| Literature DB >> 32256639 |
Timothy Omara1,2,3, Ambrose K Kiprop1,3, Rose C Ramkat3,4, Jackson Cherutoi1, Sarah Kagoya5,6, Decrah Moraa Nyangena1,3, Tsedey Azeze Tebo7, Papias Nteziyaremye1,3, Lucy Nyambura Karanja1,3, Abigael Jepchirchir1,3, Alfayo Maiyo1,3, Betty Jematia Kiptui1,3, Immaculate Mbabazi1,3, Caroline Kiwanuka Nakiguli1,3,8, Brenda Victoria Nakabuye9,10, Margaret Chepkemoi Koske1,3,11.
Abstract
The burden of neoplastic diseases is a significant global health challenge accounting for thousands of deaths. In Uganda, about 32,617 cancer cases were reported in 2018, accompanied by 21,829 deaths. In a view to identify some potential anticancer plant candidates for possible drug development, the current study was designed to compile the inventory of plants with reported anticancer activity used in rural Uganda and the evidences supporting their use in cancer therapy. An electronic survey in multidisciplinary databases revealed that 29 plant species belonging to 28 genera distributed among 24 families have been reported to be used in the management of cancer in Uganda. Anticancer plants were majorly from the families Bignoniaceae (7%), Caricaceae (7%), Fabaceae (7%), Moraceae (7%), and Rutaceae (7%). Most species occur in the wild (52%), though some are cultivated (48%). The growth habit of the plants is as trees (55%) or herbs (45%). Anticancer extracts are usually prepared from leaves (29%), bark (24%), roots (21%), and fruits (13%) through decoctions (53%), as food spices (23%) or pounded to produce ointments that are applied topically (10%). Prunus africana (Hook.f.) Kalkman, Opuntia species, Albizia coriaria (Welw. ex Oliver), Daucus carota L., Cyperus alatus (Nees) F. Muell., Markhamia lutea (Benth.) K. Schum., and Oxalis corniculata L. were the most frequently encountered species. As per global reports, Allium sativum L., Annona muricata L., Carica papaya L., Moringa oleifera Lam., Opuntia species, Prunus africana (Hook.f.) Kalkman, and Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don. are the most studied species, with the latter having vincristine and vinblastine anticancer drugs developed from it. Prostate, cervical, breast, and skin cancers are the top traditionally treated malignancies. There is a need to isolate and evaluate the anticancer potential of the bioactive compounds in the unstudied claimed plants, such as Cyperus alatus (Nees) F. Muell., Ficus dawei Hutch., Ficus natalensis Hochst., and Lovoa trichilioides Harms, and elucidate their mechanism of anticancer activity.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32256639 PMCID: PMC7102457 DOI: 10.1155/2020/3529081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Plants used in the management of cancer in rural Uganda as per reports of ethnobotanical surveys.
| Plant family | Local name | Botanical name | Part used | Life form | Conservation status | Mode of preparation (administration) | Cancer treated | District (s) | Author (s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amaranthaceae | Beetroot ( |
| Blb | H | C, NE | Eat beetroot/prepare juice and drink | Blood cancer | Kampala, not specified | [ |
| Amaryllidaceae | Garlic ( |
| Blb | H | C, NE | Chew/eat regularly or put in food | Lung cancer | Kampala | [ |
| Annonaceae | Kitafeeri ( |
| R, L, F | T | C, NE | Decoction drunk | Not specified | NS | [ |
| Apiaceae | Carrot ( |
| R | H | C, NE | Eat raw roots regularly; used with beetroot | Blood cancer | Wakiso, Kampala | [ |
| Apocynaceae | Sekagya ( |
| F | H | C, NE | Not specified | Not specified | Kampala | [ |
| Asteraceae | Artemesia ( |
| L | H | W, NK | Infusion with rock salt | Not specified | NS | [ |
| Bignoniaceae | Yago ( |
| R, B | T | W, NK | Crushed in water to make a concoction; 1-2 tablespoonfuls of juice taken orally twice a day | Not specified | Tororo/Mbale | [ |
| Bignoniaceae | Sambya ( |
| F | T | W, NK | Not specified | Not specified | Not specified | [ |
| Burseraceae | Mwafu ( |
| F | T | C, NE | Eat fruits | Not specified | Not specified | [ |
| Cactaceae | Prickly pear cactus ( |
| L | H | C, NE | Take the juice from leaves | Prostate, stomach, colon and rectum cancer | Kampala | [ |
| Capparaceae | Njagga ( |
| L | H | C, NE | Decoction drunk | Not specified | NS | [ |
| Caricaceae | Mapapali ( |
| L | H | C, NE | Decoction drunk | Not specified | Pallisa | [ |
| Caricaceae | Not reported |
| B | T | W, NK | Decoction drunk | Prostate cancer | Mukono/Buikwe | [ |
| Cyperaceae | Not reported |
| RZ | H | W, NK | Not specified | Not specified | Not specified | [ |
| Fabaceae | Omugavu ( |
| B | T | W, C, NE | Decoction drunk/applied as an ointment | Not specified | NS | [ |
| Fabaceae | Jjirikiti ( |
| B, R | T | W, NK | Decoction drunk | Not specified | NS | [ |
| Lamiaceae | Mubengeya, Nfulubwa, Ffulubwa ( |
| L | T | W, NK | Decoction drunk | Not specified | NS | [ |
| Malvaceae | Okra ( |
| F | H | C, NE | Eat as food or add to food as a spice | Stomach, rectum and colon cancer | Kampala | [ |
| Meliaceae | Musonko ( |
| B, Sd, L | T | W, E | Crushed and applied as an ointment | Not specified | NS | [ |
| Moraceae | Muwo ( |
| B | T | W, NK | Decoction drunk | Breast cancer | Mukono/Buikwe | [ |
| Moraceae |
|
| R | T | W, NE | Not specified | Cancerous wounds | Iganga | [ |
| Moringaceae | Moringa ( |
| L, R, B, Sd | H | C, NE | Chew/make juices | Prostate, lung, colon and rectal cancers | Kampala | [ |
| Oxalidaceae | Kajjampuni ( |
| L | H | W, E | Pound, dry and put on the wound | Skin and uterine cancer | Mukono/Buikwe, Iganga | [ |
| Poaceae | Akisube ( |
| L | H | C, NE | Decoction drunk | Not specified | Pallisa | [ |
| Rosaceae | African cherry ( |
| L, B | T | W, OD | Decoction drunk/tea | Prostate cancer | NS, Not specified, Mukono/Buikwe, Not specified | [ |
| Rutaceae | Omuqugwa ( |
| R | T | C, NE | Not specified | Not specified | Pallisa | [ |
| Rutaceae | Ntale ya ddungu ( |
| R | T | W, NK | Pound, add water & drink | Cervical cancer | Mukono/Buikwe | [ |
| Sapindaceae | Mukuzanyana ( |
| B | T | W, NK | Decoction drunk | Cervical cancer | Mukono/Buikwe | [ |
| Solanaceae | Kamulali ( |
| F | H | W, C | Food condiment | Prostate cancer | Mukono/Buikwe | [ |
Languages: Eng: English, Gis: Lugishu, Lgb: Lugbara, Lug: Luganda, Lus: Lusoga, Lang: Lango, Kar: Ngakarimojong, Rut: Rutoro, Ruk: Rukiga. Parts used: B: bark, Blb: bulb, F: fruit, L: leaf, R: root, RZ: rhizome, Sd: seed. Growth habit: H: herb, T: tree. Conservation status: C: cultivated, W: grows in the wild/forest, E: endangered, NE: not endangered, OD: out of danger, NK: not known. Districts: NS: this study was done in Arua, Dokolo, Mbale, Iganga, Bushenyi, Rakai, Luwero, and Kaabong districts of Uganda. Species not specified. Opuntia hybridizes readily between species.
Anticancer activity of the medicinal plant species reported in Uganda as per global reports.
| Plant | Active phytochemicals | Molecular targets and/or effects on cancer cells |
|---|---|---|
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| Isoquercitrin ( | Cytotoxicity of extracts reported against breast cancer (MCF-7), hepatocellular carcinoma (HepG2), and cervical carcinoma (HeLa) cell lines [ |
| Extracts induced significant cell growth inhibition (63%) in human breast cancer (MCF-7) and skin fibroblast (CCD-1059 sk) cells. The expression of proapoptotic caspase-3, caspase-9, and p21 genes was increased in MCF-7 cells [ | ||
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| Oleanane-type saponins (coriarioside A and coriarioside B), gummiferaoside C, acacic acid glycosides, lupeol ( | Cytotoxicity (IC50 > 500 |
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| Diallyl thiosulfinate (allicin) ( | Extracts exhibited an antiproliferative effect on human cancer cell lines, including liver (HepG2), colon (Caco2), prostate (PC-3), and breast (MCF-7) cancer cells [ |
| SAC induced cell cycle arrest in A2780 human epithelial ovarian cancer cells [ | ||
| Allicin inhibited the proliferation of gastric adenocarcinoma cells by inducing cell cycle arrest [ | ||
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| Annonaceous acetogenins (muricin J, muricin K, muricin L) [ | Annonaceous acetogenins exhibited antiproliferative activity against human prostate cancer PC-3 cells [ |
| Annonacin caused complete suppression of 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene (DMBA) induced and 12-0- tetradecaboylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) promoted skin tumorigenesis in mice [ | ||
| At 0.1 | ||
| Annomuricin E was cytotoxic to HT-29 colon carcinoma and CCD841 normal colon cell lines with IC50 values of 5.72, 3.49, and 1.62 | ||
| Stem extracts suppressed the expression of molecules associated with hypoxia and glycolysis in CD18/HPAF (pancreatic) cancer cells (IC50 of 73.0 | ||
| Aqueous leaf extracts exhibited anticancer activity with IC50 values of 220, 350, and 250 | ||
| Cytotoxicity recorded against Raji cells with IC50 values of 90.6, 407.2, and 260.2 | ||
| Leaf extracts inhibited cell proliferation in pancreatic cancer cells (capan-1) [ | ||
| Ethanol extract of seeds showed a cytotoxic effect on MDBK and HEp-2 cells (IC50 values:34.5 and 55 mg/mL, respectively) at 24 h, and an IC50 value of 49.6 × 10−3 mg/mL toward HEp-2 cells at 72 h [ | ||
| Cytotoxic against kidney epithelial (VERO), stomach cancer (C-678), and human large lung cell carcinoma (H-460) cell lines with IC50 values lower than 0.00022 mg/mL for all the cell lines [ | ||
| Ethanol extracts of leaves cytotoxic to Ehrlich Ascites carcinoma (EACC) and breast cancer (MDA and SKBR3) cell lines with IC50 values of 335.85, 248.77, and 202.33 | ||
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| Sesquiterpene trioxane lactone (artemisinin) ( | Acetonitrile extract inhibited the viability of breast (MDA-MB-231 and MCF-7), pancreas (MIA PaCa-2), prostate (PC-3), and non-small-cell lung cancer (A459) cells. The extracts inhibited cancer cell proliferation, decreased tumor growth, and induced apoptosis |
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| Lutein, | The ethanolic extract exhibited significant anticancer activity against lung cancer (A549) cell line but only a slight effect against colorectal adenocarcinoma (Caco-2) cell line at 800 |
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| Methyl salicylate, oleic acid, 2-morpholinophenazine, octadec-9-enoic acid, 2-[(tert-butyldimethylsily)oxy]-1-isopropyl-dimethyl-benzene, octadecanoic acid, 1,3-dibromo-4,5-dimethylbenzene, 3,7-dimethyl-8-oxo-5-dioxa-spiro [ | Leaves and stem bark extracts had LC50 of 539.6 and 389.8 |
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| Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol, THC ( | THC and other cannabinoids exhibited antitumor effects in animal models of cancer [ |
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| 3a-Hydroxytirucalla-8, 24-dien-21-oic, 3 | Cytotoxicity test on leukemia (CCRF-CEM) cells at 40 |
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| Capsaicin ( | Aqueous fruit extracts exhibited anticancer activity (though lower than capsaicin standard) when tested against prostate (PC-3) and breast (MCF-7) cancer cell lines |
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| Lycopene, ferulic acid, benzyl isothiocyanate, kaempferol, quercetin, chlorogenic acid, caffeic acid, beta carotene, and | Pure lycopene and papaya juice inhibited the viability of liver cancer (HepG2) cell line with IC50 of 22.8 |
| Aqueous extract of flesh (0.01–4% v/v) inhibited the proliferation of breast cancer cell line (MCF-7) [ | ||
| Aqueous extracts of leaves (1.25–27 mg/mL) exhibited a concentration-dependent anticancer effect on stomach cancer cell line (AGS), pancreatic cancer cell line (Capan-1), colon cancer cell line (DLD-1), ovarian cancer cell line (Dov-13), lymphoma cell line (Karpas), breast cancer cell line (MCF-7), Neuroblastoma cell line (T98G), uterine cancer cell line (HeLa), and T-cell leukemia cell line (CD26 negative or negative Jurkat) cell lines and suppressed DNA synthesis by suppressing the incorporation of 3H-thymidine [ | ||
| Aqueous extract of leaves (0.625–20 mg/mL) inhibited the proliferative responses of both haematopoietic and solid tumor cell lines (T-cell lines, H9, Jurkat, Molt-4, CCRF-CEM, and HPB-ALL), Burkitt's lymphoma cell lines (Ramos and Raji), chronic myelogenous leukemia cell line (K562), cervical carcinoma cell line (HeLa), hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines (HepG2 and Huh-7), lung adenocarcinoma cell line (PC-14), pancreatic epithelioid carcinoma cell line (Panc-1), mesothelioma cell lines (H2452, H226, and MESO-4), plasma cell leukemia cell line (ARH77), anaplastic large cell lymphoma cell line (Karpas-299), breast adenocarcinoma cell line (MCF-7), mesothelioma cell line (JMN), and pancreatic adenocarcinoma cell line (Capan-1). In peripheral blood mononuclear cells, the extract reduced the production of IL-2 and IL-4 whereas it increased the production of Th1 types cytokines such as IL-12p40, IL-12p70, INF- | ||
| Leaf juice not only exhibited a stronger cytotoxic effect on human squamous cell carcinoma (SCC25 cancer) cells but also produced a significant cancer-selective effect as shown by tests on noncancerous human keratinocyte HaCaT cells [ | ||
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| Antitumor terpenoid indole alkaloids: vincristine and vinblastine, serpentine, catharanthine, ajmalicine, akuammine, lochnerine, lochnericine, tetrahydroalstonine, 3′,4′-anhydrovinblastine, serpentine, vincaleukoblastine, leurocristine, vincaleurocristine, vincarodine, vincoline, leurocolombine, viramidine, vincathicine, vincubine, isositsirikine, vincolidine, catharanthine, vindoline, tetrahydroalstonine, vindolinine, reserpine, coronaridine, 11-methoxy tabersonine, tetrahydroalstonine, vindorosidine, hydroxytyrosol, ferulic acid, chlorogenic acid, kaempferol, trisaccharides, quercetin, and petunidin 3-O-(6-O- | Cytotoxicity with LC50 of 6.7 |
| Vindoline from leaf extracts was cytotoxic to HCT-116 colorectal carcinoma cell line at 200 | ||
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| Limonin, isolimonexic acid methyl ether, ichangin, deacetylnomilin, and obacunone [ |
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| Citral (neral and geranial), geraniol and | Essential oil exhibited protective action against |
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| Chemopreventive against 7,12-dimethyl Benz(a)anthracene-induced squamous cell carcinoma in mice [ |
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| Steroidal glycosides, eudesmane-type sesquiterpenoid, and dammarane triterpenoids: elabunin ( | Elabunin exhibited moderate cytotoxic activity with a median effective dose (ED50) of 100 |
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| Erythrina alkaloids: erythraline, erysodine, erysotrine, 8-oxoerythraline, and 11-methoxyerysodine [ | Cytotoxicity with LC50 value > 240 μg/ml [ |
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| Mamegakinone, diospyrin ( | Cytotoxicity of ethanolic roots and stem extracts reported in brine shrimp lethality test [ |
| Cytotoxicity of crude chloroform extract of the roots, diospyrin, and 7-methyljuglone reported against green monkey kidney cells (VERO) and a mouse macrophage cell line, J774A.1. Crude extract and diospyrin had IC50 values of 64.87 and 17.78 | ||
| Cytotoxicity of 7-methyljuglone from the root and a series of its derivatives on MCF-7, HeLa, SNO, and DU 145 human cancer cell lines had IC50 values ranging from 5.3 to 10.1 | ||
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| Lapachol, 3-(2′- hydroxyethyl)-5-(2″-hydroxypropyl) dihydrofuran-2-(3H)one, specioside, verminoside, and minecoside, kigelin, | Seed oil suppressed human colon adenocarcinoma (Caco-2) and human embryonic kidney (HEK-293) cell growth in a dose-dependent manner [ |
| An 80% methanol extract of the roots exhibited cytotoxicity to brine shrimps with LC50 of 7.2 | ||
| Fruit extracts increased the sub-G1 phase (apoptosis) population in HCT116 human colon cancer cells [ | ||
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| Cycloartane triterpenoids, musambins A–C and their 3-Oxyloside derivatives musambiosides A–C [ | Anticancer activity against Ehrlich ascites carcinoma cells with an IC50 value of 27.0 |
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| Quercetin, kaempferol, | Cytotoxic against colon cancer (Colo-320 DM), breast cancer (MCF-7), ovary cancer (PA-1), and oral cancer (KB-403) cell lines with IC90 value of 3.98, 17.60,12.86, and 8.40 |
| Apoptosis assay performed using leaf and bark extracts on breast and colorectal cancer lines showed a remarkable increase in the number of apoptotic cells with a sevenfold increase in breast (MD-MB-231) cell line to an increase of several folds in colorectal cancer (HCT-8) cell line [ | ||
| Leaf extracts inhibited the growth of hepatocarcinoma (HepG2), colorectal adenocarcinoma (Caco-2), and breast adenocarcinoma (MCF-7) cell lines with dichloromethane leaf extract having IC50 between 112 and 133 | ||
| Leaf extract had anticancer activity against human epidermoid cancer (Hep2) cell line with IC50 of 12.5 | ||
| Cell viability of leaf extract-treated A549, HepG2, CaCo2, Hek293, and Jurkat cells was reported to be reduced with IC50 from 0.05 to 0.4% [ | ||
| Human pancreatic cancer cells (Panc-1, p34, and COLO-357) were inhibited by leaf extracts with IC50 of 1.1, 1.5, and 1.8 mg/mL [ | ||
| Seed extracts had cytotoxic potential against A549, Hep-2, HT-29, and IMR-32 cancer cell lines [ | ||
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| Quercetin, kaempferol-3-O-rutinoside, isorhamnetin-3-O-rutinoside, betanin, and indicaxanthin [ | Fruits, peels, seed, cladode, stem, and root extracts of different species have cytotoxicity against mammary (MCF-7), prostate (PC3), colon (Caco2, SW-480, HT-29), HeLa cervical carcinoma, myeloid leukemia (K562), and hepatic (HepG2) cell lines [ |
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| Palmitic, 8 oleic, linoleic, linolenic, stearic, tartaric, and citric acids, flavones (acacetin and 7,4′-diOMe apigenin), glycoflavones (4′-OMe vitexin, 4′-OMeiso-vitexin and 3′,4′-diOMe orientin), flavonols (3′,4′-diOMe quercetin), and phenolic acids such as | The ethanolic extract inhibited tumor growth of Ehrlich ascites carcinoma (EAC) induced in Swiss albino mice [ |
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| Ursolic acid, oleanolic acid, | Antiprostate cancer activity targets fast dividing cells by impairing mitosis or by causing target cells to undergo apoptosis [ |
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| Skimmianine, furoquinoline alkaloid skimmianine, the benzophenanthridine alkaloids chelerythrine and nitidine, the aporphine alkaloids tembetarine, magnoflorine, N-methylcorydine, | Extracts showed moderate cytotoxicity with IC50 values below 50 |
| Stem bark extracts exhibited potential cytotoxicity effect with LC50 value of 5.74 | ||
| Cytotoxicity reported against human cancer cell line HL-60 cells with IC50 of 137.31 | ||
| Cytotoxicity of root bark extracts reported with IC50 of 38.5, 68.9 and < 500 | ||
IC50: -median inhibitory concentration/half maximal inhibitory concentration, LC50: median lethal concentration, and IC90: concentration inhibiting 90% of cellular growth.
Figure 1Some of the anticancer molecules reported in some anticancer plants used in rural Uganda. The numbers 1–22 correspond to the molecules mentioned in Table 2.
Ethnomedicinal uses and other biological activities of the anticancer plant species reported in Uganda as per global studies.
| Plant | Ethnomedicinal uses | Biological activities |
|---|---|---|
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| Treatment of syphilis, immunity boosting and treatment of anaemia, cuts, wounds, boils, catarrhal infections, ardor urinae, dysuria, and gonorrhoea [ | Immunomodulating, antioxidant, antidiabetic, and antihyperlipidemic activities [ |
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| Treatment of heart diseases, meat allergy, nausea, headaches, mental illness, diarrhea, cough, tuberculosis, anaemia, syphilis, postpartum haemorrhage, snakebites, sore throats, herpes zoster, menorrhagia, stimulating milk production in lactating mothers, threatened abortion, skin diseases, jaundice, cough, steam fumigation treatments for sore eyes, and as a general tonic [ | Antibacterial activity [ |
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| Arteriosclerosis, management of diabetes mellitus, asthma, deafness, leprosy, bronchial congestion, fevers, worms, and liver gall bladder trouble [ | Antidiabetic, hepatoprotective, antimicrobial, and antihyperlipidemic activities [ |
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| Leaves are used to treat cystitis, diabetes, headaches, colds, flu, asthma, and insomnia [ | Antiviral, antinociceptive, anti-inflammatory, and antihyperglycemic activities [ |
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| Treatment of cough, indigestion, malaria, fever caused by tuberculosis, and jaundice [ | Antimalarial, antimicrobial, and anti-inflammatory activities [ |
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| Management of hypertension, purifying blood and liver, and reducing inflammation [ | Antioxidant and antibacterial activities [ |
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| Treating fibroids [ | Antiplasmodial, antimalarial, and antioxidant activities [ |
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| Treatment of skin wounds, stomach swelling, digestive problems, type 2 diabetes, colitis, high cholesterol, urinary tract infections, weight loss aid to treat obesity and overweight, and as a remedy for alcohol hangovers [ | Antidiabetic, antimicrobial, antioxidant, and anti-inflammatory activities [ |
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| Treatment of cough, tuberculosis, cancer pain, asthma and diarrhea [ | Anti-inflammatory and antinociceptive activities [ |
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| Management of anaemia [ | Antioxidant, analgesic, antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, and antidiabetic activities [ |
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| Treatment of cough, diarrhea, snake bite, sterility, pain killer, antidotes, promotes labour, cracks on soles of feet, low immunity, loss of memory, measles, erectile dysfunction [ | Antibacterial, antimalarial, antifungal, and immunomodulatory activities [ |
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| Management of hernia, pancreas disorders, erectile dysfunction (roots) [ | Insulinotropic activities [ |
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| Treatment of diabetes, malaria, dengue fever, dysentery, insect bites, skin infection, diarrhea, leukemia, eye irritation, dyspepsia, dysentery, toothache, sore throat, and lung congestion [ | Anti-inflammatory, antibacterial, antifungal, antidiabetic, antihypercholesterolemic, antiandrogenic, and antiangiogenic activities [ |
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| Treatment of skin diseases, malaria, and inducing weight loss [ | Antimalarial and antioxidant activities [ |
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| Treatment of cough, fever, indigestion, pain in fallopian tubes [ | Antimalarial activity [ |
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| Treating skin diseases and wounds [ | Antioxidant and hepatoprotective activities [ |
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| Treatment of wounds, syphilis, cough, and dysentery [ | Antimicrobial, antioxidant and antifungal activities [ |
|
| Treatment of viral infections [ | Antifungal activity [ |
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| Remedy for chest ailments, toothache, bronchitis, pleurisy, asthma, headache, and urinary tract infections [ | Antiplasmodial, antioxidant, antidiabetic, and antibacterial activities [ |
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| Treating wounds [ | NR |
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| Treatment of HIV [ | NR |
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| Management of skin lesions, infections, and diarrhea [ | NR |
|
| Treatment of wounds [ | Antibacterial, antifungal, anti-inflammatory, analgesic, antidiabetic, and antioxidant activities [ |
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| Management of anaemia, liver disease, inappetence, stomachache, headache, skin rash, cataracts, throat diseases, conjunctivitis, backache, and snakebites [ | Antioxidant, antileishmanial, and antitrypanosomal activities [ |
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| Cleansing blood and liver, strengthening the heart, increasing fat metabolism to promote weight loss, deworming, improving wound healing, reducing wrinkles, improving digestion, eliminating constipation, and body detoxification [ | Potent antioxidant, cardioprotective, antibacterial, hepatoprotective, antihypertensive, antiulcer, and anti-inflammatory activities [ |
|
| Treatment of athletes foot, wounds, hypertension, diabetes and hormonal imbalance [ | Antifungal and antioxidative activities [ |
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| Used for managing fainting [ | Anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antimalarial activities [ |
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| Treatment of herpes zoster, skin infections, rashes, tuberculosis [ | Anticandidal activity [ |
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| Treatment of stomachache, cough, fever, skin rush, diabetes [ | Anticandidal, antibacterial, and antidiabetic activities [ |
NR: none retrieved in the open literature.