Literature DB >> 33884265

Use of Medicinal Plants for Respiratory Diseases in Bahawalpur, Pakistan.

Sadia Afzal1, Hafiz Ishfaq Ahmad2, Abdul Jabbar3, Mahmoud M Tolba4, Sameh AbouZid5, Nimra Irm2, Farheen Zulfiqar6, Muhammad Zahid Iqbal3, Shoaib Ahmad7,8, Zubair Aslam9.   

Abstract

The most common ethnomedicinal plants being effective in respiratory disorders were studied for the first time in Bahawalpur District. The herbal medication represents a low-cost treatment for the local community. There is a need for documenting the traditional uses of plants for further investigation of bioactive compounds. Using a qualitative approach, the ethnobotanical data was collected from the district of Bahawalpur, Pakistan, from February 2018 to February 2020 through semistructured interviews with the local people and traditional healers. The quantitative analysis included use value, informant consensus factor, family importance value, and relative frequency citation. A total of 20 indigenous plants belonging to 17 families were documented from 185 informants. These plants were claimed to be used for the treatment of 10 respiratory ailments. The plant habit, part of the plant used, and mode of preparation were standardized for authentication. The herbs are the most used life form (55%), while trees and shrubs are also used. Leaves dominate with high use value (47.62%) followed by fruit, stem, flower, and other parts of plants. For the preparation of traditional remedies, decoction (76.19%) and extract (71.43%) are common preparation methods. However, other methods of paste infusion, powder juice, and ash are used to a lower extent. The plants with higher use value are Glycyrrhiza glabra, Acacia arabica, and Mentha piperita; these have significant potential therapeutic activity for respiratory disease. The ethnomedicinal importance of plants against respiratory diseases used by the local population (traditional healers) is the commercial availability of the herbal product. It is a first-time study in this area to fill the gap between traditional practices and synthetic medicine to screen out the phytochemical and pharmacological properties of plants that have a highly futuristic use value to develop antibiotic drug with least side effects by using sustainable methods.
Copyright © 2021 Sadia Afzal et al.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33884265      PMCID: PMC8041525          DOI: 10.1155/2021/5578914

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biomed Res Int            Impact factor:   3.411


1. Introduction

The ethnobotanical importance of medicinal plants predominantly serves to maintain public health from an era of time in many cultures and traditions around the world [1-3]. It is noteworthy to say that the World Health Organization (WHO) stated that 80% of the global population is nutritionally dependent upon plants as a cure for primary health. Additionally, about 11% of essential drugs are originated from plants as phytotherapeutic agents [4]. Therefore, to explore the usage of medicinal plants in the treatment of disease, the researchers gained significant knowledge many years ago [5]. The emerging importance of ethnic usage of medical treatment caused the side effects of allopathic medicine and their cost and unavailability of biomedical treatment due to some factors that were seriously urgent to the local community for the indigenous plant [6]. The geographical position of Pakistan makes this region supplemented with a diversity of medicinal plants used by the indigenous people for the medical care of their animals [7, 8]. The majority of the population is living in rural areas, their source of income is based on agriculture, and their low economic livelihood is dependent on ethnomedicinal plants [9]. Therefore, local people use plant-based remedies using different parts of plants in the traditional form of commercially available herbal products [10]. The medicinal plant is locality matter as it is reported that about 90% of plant species are used by the natives [11]. Many significant respiratory diseases contain upper respiratory tract infection and lower respiratory infection causing asthma, bronchitis, common cold, cough, pneumonia, and whooping cough [12]. The respiratory disorder counted to 2.2 million resulting in deaths every year; therefore, in the treatment of acute infection of the respiratory tract, it exceeds a high cost of 20 billion [13]. Bahawalpur is an area with high temperature where a great range of flora exists with dust storm in summer. A high temperature where a great range of flora exists with dust storm in summer is considered a significant factor for ethnobotanical study [14]. The traditional remedies regarding respiratory diseases for human health care are widespread in this area where people rely more on medicinal plants than synthetic medicine [15]. Contextually, many plants from different families are used from one generation to another to cure cough, asthma, respiratory tract infection, and pneumonia by the indigenous population [16]. Due to the reliability of some definite phytochemicals, the plants are exploited for an extended period conventionally go over for curing diverse ailments [17]. Vast medicinal plants have naturally diverse benefits for mankind as they are very useful against respiratory disease worldwide and in other areas of Pakistan [12, 16]. Plants contain external and internal secreting secondary metabolites, such as phenol, tannins, alkaloid, steroid, resins, and gum related to the antimicrobials associated with antimicrobials [17, 18] and antibacterial [19]. Prospectively, the future must satisfy the therapeutic need for more researches on plants to emphasize the use of medicinal plants in primary health needs [20]. Therefore, the objective of this study was to document the most common medicinal plants used for respiratory disorders, which is done for the first time in this region. Furthermore, it is essential to compile indigenous knowledge of the native area by conducting studies on the pharmacological and phytochemical screening of plant species in order to certify their use in treating various ailments, as well as educating rural people about sustainable plant use and conservation.

2. Methods

2.1. Study Area

Southern Punjab is a lower area of Punjab, where Bahawalpur lies at (29°24′0″N, 71°41′0″E) covering an area of 24,830 km2 [21]. The population of this division is about 11,464,031, which was estimated in the 2017 census [22]. The Bahawalpur District has a large geographical area, which contains six tehsils Bahawalpur Saddar, Bahawalpur City, Khairpur Tamewali, Yazman, Hasilpur, and Ahmedpur East [15] (Figure 1). A river and well-irrigated canal system are the main water sources of this region, while annual rainfall fluctuates from 90 to 200 millimeters. Cholistan Desert is situated in the south of the city, which expands to the Indo Pak border, containing diversified flora and fauna [14]. It is the southeastern part of the Punjab, where the summer is very hot with dust storms in May and June, while the winter is cold. In the desert where the most essential wildlife is a national park away from the richness of wildlife habitat, ethnobotanical studies are the most important for medicinal plant researches [23].
Figure 1

Study area map—Bahawalpur District, Pakistan.

2.2. Data Collection

The ethnomedicinal study of plants for respiratory disorders is undertaken by a structured questionnaire from the population living in the district of Bahawalpur from February 2018 to February 2020, keeping in view the rules of documentation of the ethnobotanical data [24]. For collecting the data of ethnomedicinal plants and the significance of this region, the open-ended and close-ended interviews [25] were conducted on plant locality, the local name of the plant, parts of the plant used, the method used in the preparation, and the plant forms with their usage. To select the informant for indigenous knowledge, a different category was used in which area-wise information was collected from the different age groups in which gender, qualification, income, and experience were considered to analyze the usage of the plant concerning traditional medicine for respiratory diseases. The use of the same species by the informants was characterized and accordingly assessed [26]. On the other side, interviews were also conducted with the 28 traditional healers to peruse medicinal plants as commercial products. All the data obtained from 185 informants and traditional healers were compiled to analyze the locals' use of the medicinal plants.

2.2.1. Demographic Characteristics of Informants

The demographic features of local informants were determined by a questionnaire designed as per the rule of the ethnomedicinal survey. A total of 185 informants were involved in the current study; 139 males were interviewed at their workplace, and 64 females were interviewed at houses through face-to-face conversation. Most of the informants were shopkeepers, farmers, laymen, gardeners, teachers, and housewives. To collect the traditional knowledge regarding medicinal plants, the informants above 60 years were prioritized. The very significant information about the use of medicinal plants in their products was taken from traditional health practitioners through an interview. The questionnaire was also used. Many studies of the ethnomedicinal use of plants have been testified worldwide along with Pakistan [27] and Turkey [28].

2.2.2. Plant Collection and Identification

The traditionally useful plants in respiratory diseases by the natives of Bahawalpur were collected from the area: dried, pressed, and mounted on the herbarium sheet. For the authentication of the plant name index and the list of the plant, http://www.ipni.org and http://www.theplantlist.org were used, respectively, and for the taxonomic verification of the plant, http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/queries.pl was used. All the herbarium plants were accompanied by data such as family, their scientific name, local name, life form, part of the plant used, and the association of disease with the plant. Identification and voucher specimen were according to the Flora of China, Scopus, Flora Iranica, Web of Science, and Google scholar and the flora of Punjab [29] and the flora of West Pakistan and Kashmir for the vascular plants [30].

2.3. The Quantitative Study of Ethnobotanical Plants

To analyze the quantitative research of the ethnobotanical plants, there are different quantitative directories: use value (UV), informant's consensus factor (ICF), relative frequency citation (RFC), and family importance value (FIV).

2.3.1. Use Value (UV)

This is a method that shows the relative significance of the medicinal plants used by the locals of the studied area. For the standard approach to evaluate a plant's UV, a specific protocol was given by [31] where the informant's numbers are represented by “N” which specifies the use of plant species. Its value shows the user report of a specific plant but does not indicate the multiple benefits of a plant.

2.4. Informant's Consensus Factor (ICF)

It is the value that refers to the consumption of medicinal plants and analyzes the disease cured by adapted methods. Therefore, the respiratory disorder is sorted into different categories. To calculate the ICF value, the formula is given as For each category of diseases, the user report (UR) number is indicated by “Nur” while species of medicinal plant use are represented by “Nt” [32]. To prove the authenticity of locals, the data for the use of medicinal plant range from 0 to 1.00 in which the greater value expresses a high consumption of a medical plant, while the low value tells that the informants rarely use the medicinal plant species.

2.4.1. Relative Frequency Citation (RFC)

The traditional significant value of a plant species in its native area (RFC value) of each species was calculated by respondents that mention the use of specific medicinal plants (FC) by the whole number of informants (N) in the survey. The formula is given as [33]

2.4.2. Family Importance Value (FIV)

It is the quantitative measure to analyze the important value of the family and is described by the informants. It is calculated by using this formula: where it is the percentage of informant's report for a family of the plant to which it belongs.

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. Medicinal Plant Documentation and Ethnodemography of the Inhabitants

The most common 21 medicinal plants, belonging to 17 families, are used by indigenous people for 11 associated respiratory diseases. A survey was conducted by 185 informants interviewed; it was classified into different classes of demographic characters shown in Table 1.
Table 1

Demographic knowledge of informants in the current study.

VariableDemographic variantsNumberPercentage (%)
GenderMale13975
Female6435
Plant species
Age30-453921
46-605730.8
61-756535.1
>752412.9
InformantsLocals15784.8
Traditional healers2815.1
EducationIlliterate5027
Elementary2815.1
Secondary2010.8
Undergraduate4825.9
Graduate3921
Experience of TH2-5 years1865
5-10 years1035
The medicinal plants are mostly used to cure respiratory diseases giving designated information as presented in Table 2. The males—75% informants—were interviewed, and 25% of females were included in the survey. The demographic characters are designed in such a way that it showed the experience of the informant with plant species so that traditional healers were also included in studies where 65% have 2–5-year experience; those having 5-10-year experience are 35%, while the most reported locals are under the age of 61-75 (35.1%) followed by the age of 46-60 (30.8%) and 30-45 (21%), and the least are those with age above 75 years. In this study, it is clearer that respiratory disorders prevail more in illiterate people, which is 27%.
Table 2

Most common medicinal plant species of Bahawalpur District with their use values, relative frequency citation, and family importance value.

Name of plantFamily nameCommon namePlant part usedPreparation methodLife formTherapeutic effectsURFCUVRFCFIV
Justicia adhatoda BP01 Acanthaceae Malabar nutLeavesExtract, paste, ash, powder, decoctionShrubAsthma, cough, sore throat, tuberculosis290.670.054.86
Achyranthes aspera BP02 Amaranthaceae PuthkandaRootDecoction, powder, extract, paste, ashHerbAsthma, bronchitis, cold, cough, pneumonia410.70.010.54
Mangifera indica BP03 Anacardiaceae MangoBark, leavesJuice, paste infusion, extractTreeSore throat1110.860.065.95
Foeniculum vulgare BP04 Apiaceae FennelSeeds and leaves, flowerDecoction, powder, extract, paste, ashHerbRespiratory disorder cold, cough4120.650.066.49
Phoenix dactylifera BP05 Arecaceae Date palmFruitDecoction, extract, powderTreeBronchial infection270.590.043.78
Cordia obliqua BP06 Boraginaceae LasoraFruit, leavesPowder, extractTreeDry cough, tuberculosis370.610.043.78
Onosma bracteatum BP07 Boraginaceae GaozabanFruit, leavesExtract, decoction, infusionHerbRespiratory tract infection, influenza490.320.054.86
Glycyrrhiza glabra BP08 Fabaceae LiquoriceRootsDecoction, extract, pasteHerbAsthma, cough, pneumonia2120.890.066.49
Thymus vulgaris BP09 Lamiaceae ThymeLeaves, flowerDecoction, powder, extract, paste, ashShrubBronchitis, whooping cough380.540.044.32
Mentha piperita BP10 Lamiaceae PeppermintLeaves, stemJuice, paste infusion, extractHerbCough, sore throat, influenza2140.90.087.57
Hyssopus officinalis BP11 Lamiaceae ZoofaHerbDecoction, extract, powderShrubCough250.50.032.7
Abelmoschus esculentus L. BP12 Malvaceae OkraSeed fruitPowderHerbAsthma280.630.044.32
Acacia arabica BP13 Mimosaceae KikerFruit and leavesDecoction, extract, powderTreeBronchitis, cold tonsillitis4100.910.055.41
Ficus religiosa BP14 Papilionaceae PeepalFruit, leavesExtract, paste, ashTreeAsthma, tuberculosis190.680.054.86
Ziziphus vulgaris BP15 Rhamnaceae AnabFruit, leavesExtract, decoction, infusionShrubCough and cold, influenza330.290.021.62
Withania somnifera BP16 Solanaceae AshwagandhaRootsDecoction extractHerbAsthma, bronchitis4140.870.087.57
Phyla nodiflora BP17 Verbenaceae Cape weedWhole plantInfusionHerbAsthma, influenza260.570.033.24
Viola odorata BP18 Violaceae BanafshaStem, rootExtract, decoction, infusionHerbRespiratory disorders3120.850.066.49
Curcuma longa BP19 Zingiberaceae TurmericUnderground stemExtract, decoction, infusionHerbPulmonary infection, tuberculosis460.570.033.24
Zingiber officinale BP20 Zingiberaceae GingerStemJuice, paste infusion, extractHerbCold, cough and throat infection, influenza2150.910.088.11

3.2. Medicinal Plant and Indigenous Experience

The 21 species of medicinal plants that were most recorded have been used for different respiratory diseases (Table 2). These plants belong to 17 different families: Lamiaceae (3 species), Boraginaceae, and Zingiberaceae (2 species), while others reported only one species used by indigenous people. The life form of the plant is very significant because it specifies the environmental condition of the region (Bahawalpur). Figure 2 shows that herbaceous plants (52.38%) are more common and trees (23.8%) are followed by shrubs (19.10%). The parts of the plants were leaves (47.62%), fruits (33.33), and stem, roots, flower, seed, and bark which were also used to some extent (Figure 3). In ethnobotanical preparation, the leaves were used, so their collection does not impact the life cycle of plants [34]. The leaves are more tolerable for the local plants regarding other life forms of plants or entire plants. The plant's mode of usage depends upon the part of plant use that is delicate, soft, and hard [12]. According to the life form and plant part used in the crude preparation for respiratory disease, many traditional recipes are made with or without a subsidiary substance: decoction (71.4%), extract (66.7%), infusion, paste (38.1%), and powder (33.3%), and least mode of preparations that are made contains juice and ash (14.3%) (Figure 2). The traditional healer role for practice is that they use two or more plant mixes with some other ingredients: water, milk, essential oils, honey, and butter. The most used preparation is a decoction; it is prepared by boiling the plant part in water so that the required amount is obtained. Mostly, the administered dose is internal in this disease, but its external use is also preferred in the form of a paste. The dose and mode of administration to each patient are according to the physical condition and stage of the disease.
Figure 2

Mode of preparation used in the respiratory treatment and life form of a plant.

Figure 3

Plant part used for respiratory disease.

3.3. Therapeutic Significance

According to the survey from the region of Bahawalpur, the respiratory disease is categorized into 10 disorders (Figure 4). In this region, the most reported diseases in regard to plants are cough (10 species), asthma (8 species), bronchitis (5 species), influenza (4 species), sore throat and respiratory disorder (3 species), and pneumonia and tuberculosis (2 species). Other species are also significant in dry and whooping cough.
Figure 4

FCI value of plant against respiratory diseases.

3.4. The Quantitative Study of Ethnorespiratory Information

3.4.1. The Family Importance Value (FIV)

The family importance value (FIV) indicates the family significance in the region used by the informants, in which the reported dominant family is Zingiberaceae with FIV (8.11), followed by Lamiaceae (10.27), Solanaceae (7.7), Violaceae and Apiaceae (6.5), Anacardiaceae (5.9), and Mimosaceae (5.4), and the families with least FIV are Acanthaceae and Boraginaceae (4.86), Malvaceae (4.3), and Arecaceae (3.78), followed by Rhamnaceae (1.6) and Amaranthaceae (0.54). This result is shown in Figure 5.
Figure 5

Family importance value of plants.

3.4.2. Relative Frequency Citation (RFC)

From different localities of Bahawalpur, the most used medicinal plant for respiratory ailments by the informants shows the RFC value. The highest value shows the highest consumption of medicinal plants including Zingiber officinale, Mentha piperita and Withania somnifera (0.08), and Mangifera indica, Glycyrrhiza glabra, Viola odorata, and Foeniculum vulgare (0.06), while the medicinal plant with regard to respiratory disease has low RFC, but their other therapeutic indication has significant value. These are Justicia adhatoda, Ficus religiosa, Acacia arabica, and Onosma bracteatum having an RFC value of 0.05. Zingiber officinale is a herb used for cold, cough, throat infection, and influenza where an underground stem is used to make juice and a paste is made by grinding, infusion, and extraction. Mentha piperita is a common plant in which leaves and the stem are used to make juice, paste infusion, and extract in water. It is mainly helpful to treat cough, sore throat, and influenza. Withania somnifera is a small plant, commonly known as Ashwagandha; its delicate roots make decoction and extracts to treat asthma and bronchitis. Its use in a commercial product for these diseases indicates its significance. Mangifera indica is a perennial tree whose bark and leaves are used to treat the sore throat by making juice and paste by crushing the leaves, infusion; bark extract is also made for crude preparation. Glycyrrhiza glabra is a small herb plant where the plant's roots are used to make the decoction, paste, and extract helpful in curing asthma, cough, and pneumonia. Viola odorata is a common herb commonly known as Banafsha. This region is used in traditional remedies for cough and other respiratory disorders by making decoction and extract of stem and root. The decoction, the seeds of Foeniculum vulgare, is used to treat cold and cough, while extract and paste of the stem and leaves are consumed for respiratory disorders. Justicia adhatoda is a shrub plant that is considered important to cure asthma and cough by preparing extract, paste, powder, decoction, and ash, which is also prepared for tuberculosis and sore throat.

3.4.3. User Value (UV)

The relative importance of medicinal plants by quantitative analysis in a population is known as the plant's user value (UV). The plants with high UV are Acacia Arabica (0.91), Mentha piperita (0.9), which is contrary to the study conducted in Gujranwala Pakistan, Glycyrrhiza glabra (0.89), Withania somnifera (0.87), Mangifera indica (0.86), Viola odorata (0.85), and Achyranthes aspera (0.7) [35]. The plants with the highest UV are popular among the indigenous people of Bahawalpur District for respiratory diseases. Acacia arabica has antibacterial properties [36], which effectively treats the association of bronchitis, colds, and tonsillitis with respiratory diseases by using pods and leaves to make a decoction and a paste of leaves. Achyranthes aspera with a high UV value indicates its extensive use for asthma, bronchitis, cold, cough, and pneumonia in the Bahawalpur. It has been used by making decoction, powder, and extract for asthma. In addition, paste and ash are also used. The plants show their less use by the population due to minimum knowledge and exposure of plant with the natives of the region Bahawalpur. The medicinal plant with lower user value is Ficus religiosa (0.68), Phoenix dactylifera (0.59), Curcuma longa (0.57), Hyssopus officinalis (0.5), and Onosma bracteatum (0.32). The plant's availability makes a medicinal plant achieving its highest and low user value.

3.4.4. Informant Consensus Factor (ICF)

To analyze medicinal plants important for a disease used by the informant, the usage report is valuable to categorize respiratory disease into ten diseases. The cough is reported for 95.24% plant species by 66 users, followed by cold. Around 85.71% of medicinal plants have been used for asthma, and after that, plants recorded for sore throat (76.19%), bronchitis (66.67%), whooping cough (61.9%), influenza (52.38%), respiratory disorder (47.62%), pneumonia (42.86%), and tuberculosis (33.33%). The study shows that cough and cold are the most prevailing diseases in this area. The same results for disease regarding plants have been described in northern Pakistan [16].

3.5. The Medicinal Plant Available in Commercial Products

To confirm the ethnorespiratory plant significance, the market survey of herbal medicine as drugs for the usage of plants was conducted to treat respiratory disease. It is reported that five plants among the 20 plants belong to commercial treatment as respiratory disease drugs; local healers used these plants with other substituents in commercially available plants with a great source of income for the local community and traditional healer. The data of plants used commercially is shown in (Table 3).
Table 3

Commercial availability of plants in herbal products.

Commercial productsTreatment associatedMajor plants included in the herbal productReferences
SuduriBronchitis Ocimum basilicum, Adhatoda vasica[45]
InfuzaAsthma Glycyrrhiza glabra [45]
JoshinaBronchitis Ziziphus sativa, Viola odorata, Adhatoda vasica[45]
Sharbat BanafshaCough Viola odorata [46]
Shaafi JoshandaCough Adhatoda vasica, Viola odorata, Foeniculum vulgare[45]
LinkusCough Adhatoda vasica, Foeniculum vulgare, Viola odorata[45]
JoshindaBronchitis Ocimum basilicum, Onosma bracteatum, Ziziphus sativa, Viola odorata[45]
Johar JoshandaCough Ocimum basilicum, Viola odorata[46]
CorezcolExpectorant Mentha arvensis, Adhatoda vasica[46]

3.6. Comparative Study of Plants in Respiratory Disease

The ethnorespiratory plant analysis was compared in other studies in many regions of Pakistan and our neighboring countries to conform to the stated data. The comparison of this study showed that the plants reported in the Bahawalpur region were also used for respiratory diseases in another region (Table 4).
Table 4

Comparison of similarities and differences between the study area and neighboring regions.

AreaReferencesNo. of speciesPlants with similar usePlants with different useSimilarity ratio
Urmia[12]20100
Turkey[45]137121.46
Bahawalpur, Pakistan[46]123700
Gallies, Northern Pakistan[16]120500
Hafizabad, Pakistan[27]85422.35
Uganda[37]88200
Pakistan[38]384800
Lahore, Pakistan[39]129421.55
Uttar Pradesh, India[40]57435.26
Swat, Pakistan[41]100033
The study at west Azerbaijan shows the respiratory disease cured by traditional medicinal plants showing a similar study. Some 20 plants used in treating disease, the species of Mentha, have the same uses as our study [12]. The study of ethnobotanical plants in manisia where the plant has similar uses and modes of preparation through Glycyrrhiza glabra, but there is a contrast in the use of plants Mentha x piperita L and Foeniculum vulgare Mill. So, there is the novelty of the use of plants against respiratory disorder [37]. The area of Bahawalpur, Pakistan, was reported with 123 plants out of these 7 species, which uses Achyranthes aspera, Mangifera indica, Phoenix dactylifera, Mentha longifolia, Acacia nilotica, Withania somnifera, and Phyla nodiflora, with properties to cure respiratory diseases [38]. A similar study in the Northern region shows 120 plants with 5 plants having comparable uses and modes of preparation including Acacia nilotica (L.), Glycyrrhiza glabra L. Justicia adhatoda, Achyranthes aspera, Abelmoschus esculentus (L.) [27] studied 85 medicinal plants Mentha longifolia, Achyranthes aspera, Withania somnifera, and Ficus religiosa tally with plants used in the present study while some plants having dissimilar use are Mangifera indica and Acacia arabica [16, 39]. A study in Uganda, 2 plants out of 88 plants, Mangifera indica L and Achyranthes aspera L, are used for respiratory disease, but its use in tuberculosis is more emphasized [40]. A previous study contains 129 plants in which 4 plants with have same use including Justicia adhatoda, Achyranthes aspera, Withania somnifera, and Ficus religiosa are included, but 2 plants have dissimilar use and these plants are Mangifera indica and Acacia nilotica [41]. 384 medicinal plants from which 8 plants have been studied with similar use. The plant's similar use for respiratory diseases is Glycyrrhiza glabra, Onosma bracteatum, Zingiber officinalis, Viola odorata L., Mangifera indica, Ficus religiosa L, Phoenix dactylifera, and Phyla nodiflora [42]. It was reported, in India, that 57 medicinal plants belong to 37 families and 53 genera [43]. The plants, used for respiratory disease, are Acacia nilotica (L.) Curcuma longa, Withania somnifera, and Zingiber officinale while the plants Achyranthes aspera, Ficus religiosa, and Mangifera indica have dissimilar use with the present study. 100 plants were studied and no one has similar uses, but these plants have other expectorant and diuretic viz. Acacia nilotica, Achyranthes aspera, and Mentha longifolia [44].

4. Conclusion

This survey examines the most common uses of medicinal plants against respiratory diseases in the district of Bahawalpur, Pakistan. The indigenous people of this region use the native plants to cure their respiratory diseases because of synergistic and preventive causes. The most common plants belong to different families like Lamiaceae, Fabaceae, Papilionaceae, Anacardiaceae, Zingiberaceae, Solanaceae, and Arecaceae, which can cause associated respiratory symptoms: cough, asthma, bronchitis, and pulmonary infection. Traditional healers also use the plants, but the commercial manufacturer's used plants and other plants in herbal medication help ease the dilemmas of respiratory disorders. The exploration of ethnomedicinal information is necessary to value the traditional use of medicinal plants by the local community. Thus, bioassay and frequency of plant-related drugs can be executed relationally. The present study is an enduring survey supporting the prospect by documenting the traditional knowledge of indigenous plants of this area and raising the significance of old practices for treatment. As a contextual recommendation, the need for an hour is to establish research to screen out the important phytochemicals in plants and develop the antibiotics by using these plants, which have resistance against bacteria and have the least side effect on the human body. Contextually, this survey is to fill up the gaps between the traditional usage of plants and pharmacological studies of respiratory disorders to document ethnomedicinal data in a meaningful way. A conventional method of collecting the parts of plants is recommended so that its life cycle is not disturbed as well as the survival of endangered species of plants is not affected.
  17 in total

Review 1.  Ethnobotany and its role in drug development.

Authors:  M Heinrich
Journal:  Phytother Res       Date:  2000-11       Impact factor: 5.878

2.  Indigenous knowledge of medicinal plants from Gujranwala district, Pakistan.

Authors:  Adeel Mahmood; Aqeel Mahmood; Riffat Naseem Malik; Zabta Khan Shinwari
Journal:  J Ethnopharmacol       Date:  2013-05-21       Impact factor: 4.360

Review 3.  Ethnopharmacological field studies: a critical assessment of their conceptual basis and methods.

Authors:  Michael Heinrich; Sarah Edwards; Daniel E Moerman; Marco Leonti
Journal:  J Ethnopharmacol       Date:  2009-07-06       Impact factor: 4.360

4.  Ethnobotanical study on traditional use of medicinal plants in South-Western Serbia, Zlatibor district.

Authors:  Katarina Savikin; Gordana Zdunić; Nebojša Menković; Jelena Zivković; Nada Cujić; Milena Tereščenko; Dubravka Bigović
Journal:  J Ethnopharmacol       Date:  2013-02-16       Impact factor: 4.360

5.  Traditional effects of medicinal plants in the treatment of respiratory diseases and disorders: an ethnobotanical study in the Urmia.

Authors:  Mohsen Asadbeigi; Tahereh Mohammadi; Mahmoud Rafieian-Kopaei; Kourosh Saki; Mahmoud Bahmani; Mohammad Delfan
Journal:  Asian Pac J Trop Med       Date:  2014-09       Impact factor: 1.226

6.  Ethnobotanical study of medicinal plants used by Kurd tribe in Dehloran and Abdanan Districts, Ilam Province, Iran.

Authors:  A Ghasemi Pirbalouti; M Momeni; M Bahmani
Journal:  Afr J Tradit Complement Altern Med       Date:  2012-12-31

7.  Clinical evaluation of blood pressure lowering, endothelial function improving, hypolipidemic and anti-inflammatory effects of pomegranate juice in hypertensive subjects.

Authors:  Sedigheh Asgary; Amirhossein Sahebkar; Mohammad Reza Afshani; Mahtab Keshvari; Shaghayegh Haghjooyjavanmard; Mahmoud Rafieian-Kopaei
Journal:  Phytother Res       Date:  2013-03-21       Impact factor: 5.878

8.  An ethnobotanical survey of indigenous medicinal plants in Hafizabad district, Punjab-Pakistan.

Authors:  Muhammad Umair; Muhammad Altaf; Arshad Mehmood Abbasi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-06-02       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  An ethnoveterinary study of medicinal plants in treatment of diseases and syndromes of herd dog in southern regions of Ilam province, Iran.

Authors:  Mahmoud Bahmani; Zohre Eftekhari
Journal:  Comp Clin Path       Date:  2012-01-26

10.  Ecological status and traditional knowledge of medicinal plants in Kedarnath Wildlife Sanctuary of Garhwal Himalaya, India.

Authors:  Jahangeer A Bhat; Munesh Kumar; Rainer W Bussmann
Journal:  J Ethnobiol Ethnomed       Date:  2013-01-02       Impact factor: 2.733

View more
  3 in total

Review 1.  Advances and applications of monoolein as a novel nanomaterial in mitigating chronic lung diseases.

Authors:  Yinghan Chan; Sachin Kumar Singh; Monica Gulati; Sheetu Wadhwa; Parteek Prasher; Deepak Kumar; Avvaru Praveen Kumar; Gaurav Gupta; Gowthamarajan Kuppusamy; Mehra Haghi; Brian Gregory George Oliver; Jon Adams; Dinesh Kumar Chellappan; Kamal Dua
Journal:  J Drug Deliv Sci Technol       Date:  2022-06-23       Impact factor: 5.062

2.  The Identification of Childhood Asthma Progression-Related lncRNAs and mRNAs Suitable as Biomarkers Using Weighted Gene Coexpression Network Analysis.

Authors:  Min Hao; Jinling Zan
Journal:  Genet Res (Camb)       Date:  2021-07-27       Impact factor: 1.588

Review 3.  Rediscovering the Therapeutic Potential of Agarwood in the Management of Chronic Inflammatory Diseases.

Authors:  Juman Mohammed Rasmi Alamil; Keshav Raj Paudel; Yinghan Chan; Dikaia Xenaki; Jithendra Panneerselvam; Sachin Kumar Singh; Monica Gulati; Niraj Kumar Jha; Deepak Kumar; Parteek Prasher; Gaurav Gupta; Raniya Malik; Brian George Oliver; Philip Michael Hansbro; Kamal Dua; Dinesh Kumar Chellappan
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2022-05-09       Impact factor: 4.927

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.