| Literature DB >> 35736986 |
Adwait M Deshpande1, K Venkata Sastry2, Satish B Bhise1,3.
Abstract
Snakebite being a quick progressing serious situation needs immediate and aggressive therapy. Snake venom antiserum is the only approved and effective treatment available, but for selected snake species only. The requirement of trained staff for administration and serum reactions make the therapy complicated. In tropical countries where snakebite incidence is high and healthcare facilities are limited, mortality and morbidities associated with snake envenomation are proportionately high. Traditional compilations of medical practitioners' personal journals have wealth of plant-based snake venom antidotes. Relatively, very few plants or their extractives have been scientifically investigated for neutralization of snake venom or its components. None of these investigations presents enough evidence to initiate clinical testing of the agents. This review focuses on curating Indian traditional snake envenomation therapies, identifying plants involved and finding relevant evidence across modern literature to neutralize snake venom components. Traditional formulations, their method of preparation and dosing have been discussed along with the investigational approach in modern research and their possible outcomes. A safe and easily administrable small molecule of plant origin that would protect or limit the spread of venom and provide valuable time for the victim to reach the healthcare centre would be a great lifesaver.Entities:
Keywords: Daboia russelii; Naja naja; life saver; neglected tropical disease; plant-based antidote; snake envenomation; traditional therapies
Year: 2022 PMID: 35736986 PMCID: PMC9227218 DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed7060108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Med Infect Dis ISSN: 2414-6366
Snake-bite therapies comprising single plant species.
| Formulation/Dose/Direction | Plant Common Name | Botanical Name (Family) |
|---|---|---|
| To treat cobra, Russell’s viper or saw-scaled viper envenomation, juice of Indian snakeroot should be orally administered [ | Indian snakeroot | |
| Four parts of castor leaf juice diluted with one part of water should be taken orally, and a paste of the leaves should be applied to the bite area. The individual will vomit venom [ | Castor | |
| Prickly pear root levigated in cow milk should be administered twice daily. Eating spicy foods should be avoided [ | Prickly pear | |
| Sacred tree root levigated with water should be orally administered and a thick paste should be applied topically to the bite area [ | Sacred tree | |
| To treat krait venom: 5–10 mL of Portia bark juice should be taken orally [ | Portia tree | |
| To treat cobra and saw-scaled viper venom: The juice of crowded-flower jasmine leaves should be administered orally as per tolerance [ | Crowded-flower jasmine | |
| To treat snake or Russell’s viper venom: Levigated paste of white Nerium root should be applied topically on the bite area, or juice of leaves should be administered orally. In case of drowsiness due to this medication, clarified butter should be administered [ | Oleander or Nerium | |
| To treat krait envenomation: Levigated paste of spiny gourd tubers in honey should be instilled into the eyes, or juice should be administered orally [ | Spiny gourd | |
| Levigated paste of spiny gourd tubers in water should be administered orally and applied topically to the stung area [ | Spiny gourd | |
| Apple of Sodom leaves should be crushed with its sticky sap and formed into pills. These pills should be administered orally at regular intervals, or a levigated root paste should be administered orally [ | Apple of Sodom | |
| Levigated paste of sacred tree root should be administered orally or applied topically [ | Sacred tree | |
| Levigated paste of creeping launaea root should be administered orally [ | Creeping launaea | |
| Colocynth root should be consumed in | Colocynth | |
| Levigated paste of conkerberry root in water should be administered orally [ | Conkerberry | |
| Filtered aqueous soapberry solution should be instilled in the eyes. In the case of severe envenomation, soapberry water should be administered orally so that the venom is vomited out. To avoid postinstillation irritation of the eyes, white butter or clarified butter should be applied [ | Indian soapberry | |
| Snakebite test: A person not recognising the taste of neem leaves, salt or chilli peppers when given orally indicates snake envenomation. To treat envenomation, neem leaves should be chewed, or leaf or bark juice should be administered orally [ | Neem | |
| In the case of skin lumps caused by saw-scaled viper venom: Warmed bitter cumin leaves should be applied topically, or its juice should be rubbed on the affected area [ | Bitter cumin | |
| For cobra venom: Cluster fig bark paste diluted with the mixture of its juice and milk should be administered orally [ | Cluster fig | |
| In the event of a snakebite: Jaggery and sesame seeds should be crushed in cow’s milk and consumed orally [ | Sesame seeds | |
| Crushed paste of prickly pear leaves should be applied topically [ | Prickly pear | |
| Punarnava root levigated with water should be administered [ | Punarnava | |
| Powdered Punarnava roots should be administered orally with water [ | Punarnava | |
| Crushed coffeeweed root paste should be instilled in the eyes [ | Coffeeweed | |
| The root of the apple of Sodom levigated with water should be instilled into the nose and eyes [ | Apple of Sodom | |
| Rosary peas levigated with water should be administered orally [ | Rosary pea | |
| An aqueous solution of Indian soapberry should be administered orally until the patient vomits a couple of times. An aqueous paste made from Indian soapberry should be instilled into the eyes. Levigated paste of Indian soapberries should be applied topically to the stung area [ | Indian soapberry | |
| Powdered potato yam stem bark should be administered with water [ | Potato yam | |
| A reference from Ceylon (Sri Lanka): The key lime juice was applied to the stung area, and leeches were placed around it. On the third day, a laxative was administered, and the person was cured [ | Key lime | |
| One or one and a half bristly luffa fruits should be crushed in water, decanted and administered orally. Clarified butter should be administered after vomiting occurs [ | Bristly luffa | |
| To treat Russel’s viper bite: Apply castor oil topically on the bite [ | Castor | |
| To treat krait envenomation: Oral administration of fire-flame bush juice is recommended [ | Fire-flame bush | |
| The juice prepared from a minimum of 12–18 g of colocynth or its water extract should be taken orally. Venom will be expelled out in the form of vomit or faeces [ | Colocynth | |
| The root of Indian night shade levigated with water should be administered orally and applied topically on the stung area [ | Indian night shade | |
| Bristly luffa fruit extract in 40 g of cold water should be taken orally twice a day [ | Bristly luffa | |
| Levigated paste of devil’s goad roots should be administered orally [ | Devil’s goad | |
| Steamed grated unripe papaya should be applied topically for 2–4 days around the bite area [ | Papaya |
Snake-bite therapies comprising 2–4 plant species.
| Formulation/Dose/Direction | Plant Common Name | Botanical Name (Family) |
|---|---|---|
| Levigated paste of Ceylon Leadwort roots, chilla roots and | Ceylon leadwort | |
| Chilla | ||
|
| Unidentified | |
| Freshwater mangrove fruits levigated with garlic juice should be instilled into the eyes [ | Freshwater mangrove | |
| Garlic | ||
| A pill should be made from finely powdered purging croton seed kernels that have been coated with key lime fruit juice 12 times. This pill levigated with human saliva should be instilled into the eyes [ | Purging croton | |
| Key lime | ||
| A diluted paste of Indian birthwort made with soapberries or white abrus should be taken orally at regular intervals [ | Indian birthwort | |
| Indian soapberry | ||
| White abrus | ||
| To treat Russell’s viper envenomation: A thick paste of devil’s goad roots, soapberries, and bitter cumin made with veld grape juice should be diluted with cow urine and applied topically at the bite site [ | Veld grape | |
| Devil’s goad | ||
| Indian soapberry | ||
| Bitter cumin | ||
| To treat Russell’s viper and krait venom: Paste formed by levigating devil’s goad roots and dry ginger should be administered orally. It will act as purgative and emetic. In case of skin lumps due to envenomation, the levigated paste of devil’s goad roots should be applied topically [ | Devil’s goad | |
| Dry ginger | ||
| A finely powdered mixture of dried white Nerium flowers, tobacco and cardamom should be insufflated [ | Nerium | |
| Tobacco | ||
| Cardamom | ||
| To treat Russell’s viper venom: Levigated paste of devil’s goad roots in the juice of three parts hog plum bark, two parts grey downy balsam bark and one part frangipani bark should be administered orally as tolerated [ | Devil’s goad | |
| Hog plum | ||
| Grey downy balsam | ||
| Frangipani | ||
| Jaggery and sesame seeds should be crushed in the sticky sap of apple of Sodom and consumed orally [ | Sesame seeds | |
| Apple of Sodom | ||
| Powdered East Indian walnut seeds mixed with prickly pear sticky sap should be applied to the stung area [ | East Indian walnut | |
| Prickly pear | ||
| Equal portions of salted dried roselle, powdered limestone and powdered turmeric should be levigated in cow urine and applied topically on the bite area for 3–7 days [ | Roselle | |
| Turmeric | ||
| A person fainted as a result of snake envenomation. An ascetic rubbed holy basil juice around the victim’s navel, chest, and forehead and kept a cloth ball dipped in the holy basil juice until the victim woke up. The banana stem water was then administered orally [ | Holy basil/Tulasi | |
| Banana | ||
| An amount of 30 g of Bengal quince bark or leaves juice, 30 g of Frangipani bark juice, and 3 pills of Sanjeevini should be administered together [ | Bengal quince | |
| Frangipani | ||
| Sanjeevini |
Plant species used in Nagachya Golya and Vyadhiharak Vatika.
| Common Name | Botanical Name (Family) |
|---|---|
| Aconite | |
| Asafoetida | |
| Babreng | |
| Betle leaf | |
| Black pepper | |
| Castor | |
| Ceylon leadwort | |
| Chebulic myrobalan | |
| False daisy/Bhringraj | |
| Freshwater mangrove | |
| Garlic | |
| Ginger | |
| Henbane | |
| Holy basil/Tulasi | |
| Indian aconite | |
| Indian barberry | |
| Indian gooseberry | |
| Liquorice | |
| Long pepper | |
| Mount Atlas daisy | |
| Nutmeg, Mace | |
| Opium poppy | |
| Purging croton | |
| Pushkarmool | |
| Sacred fig |
Ethnobotanical and pharmacological evidence of plant species used in the treatment of snake envenomation in the modern literature.
| Family | Botanical Name | Ethnobotanical | Pharmacological Evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amaryllidaceae | |||
| Bulbs [ | Ethanolic, methanolic and aqueous extracts of garlic ( | ||
| Anacardiaceae | |||
| Leaves, Fruits [ | None | ||
| Apiaceae | |||
| Exudates [ | None | ||
| Apocynaceae | |||
| Whole plant [ | Organic solvent extracts of | ||
| Leaves [ | None | ||
| Whole plant [ | None | ||
| Fruits [ | None | ||
| Whole plant [ | The alkaloid fraction of | ||
| Aristolochiaceae | |||
| Whole plant [ | Aqueous ethanolic extract of | ||
| Asteraceae | |||
| Seeds [ | None | ||
| Plant * [ | The alkaloid fraction of | ||
| Berberidaceae | |||
| Berberine [ | None | ||
| Caesalpiniaceae | |||
| Roots [ | None | ||
| Caricaceae | |||
| Papain [ | None | ||
| Combretaceae | |||
| Fruits ^ [ | None | ||
| Cucurbitaceae | |||
| Fruits [ | Methanolic extract of the whole plant of | ||
| Roots [ | None | ||
| Dioscoreaceae | |||
| Sap [ | None | ||
| Euphorbiaceae | |||
| Stem bark [ | None | ||
| Roots, Stem Bark, Seeds [ | None | ||
| Fruits ^ [ | Fruits of Indian gooseberry when tested in vitro for | ||
| Fabaceae | |||
| Roots [ | None | ||
| Roots [ | Organic solvent extracts of | ||
| Roots [ | Glycyrrhizin, from | ||
| Lamiaceae | |||
| Flowers ^ [ | Tulsi leaves were tested in vitro for | ||
| Lecythidaceae | |||
| Seeds ~ [ | None | ||
| Lythraceae | |||
| Whole plant [ | None | ||
| Meliaceae | |||
| Whole plant [ | Neem bark was tested in vitro for | ||
| Moraceae | |||
| Leaves [ | None | ||
| Musaceae | |||
| Plant * [ | |||
| Myrsinaceae | |||
| Seeds [ | None | ||
| Nyctaginaceae | |||
| Roots [ | Ethanolic extract of | ||
| Papaveraceae | |||
| Plant * [ | None | ||
| Pedaliaceae | |||
| Seed oil [ | None | ||
| Piperaceae | |||
| Whole Plant [ | None | ||
| Roots [ | Ethanolic extract of | ||
| Fruits [ | None | ||
| Plumbaginaceae | |||
| Roots [ | None | ||
| Ranunculaceae | |||
| Roots [ | The aqueous root extract of | ||
| Tubers [ | None | ||
| Rutaceae | |||
| Whole plant [ | Aqueous ethanolic extract of | ||
| Fruit juice [ | None | ||
| Salicaceae | |||
| Twigs [ | None | ||
| Sapindaceae | |||
| Leaves, Stem bark [ | Methanolic extract of | ||
| Solanaceae | |||
| Roots, Leaves [ | None | ||
| Zingiberaceae | |||
| Rhizomes [ | Fractionated methanolic extract of | ||
| Seeds [ | None | ||
| Rhizomes [ | None | ||
$ Mention of the plant part in modern literature with a context of traditional or folk literature. * Specific plant part used in the therapy is not known. ^ As one of the parts of Bilwadi Gutika. ~ Used in combination with other plants/drugs.
Figure 1Plant parts as an antidote for snake envenomation from modern literature. * Extracted components or chemicals.
Figure 2Modern literature evidence on snake species-specific inhibition of venom and its components.
Snake species-wise literature references indicating pharmacological action, enzyme inhibition and toxin inhibition.
| Family | References | |||
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| Snake Species | Action | Enzyme X | Toxin X | |
| Elapidae | ||||
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| Viperidae | ||||
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| Crotalid species | [ | [ | [ | |
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| Unspecified snake species | [ | [ | ||
Figure 3Modern literature evidence on plant species that inhibit snake venom and its components.
Plant species with no modern literature evidence as snake envenomation antidote.
| Family | Plant Species |
|---|---|
| Asteraceae | |
| Burseraceae | |
| Cactaceae | |
| Cucurbitaceae | |
| Euphorbiaceae | |
| Malvaceae | |
| Mimosaceae | |
| Moraceae | |
| Myristicaceae | |
| Oleaceae | |
| Papaveraceae | |
| Selaginellaceae | |
| Solanaceae | |
| Vitaceae |