyl salicylate (26.5%), n-hexanal (5.3%) and o-cresol (3.5%)] | [ | |||||
| Root: triterpenoid saponins (senegin II, senegin III, senegin IV, senegasaponin A, senegasaponin B) | [ | |||||
| Polygon-aceae | Prostrate knotweed | fish poison | plant | [ | ||
| Plant: lignan aviculin; flavonoids (juglanin, avicularin, astragalin, and betmidin) | [ | |||||
| Plant: naphthoquinone 6-methoxyplumbagin, also β-sitosterol, oleanolic acid, and 5,6,7,4′-tetramethoxyflavanone | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: flavonoids (avicularin, liquiritin, cinaroside) | [ | |||||
| Plant: flavonol glucuronides [myricetin 3- | [ | |||||
| Leaves: flavonoids (myricetin, quercetin, kaempferol, myricitrin, desmanthin-1, isoquercitrin, quercitrin, avicularin, juglanin) and gallic acid | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: flavonoids (avicularin, juglanin, myricitrin, isoastragalin, isoquercitrin, kaempferol-5,7-di- | [ | |||||
| Polygon-aceae | Marshpepper knotweed | fish poison | plant | [ | ||
| Plant: polygodial | [ | |||||
| Plant: drimane sesquiterpenoids (warburanal, polygodial, isopolygodial, polygonal, isodrimeninol, drimenol, confertifolin) | [ | |||||
| Plant: flavonoids [rutin (0.58–0.93%), hyperin (0.37–0.63%), isoquercitrin (0.08–0.38%), quercitrin (0.55–0.95%), catechin (0.06–0.09%), epicatechin (0.05–0.08%), quercetin (0.28–0.65%), kaempferol (0.28–0.53%), isorhamnetin (0.03–0.04%)] | [ | |||||
| Leaves: drimane sesquiterpenoids (polygonic acid, 11-ethoxycinnamolide, polygodial acetal, valdiviolide, and fuegin), drimane norsesquiterpenoids (isopolygonal and polygonone) | [ | |||||
| Leaves: flavonoids (7,4′-dimethylquercetin, 3′-methylquercetin, quercetin, isoquercitrin) | [ | |||||
| Leaves: flavonoid sulfates (quercetin 3-sulfate, isorhamnetin 3,7-disulfate, and tamarixetin 3-glucoside-7-sulfate) | [ | |||||
| Leaves: flavonoids [3- | [ | |||||
| Sprout: drimane sesquiterpenoids (polygodial, warburganal) | [ | |||||
| Sprout: flavonoid (2 | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: sucrose cinnamyl esters (hydropiperoside A, hydropiperoside B, vanicoside A, vanicoside B, vanicoside E) | [ | |||||
| Sprout: essential oil [β-caryophyllene (9.3%), α-humulene (6.0%), ( | [ | |||||
| Leaves: essential oil (confertifolin, 22.9%) | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Whiteflower leafcup | Houma Native American use (not Cherokee) applied a leaf poultice to swellings | leaves | [ | ||
| Leaf EO: germacrene D (44.5–63.7%), β-caryophyllene (14.8–15.9%), α-humulene (3.9–5.1%) | WNSc | |||||
| Asteraceae | Leafcup, Bear′s foot | bruised root used on cuts, burns | root | [ | ||
| Germacranolide sesquiterpenoids (uvedalin, isouvedalin, 2′,3′-dehydromelnerin A, 9-hydroxy-2′,3′-dehydromelnerin A), | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: caryophyllane sesquiterpenoids: β-caryophyllene (16.5–24.5%), caryophyllene oxide (14.2–19.8%), caryophylla-4(12), 8(13)-dien-5β-ol (2.3–5.5%), 14-hydroxy-9-epi-( | WNSc | |||||
| Lamiaceae | Heal-all | sore throat, cuts, burns | plant | [ | ||
| Leaf EO: selin-1 1-en-4α-ol (14.9%), | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: aromadendrene (55.4%), cucumber alcohol (8.5%) and phytol (5.1%) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: rosmarinic acid, ursolic acid, oleanolic acid | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: rosmarinic acid, ursolic acid, oleanolic acid | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: four triterpenes, i.e., betulinic acid, ursolic acid, 2α,3α-dihydroxyurs-12-en-28-oic acid, and 2α-hydroxyursolic acid | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: polyacetylenic acids (octadeca-9,11,13-triynoic acid and trans-octadec-13-ene-9,11-diynoic acid | [ | |||||
| oleanane-skeleton triterpenoid saponins, 3β,4β,16α-17-carboxy-16,24-dihydroxy-28-norolean-12-en-3-yl 4- | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: 15 triterpene acids (oleanic acid, ursolic acid, 2α,3α,19α-trihydroxyurs-12-en-28-oic acid, 2α,3α-dihydroxyurs-12-en-28-oic acid, maslinic acid, 2α,3α,19α,23-tetrahydroxyurs-12-en-28-oic acid, 2α,3α,23-trihydroxyurs-12-en-28-oic acid, 2α,3β-dihydroxyurs-12-en-28-oic acid, 2α,3β,24-trihydroxyolea-12-en-28-oic acid, (12 | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: polyphenolics (butyl rosmarinate, ethyl rosmarinate, methyl rosmarinate, rosmarinic acid, 3,4,α-trihydroxy-methyl phenylpropionate, and | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: phenolics (quercetin, rutin, rosmarinic acid, caffeic acid, chlorogenic acid ferulic acid, protocatechuic acid) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: polygalacerebroside, ursolic acid, β-amyrin, quercetin, quercetin-3- | [ | |||||
| Prunaceae | Black cherry | bark infusion for colds | bark | [ | ||
| Leaves: flavonoids (avicularin, noutrin, hyperoside, narcissin, rutin, quercetin 3- | [ | |||||
| Leaves: chlorogenic acid (1.08–2.30%), rutin (0.10–0.35%), hyperoside (1.20–2.23%), reynoutrin (0.26–0.44%), guajiverin (0.07–0.22%), avicularin (0.98–1.82%), juglanin (0.04–0.20%) | [ | |||||
| Leaves: triterpenoids [corosolic acid (0.137%), olanolic acid (0.129%), ursolic acid (0.884%)] | [ | |||||
| Leaves: hyperoside, prunin, ursolic acid | [ | |||||
| Leaves: chlorogenic acid, hyperoside, benzaldehyde | [ | |||||
| Leaf EO: benzyl alcohol (20.3%), benzaldehyde (12.1%), cinnamyl alcohol (4.7%), cinnamaldehyde (1.1%) | [ | |||||
| Flowers: chlorogenic acid (0.63–1.90%), rutin (0.17–0.31%), hyperoside (0.80–1.59%), reynoutrin (0.08–0.21%), guajiverin (0.10–0.28%), avicularin (0.20–0.95%), juglanin (0.08–0.16%) | [ | |||||
| Bark: triterpenoids (ursolic acid, ursolic aldehyde, 2α,3α-dihydroxyurs-12-en-28-oic acid) | [ | |||||
| Bark: flavonoids (4′-methoxynaringenin, naringenin, dihydrokaempferol, eriodictyol) | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Rabbit tobacco | infusion of herb for coughs, colds, flu | herb | [ | ||
| Plant: flavonoid obtusifolin | [ | |||||
| Plant: flavonoids (gnaphaliin A, methylgnaphaliin) | [ | |||||
| Plant: flavonoid 3,5,7-trihydroxy-6,8-dimethoxyflavone | [ | |||||
| Lamiaceae | Mountain mint | leaf infusion for headache, colds, fevers | leaves | [ | ||
| Whole plant: vanillic acid 1- | [ | |||||
| Fagaceae | White oak | bark infusion for dysentery, antiseptic, fever | bark | [ | ||
| Bark: tannins | [ | |||||
| Ranuncu- laceae | Tall buttercup | leaf poultice for abcesses; leaf infusion for sore throat | leaves | [ | ||
| Aerial parts: ranunculin | [ | |||||
| Rhamnaceae | Buckthorn | itching skin, sores | berries, bark | |||
| Bark: chrysophanol, physcion, ararobinol, orachrysone, 1-docosanol | [ | |||||
| Bark EO: chrysarobin (24.2%), piperine (15.4%), and pacharin (7.5%) | [ | |||||
| Anacardi-aceae | Smooth sumac | bark decoction to wash blisters | bark | [ | ||
| Branches: methyl gallate, 3,5-dihydroxy-4-methoxybenzoic acid, gallic acid; methyl gallate and 3,5-dihydroxy-4-methoxybenzoic acid showed antibacterial activity | [ | |||||
| Leaves: | [ | |||||
| Anacardi-aceae | Staghorn sumac | bark decoction to wash blisters | bark | [ | ||
| Fruits: major components: sumadin B-3- | [ | |||||
| Fruits: major components: sumadin B-3- | [ | |||||
| Anacardi-aceae | infusion of berries for urinary tract infections, thrush | berries | [ | |||
| Fabaceae | Black locust | bark chewed as emetic | bark | [ | ||
| Bark: lectins (RPbAI and RPbAII) | [ | |||||
| Bark: lectin RPbAI (xtal structure) | [ | |||||
| Saplings: flavonoids (acacetin, secundiflorol I, mucronulatol, isomucronulatol, isovestitol) | [ | |||||
| Leaves: flavonoid glycosides (7- | [ | |||||
| Roots: lectins (RPrAI and RPrAII) | [ | |||||
| Rosaceae | Allegheny blackberry | leaf infusion for diarrhea | leaves | [ | ||
| Leaf extract: triterpenoids (tormentic acid, euscaphic acid, myrianthic acid, ziyu glycoside II, sericic acid, and 19-hydroxy-2,3-secours-12-ene-2,3,28-trioic acid 3-methyl ester) | [ | |||||
| Rosaceae | Red raspberry | leaf infusion for pain; root infusion cathartic | roots, leaves | [ | ||
| Leaf extract: quercetin glucuronide, quercetin-3-glucoside and quercetin glucosylrhamnoside (rutin) | [ | |||||
| Leaf extract: triterpenoid glycosides (3β-( | [ | |||||
| Leaf extracts: tannins (ellagic acids, ellagitannins, sanguiin H-6 and H-10, and the trimers lambertianin D and lambertianin C, as well as methyl gallate), phenolic acids (chlorogenic acid, | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Orange coneflower | root used for ear medicine | root | [ | ||
| Leaf EO: β-caryophyllene (10.0%), γ-muurolene (8.9%), germacrene D (30.1%), δ-cadinene (17.8%) | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Black-eyed Susan | root infusion taked for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) | root | [ | ||
| Leaf EO: (2 | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Souchan, Green-headed coneflower | tonic, skin wash | leaves | [ | ||
| Aerial parts: lignans ((+)-4,4′- | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: flavonoid glycosides (quercetin 3- | [ | |||||
| Roots: sesquiterpene rudbeckianone | [ | |||||
| Roots: sesquiterpene lactone rudbeckiolide | [ | |||||
| Root extract: sesquiterpenoids (sesquithuriferol, igalan, lacinan-8-ol) | [ | |||||
| Adoxaceae | American elder | berry infusion for rheumatism; infusion of flowers taken for fever; leaves used to wash sores | plant | [ | ||
| Flowers: rutin | [ | |||||
| Fruits: anthocyanins (cyanidin 3-sambubioside-5-glucoside, cyanidin 3,5-diglucoside, cyanidin 3-sambubioside, cyanidin 3-glucoside, cyanidin 3- | [ | |||||
| Fruits: anthocyanins [cyanidin 3-sambubioside-5-glucoside (0.0.11–0.19%), cyanidin 3,5-diglucoside (0.03–0.06%), cyanidin 3-sambubioside (0.03–0.04%), cyanidin 3-glucoside (0.04–0.06%), cyanidin 3-( | [ | |||||
| Fruits: anthocyanins (cyanidin 3- | [ | |||||
| Papaver-aceae | Bloodroot | root decoction for cough | root | [ | ||
| Rhizome: alkaloids (sanguinarine, chelerythrine, protopine) | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: alkaloids [protopine (0.32–0.74%), allocryptopine (0.34–0.77%), sanguinarine (1.38–4.45%), chelerythrine (0.99–2.57%), chelirubine (0.37–0.87%), chelilutine (0.78–1.83%), sanguilutine (0.49–1.03%)] | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: alkaloids (sanguinarine and chelerythrine-antimycobacterial) | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: alkaloids (sanguinarine, chelerythrine, protopine - anti-Helicobacter pylori) | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: alkaloids [sanguinarine (2.81–3.96%), chelerythrine (1.38–2.08%)] | [ | |||||
| Rhizome: alkaloids (sanguinarine, chelerythrine, sanguilutine, chelilutine, sanguirubine, chelirubine, protopine, and allocryptopine) | [ | |||||
| Lauraceae | Sassafras | bark decoction for skin diseases, sexually-transmitted diseases; poultice for wounds and sores | bark | [ | ||
| Leaf EO: (3 | [ | |||||
| Root EO: safrole (85%), camphor (3.25%), and methyleugenol (1.10%) | [ | |||||
| Bark EO: α-pinene (37.9–61.5%), camphene (2.9–5.1%), β-pinene (10.0–13.0%), 1,8-cineole (7.3–10.0%), camphor (1.7–4.6%), and α-terpineol (4.2–11.6%) | [ | |||||
| Bark: sesamin, spinescin, β-sitosterol, hexatriacontanal, and 1-triacontanol; sesamin and spinescin showed antileishmanial activity | [ | |||||
| Saururaceae | Lizard′s tail | mashed roots poultice for wounds | root | [ | ||
| Aerial parts: lignans (austrobailignan-5, veraguensin, guaiacin, saucernetin) | [ | |||||
| Plant: lignans (manassantin A, manassantin B, saucerneol) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: indole alkaloids (sauristolactam, cepharanone B) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: lignans (saururin, saururenin, saururinone, austrobailignan 6, calopiptin, galbacin, zuonin A) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: lignans (sauriol A, sauriol B) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: lignans (licarin A, saucernetin, dihydroguaiaretic acid, sauriol A, sauriol B, saucerneol, and saucerneol methyl ether) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: diterpenoid 12,13-dehydrogeranylgeraniol | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: lignans (manassantin B, 4- | [ | |||||
| Stems and leaves: lignans (manassantin A, manassantin B, manassantin B1, 4- | [ | |||||
| Lamiaceae | Blue skullcap | root infusion for monthly period, diarrhea; root decoction to expel afterbirth; for breast pains, and for nerves | root | [ | ||
| Review | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts EO: δ-cadinene (27%), calamenene (15.2%), β-elemene (9.2%), α-cubenene (4.2%), α-humulene (4.2%), and α-bergamotene (2.8%) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: neo-clerodane diterpenoids (scutelaterin A, scutelaterin B, scutelaterin C, ajugapitin, and scutecyprol A) | [ | |||||
| Herb: flavonoids baicalin and baicalein (aglycone) | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: indole alkaloids (melatonin, serotonin); flavonoids (baicalin, baicalein, wogonin, scutellarin) | [ | |||||
| Herb: flavonoids (viscidulin III, chrysin, baicalein, oroxylin A, wogonin); phenolics ( | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: coumarins (scuteflorin A, scuteflorin B, decursin) | [ | |||||
| Stem: flavonoids [scutellarin (0.08%)]; phenolic [acteoside (0.05%)] | [ | |||||
| Root: flavonoids [baicalin (0.05%), baicalein (0.06%), wogonin (0.20%), oroxylin A (0.02%)] | [ | |||||
| Leaf: flavonoids [scutellarin (0.92%), baicalin (0.05%)] | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: flavonoids (apigenin, luteolin, baicalein, wogonin, 6-methoxyluteolin 4′-methyl ether, isoscutellarin 8- | [ | |||||
| Aerial parts: flavonoids (norwogonin-7- | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Golden ragwort | infusion of plant taken to prevent pregnancy/induce abortions | plant | [ | ||
| Eremophilane sesquiterpenoids ( | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Rosin weed | tonic | plant | [ | ||
| Leaves: flavonoid glycosides (isorhamnetin 3- | [ | |||||
| Solanaceae | Carolina horsenettle | leaf infusion for worms | leaves | [ | ||
| Leaves: steroidal glycoside (carolinoside) is shown to be | [ | |||||
| Roots: ethyl | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | Goldenrod | bee stings, sore throat | flowers | [ | ||
| Flowering parts EO: methyl chavicol (70.8%), myrcene (12.5%), methyl eugenol (5.8%), limonene (4.5%) | [ | |||||
| Flowering parts EO: myrcene (31.3%), limonene (27.1%), ( | [ | |||||
| Euphorbi-aceae | Queen′s delight | root tincture for STDs | root | [ | ||
| Roots: stillingia factors S1–S6 (2-hydroxydaphnetoxin diterpenoids) | [ | |||||
| Asteraceae | New England aster | root poultice for pain | root | [ | ||
| Leaf EO: (2 | [ | |||||
| Ranuncu-laceae | Early meadowrue | root infusion for diarrhea | root | [ | ||
| Bis-benzylisoquinoline alkaloids (thalictropine, thalidoxine, pennsylvanine, thalmelatine, thalictrogamine | [ | |||||
|
| Isopavine alkaloid thalidine | [ | ||||
| Pallidine and corydine alkaloids | [ | |||||
| Tiliaceae | American basswood | inner bark decoction for diarrhea, coughs, boils. | bark | [ | ||
| Flowers: quercetin and kaempferol derivatives; showed sedative and anxiolytic activity | [ | |||||
| Flowers: tiliroside, quercetin, quercitrin, kaempherol; showed anxiolytic activity | [ | |||||
| Flowers: quercetin; showed analgesic activity | [ | |||||
| Flowers: quercetin, kaempferol; showed anxiolytic activity | [ | |||||
| Flowers and leaves: flavonoids quercetin, rutin, isoquercetin); extract showed anticonvusant activity | [ | |||||
| Pinaceae | Eastern hemlock | bark poultice for itching skin; stem tips for kidneys | bark, leaves | [ | ||
| Foliar EO: α-pinene (17.6%), camphene (11.5%), isobornyl acetate (43.4%) | [ | |||||
| Foliar EO: α-pinene (13.2%), camphene (7.8%), isobornyl acetate (42.9%) | [ | |||||
| Foliar EO: tricyclene (1.6–5.1%), α-pinene (4.1–15.1%), camphene (3.0–11.1%), myrcene (0.5–21.1%), isobornyl acetate (22.0–55.8%), α-humulene (3.6–9.8%), germacrene D (1.4–21.3%) | [ | |||||
| Foliar EO: tricyclene (3.1–7.8%), α-pinene (11.6–22.7%), camphene (7.8–15.9%), isobornyl acetate (32.8–50.7%), α-humulene (up to 9.2%), germacrene D (up to 6.4%) | [ | |||||
| Foliar EO: α-pinene (13.9, 5.4%), camphene (13.3, 3.4%), limonene (6.0, 7.0%), piperitone (4.3, 7.7%), isobornyl acetate (38.6, 37.0%) | [ | |||||
| Adoxaceae | Black haw shrub | bark infusion as tonic for female bleeding | bark | [ | ||
| Bark: biflavonoid amentoflavone | [ | |||||
| Bark: iridoid glycosides (2- | [ | |||||
| Bark: 1-methyl-2,3-dibutyl hemimellitate | [ | |||||
| Fabaceae | Vetch | pains, rheumatism | plant | [ | ||
| Aerial parts EO: phytone (2.2–21.5%), methyl roughanate (1.9–29.5%), palmitic acid (9.9–28.1%), ( | [ | |||||
| Ranuncu-laceae | Yellow root | root infusion for cramps, as tonic | root | [ | ||
| Root: alkaloids (berberine, jatrorrhizine, magnoflorine) | [ | |||||
| Whole plant: alkaloids berberine and puntarenine | [ | |||||
| Roots: bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids (obamegine and oxyacanthine) | [ | |||||
| Rutaceae | Common prickly ash | bark infusion for swollen joints | bark | [ | ||
| Bark: pyranocoumarins (dipetaline, alloxanthoxyletin, xanthoxyletin, xanthyletin) and lignans (sesamin, asarinin) | [ | |||||
| Rutaceae | Hercules′s club | Houma tribe of Native Americans (not Cherokee) used the bark for toothache | bark | [ | ||
| Leaf EO: α-thujene (0.2–5.6%), limonene (43.6–73.0%), 1,8-cineole (12.9–43.3%), linalool (up to 11.3%) | [ | |||||
| Bark EO: sabinene (47.0%), limonene (18.7%), terpinen-4-ol (12.9%) | [ | |||||
| Bark: asarinin, sesamin, neoherculin, xanthoxylol-γ,γ-dimethylallyl ether, piperitol-γ,γ-dimethylallyl ether, pluviatol-γ,γ-dimethylallyl ether | [ | |||||
| Bark: chelerythrine | [ | |||||
a Non-native. b Commercial (dōTERRA) essential oil. c W. N. Setzer (unpublished).