| Literature DB >> 32071543 |
Timothy Omara1,2, Sarah Kagoya3,4, Abraham Openy5, Tom Omute6, Stephen Ssebulime7, Kibet Mohamed Kiplagat8, Ocident Bongomin9.
Abstract
Snakebite envenomation is a serious public health concern in rural areas of Uganda. Snakebites are poorly documented in Uganda because most occur in rural settings where traditional therapists end up being the first-line defense for treatment. Ethnobotanical surveys in Uganda have reported that some plants are used to antagonize the activity of various snake venoms. This review was sought to identify antivenin plants in Uganda and some pharmacological evidence supporting their use. A literature survey done in multidisciplinary databases revealed that 77 plant species belonging to 65 genera and 42 families are used for the treatment of snakebites in Uganda. The majority of these species belong to family Fabaceae (31%), Euphorbiaceae (14%), Asteraceae (12%), Amaryllidaceae (10%) and Solanaceae (10%). The main growth habit of the species is shrubs (41%), trees (33%) and herbs (18%). Antivenin extracts are usually prepared from roots (54%) and leaves (23%) through decoctions, infusions, powders, and juices, and are administered orally (67%) or applied topically (17%). The most frequently encountered species were Allium cepa, Carica papaya, Securidaca longipedunculata, Harrisonia abyssinica, and Nicotiana tabacum. Species with global reports of tested antivenom activity included Allium cepa, Allium sativum, Basella alba, Capparis tomentosa, Carica papaya, Cassia occidentalis, Jatropa carcus, Vernonia cinereal, Bidens pilosa, Hoslundia opposita, Maytensus senegalensis, Securinega virosa, and Solanum incanum. There is need to identify and evaluate the antivenom compounds in the claimed plants.Entities:
Keywords: Antiophidic; Antivenin; Snakebite; Traditional medicine; Uganda
Year: 2020 PMID: 32071543 PMCID: PMC7014759 DOI: 10.1186/s41182-019-0187-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Med Health ISSN: 1348-8945
Fig. 1Map of Uganda showing the location of the districts with reports of ethnobotanical surveys (marked X). Inset is the location of Uganda on the African continent
Antivenin plants used in rural communities of Uganda
| Plant family | Latin botanical name | References |
|---|---|---|
| Acanthaceae | [ | |
| Amaryllidaceae | [ | |
| Amaryllidaceae | [ | |
| Amaryllidaceae | [ | |
| Amaryllidaceae | [ | |
| Apocynaceae | [ | |
| Apocynaceae | [ | |
| Aristolochiaceae | [ | |
| Aristolochiaceae | [ | |
| Asclepiadaceae | [ | |
| Asparagaceae | [ | |
| Asparagaceae | [ | |
| Asteraceae | [ | |
| Asteraceae | [ | |
| Asteraceae | [ | |
| Asteraceae | [ | |
| Asteraceae | [ | |
| Basellaceae | [ | |
| Boraginacea | [ | |
| Cleomaceae | [ | |
| Capparidaceae | [ | |
| Caricaceae | [ | |
| Celastraceae | [ | |
| Combretaceae | [ | |
| Combretaceae | [ | |
| Commelinaceae | [ | |
| Compositae | [ | |
| Convolvulaceae | [ | |
| Convolvulaceae | [ | |
| Dracaenaceae | [ | |
| Ebenaceae | [ | |
| Euphorbiaceae | [ | |
| Euphorbiaceae | [ | |
| Euphorbiaceae | [ | |
| Euphorbiaceae | [ | |
| Euphorbiaceae | [ | |
| Euphorbiaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Fabaceae | [ | |
| Lamiaceae | [ | |
| Lamiaceae | [ | |
| Leguminosae | [ | |
| Liliaceae | [ | |
| Loganiaceae | [ | |
| Malvaceae | [ | |
| Melastomataceae | [ | |
| Meliaceae | [ | |
| Meliaceae | [ | |
| Menispermaceae | [ | |
| Moraceae | [ | |
| Myricaceae | [ | |
| Papillionaceae | [ | |
| Passifloraceae | [ | |
| Poaceae | [ | |
| Poaceae | [ | |
| Polygalaceae | [ | |
| Rosaceae | [ | |
| Rubiaceae | [ | |
| Rutaceae | [ | |
| Rutaceae | [ | |
| Simaroubaceae | [ | |
| Solanaceae | [ | |
| Solanaceae | [ | |
| Solanaceae | [ | |
| Solanaceae | [ | |
| Umbifellifereae | [ | |
| Verbenaceae | [ |
Fig. 2Major families from which vegetal antivenins are obtained in Uganda
Fig. 3Distribution of antivenin plant species in Ugandan districts as per ethnobotanical reports
Fig. 4Growth habit of the antivenin plants used in rural communities of Uganda
Fig. 5Parts of antivenin plants used in rural communities of Uganda
Plants used in Ugandan rural communities for repelling of snakes
| Family | Botanical name | Growth habit | Part used | Mode of use to prevent snakes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amaryllidaceae | Herb | Bulb | Decoction made and sprinkled around the house. Snakes are discouraged by the sharp onion smell. | [ | |
| Amaryllidaceae | Herb | Bulb | Decoction made and sprinkled around the house. Snakes do not are discouraged by the sharp onion smell. | [ | |
| Asteraceae | Herb | Leaves | Plants have bitter tastes and strong smells that cause discomfort and disorientation to snakes when they slither over them. | [ | |
| Euphorbiaceae | Herb | Leaves/whole plant | Plant have strong smell that cause discomfort and disorientation to snakes when they slither over them. | [ | |
| Poaceae | Grass | Leaves | Decoction made and sprinkled around the house. Snakes do not like the citrus smell from the leaves | [ | |
| Solanaceae | Shrub | Leaves | Planted around the house, leaves burnt | [ |
Fig. 6.Treatment of snake bites in Uganda. a 500 Uganda shillings copper coin. Side displayed is usually placed on the bite. bHaemanthus multiflorus bulb. c black stone
Antivenin activities of some plants used for snakebite treatment in Uganda as per global reports
| Plant | Part used | Solvent used | Antivenin activity (comments) | Active chemical constituents | Authors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bulb | Methanol | Cardioprotective activity (14.8 ± 1.65 units/l; | Quercitin, sulfurous volatile oils, oleanolic acid, protocatechuric acid | [ | |
| Bulb | Methanol | Hepatoprotective activity ( | Quercetin, scordinines A, B allicin, thiosulfinates, 2 mercapto-L-cysteines, anthocyanins, alliinase, polysaccharides, sativin I, sativin II, glycosides of kaempferol | [ | |
| Leaves | Methanol | 1000 mg/kg provided 80% protection against | Flavonoids, saponins and tannins | [ | |
| Leaves | Methanol, Ethanol, Water, pentane | PLA2 and hyaluronidase enzymes from | Aristolochic acid I, lignan (-)-cubebin | [ | |
| Fruit | Methanol | Radical scavenging activity against 1,1-diphenyl 2-picrylhydroxyl (DHPP) experimented in mice. | Flavonoids, phenolics, betacyanins, Lupeol, β sitosterol | [ | |
| Root | Water, petroleum ether | The antioxidant activity by DPPH was 35.50 ± 0.02%, by phosphomolybdate assay was 41.22 ± 0.17 mg/kg ascorbic acid equivalent, and the reducing power increased with increase in concentration up to a maximum at 800 μg/ml in alloxanized male mice (aqueous extracts). | N-benzoylphenylalanylaninol acetate, 24-ethylcholestan-5-en-3-ol, L-stachydrine, 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-4-methoxyoxindole | [ | |
| Leaves | Water, ethanol | Hepatoprotective against carbon tetrachloride induced hepatotoxicity in mice. | Saponins, cardiac glycosides, alkaloids, phenolic acids, chlorogenic acid, flavonoids and coumarin compounds | [ | |
| Leaves | Methanol | Acetylcholinesterase, PLA2, hyaluronidase, phosphomonoesterase, phosphodiesterase,5-nucleotidase enzymes from | Steroids, flavonoids, tannins, saponins, alkaloids, ursolic acid | [ | |
| Leaves, roots | Ethanol | Stimulated angiogenesis, inhibited epidermal hyperplasia, and minimized local effects caused by | Anthraquinones | [ | |
( | Root, ripe fruits | Methanol | Neutralized the anticoagulant effect induced by weak PLA2 enzymes in | d-x-pinene camphene, d-limonene, linalool, ichangin 4-β-glucopyranoside, nomilinic acid, 4-β-glucopyranoside | [ |
| Bulb | Methanol, ethyl acetate | Significant anti-inflammatory activity against carageenin-, histamine-, dextran-induced rat paw edema compared to Diclofenac sodium (20 mg/kg) standard | Flavonoid glycosides, querection 3-0-(2″-acetyl)-glucoside, phenolics | [ | |
( | Bulb | Methanol | Extract of 1000 mg/kg protected 50% of mice; injection of a pre-incubated mixture of the same extract dose and venom gave 100% protection against | Phenolic compounds, tannins, alkaloids, cardiac glycosides | [ |
( c | Leaves | Methanol, ethanol, water | Extracts reduced bleeding and clotting times of | Flavonoids, phenolic compounds, steroids, triterpenes, anthraquinone, alkaloids | [ |
| Methanol | Extract inhibited anticoagulant, hemolytic and PLA2 activities of | Tannins, flavonoids, saponins, and steroids | [ | ||
| Leaf latex | Methanol | Inhibits hemolytic activity of PLA2 from | Terpenoids, alkaloids, phenolics, flavonoids, saponins | [ | |
| Whole plant | Methanol | Antioxidant activity by DPPH free radical scavenging assay. Ethyl acetate fraction exhibited 63.3% DPPH radical scavenging activity at 100 μg/ml. | Phenolics, flavonoids | [ | |
( | Rhizome, root | Methanol | LD50 of 353.5 ug/kg. The extract, n-hexane, ethyl acetate, and butanol fractions significantly protected mice from | Terpenoids, flavonoids, saponins | [ |
| Root/bark | Water | 1000 mg/kg | Carbohydrates, proteins, alkaloids, flavonoids, tannins, echinocystic acid, amino acids | [ | |
| Whole plant | Methanol | LD50 not specified, against | Quercetin-3-O-alpha-rhamnoside, terpenoids, alkaloids, steroids, tannins, flavonoids, phenolic compounds | [ | |
| Leaves, whole part | water, hexane | Effective against | Linalool, Cadinene, 훽-Caryophyllene, 훽-Cubebene, Cedrene, Humulene, Selina-3,7(11)-diene, Thujopsene, | [ | |
| Root, leaves | Methanol, Water | DPPH radical scavenging activity of 32.3 ± 1.9 μg/ml compared to standard | 훼-Cadinol Ethyl linolenate, Palmitic acid | [ | |
| Root | Methanol, chloroform | Anti-inflammatory activity inhibited ear edema induced by croton oil in mice | Maytenoic acid, lupenone, | [ | |
| Leaves | Hexane, ethyl acetate, methanol | N-hexane extract provided protection against lethal dose of | Alkaloids, phenols, saponins and triterpenes/steroids | [ | |
| Root | Water | Inhibited the response to acetylcholine in a concentration-dependent manner like atropine. The extract inhibited charcoal travel in mice intestine by 36.28, 51.45, 52.93, and 38.53% in doses of 50, 100, 200, and 400 mg/kg body weight respectively | Quercetin, Isoquercitrin, Kaempferol, β-Sitosterol, Luteolin 7-O-b-D-glucopyranoside, sodium, potassium, chromium, vitamins B and C | [ |