| Literature DB >> 33025667 |
Bahare Salehi1,2, Abhay Prakash Mishra3, Manisha Nigam4, Natallia Karazhan5, Ila Shukla6, Anna Kiełtyka-Dadasiewicz7, Barbara Sawicka7, Aleksandra Głowacka7, Mohammad Sanad Abu-Darwish8,9, Amer Hussein Tarawneh10, Anastassiya V Gadetskaya11, Célia Cabral12,13, Lígia Salgueiro14,15, Montserrat Victoriano16, Miquel Martorell16,17, Anca Oana Docea18, Anna Abdolshahi19, Daniela Calina20, Javad Sharifi-Rad21,22.
Abstract
Ficus genus is typically tropical plants and is among the earliest fruit trees cultivated by humans. Ficus carica L. is the common fig, Ficus benjamina L. is the weeping fig, and Ficus pumila L. is the creeping fig. These species are commonly used in traditional medicine for a wide range of diseases and contain rich secondary metabolites that have shown diverse applications. This comprehensive review describes for Ficus genus the phytochemical compounds, traditional uses and contemporary pharmacological activities such as antioxidant, cytotoxic, antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, antidiabetic, antiulcer, and anticonvulsant. An extended survey of the current literature (Science Direct, Scopus, PubMed) has been carried out as part of the current work. The trends in the phytochemistry, pharmacological mechanisms and activities of Ficus genus are overviewed in this manuscript: antimicrobial, antidiabetic, anti-inflammatory and analgesic activity, antiseizure and anti-Parkinson's diseases, cytotoxic and antioxidant. Health-promoting effects, recent human clinical studies, safety and adverse effects of Ficus plants also are covered. The medical potential and long-term pharmacotherapeutic use of the genus Ficus along with no serious reported adverse events, suggests that it can be considered as being safe.Entities:
Keywords: anti-inflammatory; antidiabetic; antimicrobial, cytotoxic, Ficus plants, neuroprotective, pharmacological mechanisms of actions, phytochemistry, toxicological safety, traditional uses
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33025667 DOI: 10.1002/ptr.6884
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phytother Res ISSN: 0951-418X Impact factor: 5.878