| Literature DB >> 35330200 |
Maria Jamil1,2,3, Muhammad Tahir Aleem2, Aftab Shaukat4, Asad Khan2, Muhammad Mohsin5, Tauseef Ur Rehman6, Rao Zahid Abbas7, Muhammad Kashif Saleemi3, Aisha Khatoon3, Waseem Babar8, Ruofeng Yan2, Kun Li1,2.
Abstract
Parasitic infections are a major public health concern affecting millions of people universally. This review elaborates on the potential impacts of plants and their bioactive components that have been widely used in the cure of several parasitic infections of poultry. The medicinal importance of natural herbs depends upon their bioactive ingredients, which are originated from crude plants, consequently leading to the specific action on the body. Due to the limited availability of effective drugs and high cost, the development of drug resistance in several harmful parasites and microbes leads to huge economic losses in the poultry industry. This will impose the development of innovative sources for drugs to overwhelm the therapeutic failure. Moreover, the environment-friendly feed additives which can be applied as a substitute to antibiotic growth promoters (AGP) for broilers were proven. The application of natural products with therapeutic characteristics is an ancient practice that is appropriately gaining more acceptance. Globally, it is assessed that some 20,000 species of higher plants are used medicinally, although traditional medicine has a scarcity of knowledge on its efficiency and wellbeing. This review explores the usage of medicinal herbs for parasitic infections, emphasizing the recent knowledge available while detecting the research gaps which may be explored to find the usage of herbal medicines for parasitic infections in poultry. In conclusion, herbal medicines are the effective source of prime components for drug detection and the formation of phytopharmaceuticals in the control of devastating parasitic infections. There is a prerequisite to applying the traditional medicine information in clinical applications via value addition.Entities:
Keywords: alternative control; medicinal plants; parasitic diseases; poultry
Year: 2022 PMID: 35330200 PMCID: PMC8953102 DOI: 10.3390/life12030449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life (Basel) ISSN: 2075-1729
Figure 1Mechanism of action of medicinal plants linked with poultry.
Figure 2The general layout of parasitic diseases in poultry.
Antiparasitic medicinal plants with their bioactive components and applications.
| Scientific Name | Common Name | Secondary Bioactive Metabolite | Applications | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Green tea | Polyphenolic compounds | Inactivate the enzyme for coccidian sporulation | [ |
|
| Pine bark | Tannins | Effective against | [ |
|
| Guar bean | Saponins which might lyse oocyst | Reduce the chance of coccidiosis in chicken | [ |
|
| Barberry root bark | Isoquinoline alkaloid berberine | Inhibit the sporozoites of | [ |
|
| Grape seed | Proanthocyanidin | Reduces the coccidiosis via downregulation of oxidative stress | [ |
|
| Olive tree | Maslinic acid | Enhances the anticoccidial index | [ |
|
| Rangoon creeper | gallic acid and ellagic acid | Decreased lesion score, reduced oocyst and mortality | [ |
|
| brimstone tree | alkaloids, anthraquinones, and anthraquinols | Decreased oocyst count | [ |
|
| African wormwood | Flavonoids, terpenes, coumarins, and phenolic acids | Decreased oocyst count, increased feed consumption, reduced lesion score | [ |
|
| Coneflower | Flavonoid echinolone, chloric acid | Provoke the humoral immune response against the coccidiosis in poultry | [ |
|
| Turmeric rhizome | Curcumin (diferuloylmethane) | Inhibition of sporozoites of | [ |
|
| Aloe leave | Acemann sugars anthraquinones | Aloe vera supplemented group exhibited considerably lesser intestinal lesions | [ |
|
| Emblic fruits | Tannins | Against coccidiosis | [ |
|
| Shrubby sophora | Sophorae Radix | Reduced oocyst count, decreased lesion score and decreased mortality | [ |
|
| Drumstick tree | Flavanol, rutin and glycoside | Reduced oocyst count and increased body weight | [ |
Application of Ethnoveterinary Medicine in Poultry.
| Scientific Name | Local Name | Parts Used | Ethnoveterinary Use | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Shrubby sophora | Decoction |
| [ |
| Black paper and nettle | Ethanolic extract | Coccidial species | [ | |
|
| Mugwort | Acetone extract |
| [ |
| Aleppo oak, Chinese rose, black/chebulic myrobalan | Ground powder | [ | ||
| garlic and black pepper | Garlic cloves and black piper kernels | [ | ||
|
| guggul | Ethanolic resinous extract | Oocyst | [ |
|
| Western red cedar | shavings | Red bird mites | [ |
|
| Wild tobacco | Chopped dried stems | Red bird mites | [ |
|
| Wild tobacco | Chopped stem, seed pods, and leaves | External parasites poultry | [ |
|
| Wild tobacco | Handful of crumbled dry leaves or decoction | Endoparasites poultry | [ |
|
| Neem | Neem oil | Filariasis | [ |
|
| Horsemint | Leaves |
| [ |
|
| Black cumin | Plant Extract | Helminths | [ |
|
| Clove oil | Aromatic clove oil | Haemoproteus columbae | [ |
|
| Common dandelion | Whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | [ |
|
| comfrey | Whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | [ |
|
| Common burdock | Whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | [ |
|
| Mugwort | Whole plant | Endoparasites poultry | [ |
|
| Grassy leaved sweet | Whole plant | Avian trichosporon | [ |
|
| Neem | Whole plant |
| [ |
|
| Spanish lavender | Essential oil | Coccidial infection | [ |
|
| Sweet bay | Essential oil | Coccidial infection | [ |
|
| Moringa | Acetone leaves extract | Coccidial infection | [ |
|
| Dalchini | Bark (Volatile oil) |
| [ |
|
| Eastern purple coneflower | Whole plant extract |
| [ |
|
| Aloe vera | Polysaccharides (maltose, glucose, sucrose) | Coccidiosis | [ |