Sunday, July 5, 2015

Vigna radiata, Green gram, Mung, Pesalu, thua khieo, balatong



Vigna radiata (L.) R.Wilczek
Family: Fabaceae

English: golden gram, greed gram, green gram, mung bean
  • Common name: Wild Moong, Mung bean, Wild black gram
  • Burma: pè-di-sien
  • Cambodia: sândaèk ba:y
  • China: chih hsiao tou, hung tou, lu dou
  • Hindi: बन उरद Ban Urad
  • Japan: ke-tsuru-azuki
  • Laos: thwàx khiêw, thwàx ngo:k, thwàx sadê:k
  • Madagascar: antandro, sarimahalay, voango
  • Malayalam: kattu uluntu
  • Malaysia: kacang hijau
  • Marathi: वेल मूंग Vel mung
  • Nepal: mung
  • Philippines: balatong, mongo
  • Sanskrit: मासपर्णी Masaparni
  • Tamil:  பாசிப் பயறு pasi payaru
  • Tanzania: mchooko, mchoroko, ndotodoto
  • Telugu: పెసులు
  • Thailand: thua khieo, thua thong
  • Tibet: ma-sha, mon-sran, mon sran sdeu, mu dga, non sran rdeu
  • Vietnam: dâu chè, dâu xanh
Used in Ayurveda, Unani and Sidha. Seeds used for paralysis, rheumatism, coughs, fevers and liver ailments. Low in antinutritional factors, a good source of minerals, proteins, provitamin A and vitamin B complex. Veterinary medicine, seed paste mixed with turmeric powder applied to treat dislocated bone of cattle. [CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants]

Used as a pulse. Soup is given as a diet to patients of enlarged liver and spleen, and after recovery from acute illness. A poultice of it is used for checking secretion of milk and reducing distention of the mammary glands. [Indian Medicinal Plants an Illustrated Dictionary]

83 Published articles related to Pharmacy/Pharmacology of Vigna radiata

Bambusa Bambos, Bamboo, Moongil, veduru bongu



Bambusa bambos (L.) Voss.
Family: Poaceae


Synonyms: Arundarbor agrestis (Lour.) Kuntze, Arundarbor arundinacea (Retz.) Kuntze, Arundarbor bambos (L.) Kuntze, Arundarbor orientalis (Nees) Kuntze, Arundarbor spinosa (Buch.-Ham.) Kuntze, Arundarbor teba (Miq.) Kuntze, Arundo agrestis Lour., Arundo arborea Mill., Arundo bambu Lour., Arundo excelsa Salisb. , Arundo spinosa (Roxb. ex Buch.-Ham.) Oken, Bambos arundinacea Retz., Bambos arundo J.F.Gmel., Bambos bambos (L.) W.F.Wright , Bambos quinqueflora Stokes , Bambusa agrestis (Lour.) Poir., Bambusa arundinacea Willd., Bambusa arundo Wight ex Steud. , Bambusa bambusa Huth , Bambusa neesiana Arn. ex Munro , Bambusa orientalis Nees, Bambusa spinosa Roxb. ex Buch.-Ham., Ischurochloa spinosa (Buch.-Ham.) Buse, Nastus arundinaceus (Retz.) Sm., Arundo bambos L., Bambusa spinosa Roxb., Bambusa arundinacea var. gigantea Bahadur , Bambusa arundinacea var. orientalis (Nees) Gamble, Bambusa arundinacea var. spinosa (Buch.-Ham.) E.G.Camus, Bambusa bambos var. spinosa (Buch.-Ham.) S.S.Jain & S.Biswas, Ischurochloa arundinacea var. orientalis (Nees) Buse

Common name: Indian Thorny Bamboo, giant thorny bamboo, male bamboo, spiny bamboo, spring bamboo
  • Assamese: জাতি-বাঁহ jaati baansh, মোকাল-বাঁহ mokal baansh
  • Bengali: বাঁশ baansha
  • French: Bambou épineux
  • Gujarati: બામ્બુ baambu, વાંસ vaans
  • Hindi: बांस baans, बम्बू bambu, बंस buns
  • Kannada: ಬಿದಿರು bidiru, ವಂಶ vamsha
  • Kashmiri: वंशः Vanshah, बैँस् Bains, बाँस् Bons
  • Konkani: वासो vaaso, वसो vaso, वेलु velu
  • Malayalam: മുള mula
  • Manipuri: সনৈবী Saneibi
  • Marathi: बांबू baamboo, कळक kalaka, कळंक kalanka, माणगा maanga, वेळू velu
  • Nepali: काँस kauns
  • Oriya: ਮਗਰ ਬਾਂਸ magar baans
  • Sanskrit: आमुपः amupah, आर्द्रपत्रकः ardrapatrakah, कण्टकः kantakah, कण्टकिलः kantakilah, वम्भः vambhah, वंशः vamsh
  • Tamil: குழாய்மூங்கில் kulay-munkil, பெருமூங்கில் peru-munkil
  • Telugu: బొంగువెదురు bongu-veduru, వంశము vamsamu, వెదురు veduru
  • Urdu: بانس baans, بمبو bambu, نبس buns
  • Vietnamese: Tre nghệ

Description: Culms from a thick stoloniferous rhizome, erect, 10-20 cm across; culm sheaths broadly triangular, densely brownish-hairy within, and scattered hairy without. Leaves to 20 cm long; sheaths to 12 x .2 cm, linear, glabrous; ligule short, entire; petiole short. Inflorescence a compound panicle with the spikelets in heads. Spikelets 1-many-flowered, 0.8-2 cm long, oblong, terete. Bracts glume-like. Glumes 1-3, to 5.5 mm, broadly ovate, mucronate. Lemmas to 6.5 mm, lanceolate, mucronate, coriaceous, glabrous. Paleas to 7 mm, 2-keeled, ciliate. Stamens 6. Style 1; stigmas 3. Caryopsis linearly cylindric.
Ayurvedic uses: Leaf bud and young shoots—used in dysmenorrhoea; externally in ulcerations. Leaf—emmenagogue, antileprotic, febrifuge, bechic; used in haemoptysis. Stem and leaf—blood purifier (used in leucoderma and inflammatory conditions). Root—poisonous. Burnt root is applied to ringworm, bleeding gums, painful joints. Bark—used for eruptions. Leaf and Bamboo-manna—emmenagogue. Bamboo-manna—pectoral, expectorant, carminative, cooling, aphrodisiac, tonic (used in debilitating diseases, urinary infections, chest diseases, cough, asthma). [Indian Medicinal Plants An Illustrated Dictionary]

Emmenagogue, anthelmintic, astringent, stimulant [Medicinal Plants Kerala Ag University]

Published articles of Bambusa Bambos

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Terminalia chebula, Harithaki, Kadukkai, สมอไทย, Chiêu lieu, Hardi,


Terminalia chebula Retz.
Family: Combretaceae

Synonyms: Buceras chebula (Retz.) Lyons, Myrobalanus chebula (Retz.) Gaertn., Myrobalanus gangetica (Roxb.) Kostel., Terminalia acuta Walp., Terminalia chebula var. chebula, Terminalia gangetica Roxb., Terminalia parviflora Thwaites, Terminalia reticulata Roth, Terminalia zeylanica Van Heurck & Müll. Arg.

  • Common name: Black Myrobalan, Myrobalan
  • Assamese: শিলিখা Shilikha
  • Bengali: হরীতকী Haritaki
  • Chinese: 诃子
  • Gujaratai: હરડી Hardi, હરડે Harde
  • Hindi: हरीतकी Harithaki
  • Kannada: ಅಳಲೆ ಕಾಯಿ Alale kayi
  • Konkani: Ordo
  • Malayalam: കടുക്ക Katukka
  • Manipuri: মনাহী Manahi
  • Marathi: हिरडा Hirada
  • Nepali: हर्रा Harra,
  • Oriya: Karedha
  • Pashto: هريړه
  • Sanskrit: हरीतकी Harithaki
  • Tamil: கடுக்காய் kadukkaay
  • Telugu: కరక్కాయ karakkaya
  • Thai: สมอไทย
  • Vietnamese: Chiêu lieu
Description: Deciduous trees, to 25 m high, bark 5-6 mm thick, surface dark brown to black, fissures shallow, vertical, exfoliating in thick scales; blaze yellowish-brown; young shoots densely pubescent; branchlets brownish or greyish, glabrous. Leaves simple, opposite to alternate, exstipulate; petiole 12-25 mm long, stout, grooved above, pubescent, 2 sessile glands at the top; lamina 9.5-28 x 4-13 cm, ovate, elliptic, obovate or elliptic-obovate, base round, obtuse, oblique or subtruncate, apex acute, acuminate, obtuse or apiculate, margin entire, glabrous above tawny villous beneath, coriaceous; lateral nerves 6-12 pairs, pinnate, ascending, prominent, arched towards the margin, intercostae reticulate, prominent. Flowers bisexual, greenish-white, 5-6 mm across, in terminal and axillary spikes with offensive smell; bracts 2-3 mm long; calyx tube 1.5-2.5 × 0.8-1 mm, villous, constricted above the ovary, lobes 5, creamy, triangular, 1.5 mm; petals 0; stamens 10 in 2 rows; filaments 4-6 mm; disc 5-lobed, villous; ovary 2 mm long, inferior, densely villous, 1-celled; style 5 mm, subulate; stigma terminal. Fruit a drupe 3-4 x 2-2.5 cm, obovoid, woody, obscurely 5 angled, glabrous, greenish-yellow; seed one.

Ayurvedic uses: Sotha, Arsha, Aruchi, Hrudroga, Kasa, Pandu, Prameha, Udavarta, Vibandha, Jirna jvara, Siroroga, Tamakasvasa, Gulma, Udararoga. [API, Vol 1]

 The  chebulic  myrobalan  fruit  is  a  very  important  herb  in  the Ayurvedic tradition, and consequently, in the Royal Thai tradition as well. The unripe fruit is a common detoxifying remedy for fever, parasitic infections, spleen disorders, jaundice, skin disease, and allergic reactions of the skin. Chebulic myrobalan corrects digestive disorders and can be used for constipation, diarrhea, dysentery, and intestinal parasites. It also has a beneficial effect on the nervous system, nervous disorders, and cancerous tumors. It is an expectorant used for colds, congestion, cough, asthma, bronchitis, and laryngitis, and an astringent used to halt blood or mucous in stool, sputum, or vaginal discharge. The ripe fruit is astringent, demulcent, and antidiarrheal. [A Thai Herbal: Traditional Recipes for Health and Harmony]

Used  in  Ayurveda,  Unani  and  Sidha.  Herbal  preparation  antidyslipemic  and  antioxidant:  Terminalia  bellirica,  Terminalia  chebula,  Andrographis  paniculata  and  Gymnema  sylvestre.  Powder  made  of  Terminalia  chebula  and Asparagus racemosus mixed with milk and drunk for  cooling effect. Insect galls on the leaves crushed and taken  with water to cure asthma. Bark diuretic, cardiotonic, disinfectant, wound dressing; poultice of stem of Opuntia dillenii with bark of Terminalia chebula applied in ulceration in  venereal diseases; latex of Euphorbia neriifolia mixed with  dry powdered bark of Terminalia chebula given in constipation; dry powdered roots of Abroma augustum with bark of  Dillenia indica and Terminalia chebula given in urinary diseases. Seeds eaten for cough; contact therapy, a seed is tied  to the arm or a necklace of seeds is worn to prevent smallpox.  Fruits  laxative,  astringent,  stomachic,  tonic,  antibacterial, antifungal, alterative, for inflamed gums and as a relief in  asthma, often used in combination with Phyllanthus emblica  L. and Terminalia bellirica; fruit paste applied on neck for  cough, and also on forehead for headache; fruit paste applied  on seasonal wounds and cuts of the feet, also used to massage the body to cure bodyache; roots of Neonotonia wightii  ground with the fruits of Terminalia chebula and the paste  used in toothache. Fruit kept in water overnight, the filtrate  used as a soothing eye wash. Dry fruits decoction taken for  diarrhea, stomachache, spleen disorders; dried fruits chewed  and the juice used to cure coughs. Ripe fruit purgative, tonic,  carminative; rind of fruit chewed in asthma and cough; fruits  of Terminalia chebula ground with the latex of Ficus racemosa  and  the  paste  applied  in  rheumatism,  rheumatoid  arthritis. Unripe fruit blood purifier, highly astringent, used  for diarrhea, dysentery, metrorrhagia, digestion, heart, constipation, diseases of lung, used to expel diseases via diarrhea  and urine before taking other medicine; unripe fruit roasted  and chewed to cure cough. Veterinary medicine, leaves of  Cassia italica with flower of Calotropis gigantea and fruit  of Terminalia chebula pounded and given orally in constipation. Stem bark and fruits as fish poison. [CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants]

Gentle purgative, astringent (unripe fruits are more purgative, ripe ones are more astringent; sennoside A and anthraquinone glycoside is laxative, tannins are astringent), stomachic, antibilious, alterative. Used in prescriptions for treating flatulence, constipation, diarrhoea, dysentery, cyst, digestive disorders, vomiting, enlarged liver and spleen, cough and bronchial asthma, and for metabolic harmony. Bark—diuretic. [Indian Medicinal Plants An Illustrated Dictionary]

Uses: The dried immature fruits of Terminalia chebula Retz. (Myrobalans, British Pharmaceutical Codex, 1934) are astringent and contain 20% to 40% of tannins. In Burma, the fruits are eaten to relieve the bowels of costiveness and to invigorate health. In China, the fruits are used to stop flatulence and promote expectoration. In India, the fruits are eaten to invigorate health, promote digestion and expectoration, soothe sore throat and inflamed areas, stop dysentery and vomiting, and to treat ascite (Ayurveda). In Indonesia, the fruits are astringent. In Malaysia, the fruits are used to check bleeding, assuage liver discomfort and stop dysentry. In Vietnam, the fruits are used to relieve the bowels of costiveness.  [Medicinal Plants: Drugs For The Future?]

100 g of fresh corms is boiled in 1 cup (250 mL)  of water for 10–15 min. Then the water is  filtered in a fi ltration pot and the corms are  dried in sunlight for 4–5 h. Then they are  mixed in 60–70 g of  Aloe vera  (Musabbar,  Alons) and 50 g of  Terminalia chebula  (Harir)  and ground for 10–15 min. Thirty or forty  small tablets, 5–6 g each, are made from this  powder; they are stored in a glass or plastic  bottle and given to patients suffering from  rheumatism.  For children,  not used.  For  adults,  1 tablet (5–6 g) of drug (at one time) is  given with 1 cup (250 mL) of milk or water  twice daily (morning–evening) for 15–20 days. [Medicinal Plant Biodiversity of Lesser Himalayas-Pakistan]

Medicinal  use:  Fruits  are  given  internally  in  the  treatment  of  indigestion,  constipation,  dysentery,  jaundice,  piles  and  painful  menstruation,  and  as  a  general tonic.  Externally they are used to treat eye discharges.  Unripe fruit is  purgative  and  ripe  ones  astringent  and  used  also  in  fevers,  coughs,  asthma,  flatulence,  hiccup,  colic,  enlarged  spleen  and  liver,  rheumatism   and  urinary  diseases.  Powdered fruit is useful in carious teeth, bleeding and ulceration of gums. Bark acts as a cardio tonic and diuretic.

Other uses:  The fruit is the source of tannin, dye and ink.  Fruits taste  bitter,  astringent  when  first  chewed,  afterwards  if  water  is  taken,  it  tastes  very  sweet. Wood is greenish yellow, hard and heavy and takes a good polish. The  wood  is  used  for  making  houses,  furniture,  tool  handles,  agricultural  implements etc. Wood extracts contain tannin that are used to produce ink. Traditional use by the herbal healer of Bolipara: Local herbal healers use this  for  several  treatment  purposes  as,  cough,  dysentery,  fever,  food  poisoning.  Jaundice, menstrual problems, rheumatic pain and sore.  Different ethnic groups, such as Chakma, Tripura, Marma, Mru  and Bawm  use this species for  their  treatment.  Several Bengali community of the Bolipara also uses this plant as medicine. [Selected Medicinal Plants of Chittagong Hill Tracts]

536 Published articles of Terminalia chebula

Litsea monopetala, Meda, Maidaa-lakdi, Litsée à un pétale, Kutmiro

Litsea monopetala (Roxb.) Pers.
Family: Lauraceae

Synonyms: Litsea polyantha Juss., Tetranthera alnoides Miq., Tetranthera fruticosa Buch.-Ham. ex Meisn., Tetranthera hexantha Sieber ex Meisn., Tetranthera hirana Buch.-Ham. ex Wall., Tetranthera macrophylla Roxb., Tetranthera monopetala Roxb., Tetranthera verticillata Buch.-Ham. ex Meisn., Tetranthera villosa Bojer, Tomex monopetala (Roxb.) Hoffmanns., Tomex pubescens Willd. ex Meisn.
  • Common name: Meda
  • Assamese: muga, sualu
  • Bengali: bara-kukurchita
  • Cantonese: 假柿樹
  • Chinese: 山菠萝树, 假柿木姜子
  • Frrench: Litsée à un pétale
  • Hindi: Meda, Gwa, Singraf, Katmarra, Jangli-rai-am
  • Kannada: gajapippali, hemmudi, kainji
  • Khasi: dieng soh phohskei, dieng sohtyllap
  • Manipuri: তুমিতলা Tumitla
  • Marathi: ranamba
  • Mizo: nauthak
  • Nepali: कुटमिरो Kutmiro, 
  • Sanskrit: Maidaa-lakdi
  • Tamil: maidalagadil, muchaippeyetti, picinpattai
  • Telugu: chiru mamidi, meda, chiru maamidi, naara, narachettu, naramaamidi
Description: Shrubs or trees, up to 7 m tall and 60 cm in diameter. Bark dark brown, exfoliating in small corky pieces; inner bark white, odorless. Wood brownish. Branchlets densely, minutely rusty sub-lanuginose. Leaves spirally arranged, chartaceous, variable, broadly elliptic to subovate-elliptic, 4-15 x 8-28 cm, obtuse, apiculate or shortly acuminate, base contracted into 1.5-2.5 cm long, slender, densely pilose petiole; upper surface glabrous, except the impressed midrib, smooth or densely, reticulate, nerves filiform, impressed; secondary nerves parallel, numerous; lower surface glaucous, sparsely, minutely pilose, denser on the nerves, 8-12 pairs of erect-patent, prominulous nerves, secondary nerves perpendicular to the nerves. Umbels numerous in densely brown pilose, 0.5 -1(-2) cm long peduncles, these attached to dwarf (5mm) axillary, bracteate branchlets or umbels behind the leaves; bracts 5-6 mm. Male flower: tube obconical, pilose inside; tepals ovate-spathulate, 2.5 mm; stamens 9-12, filaments 3 mm, thin, pilose near the base, anthers narrow, 1.25 mm, outer ones introrse; glands stipitate. Female flower: tube 1.5 mm; pedicel 2 mm long, pilose; tepals 1.5 mm; staminodes sligtly shorter than the tepals; ovary glabrous; style thick, stigma peltate, lobed. Fruit subglobose, up to 7 mm; cup shallow, up to 5 mm in diameter, pedicel up to 7 mm., slightly thickened at the apex.
Uses: Leaves  stomachic,  nerve  tonic,  applied  for  arthritis;  Amorphophallus bulbifer rhizome paste mixed with leaves  of  Litsea  monopetala  and  Mikania  micrantha  applied  externally  in  stomachache.  Bark  astringent,  stomachic,  stimulant;  bark  mucilaginous  extract  in  chronic  diarrhea  and dysentery; bark paste applied in bone fracture, body ache and swellings. A decoction of roots of Dillenia indica  with roots of Glycosmis pentaphylla and Litsea monopetala  given  in  biliousness.  Veterinary  medicine,  bark  paste  applied in bone fracture. [CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants]

Bark—stimulant, astringent, spasmolytic, stomachic, antidiarrhoeal. Root—applied externally for pains, bruises and contusions. [Indian Medicinal Plants An Illustrated Dictionary]

10 Published articles of Litsea monopetala

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Sphaeranthus amaranthoides, Siva karandhai

Sphaeranthus amaranthoides Burm.f.
Family: Compositae
Tamil: Siva karandhai

Indian venracular names: amutakarantai, cekilacitacceti, cekilacitam, cevayakkarantai, cevayam, ceyavalli, cittakanni, civakamikacceti,  civakamikam,  civakarantai,  civakkarunti,  civamakitacceti,  civamatikam,  civanmutivacikkanni,  civappukki,  civappukkicceti,  civaralanankai,  curaikkarantai,  curakkarantai,  kankalamuli,  kankalanmuli,  kayvaciyacceti,  kayvaciyam,  kolumpuccivakarantai,  konaicuticceti,  konraicuti,  kulattatikam,  kulatti,  kunatti,  maiyaltarumakamuli,  marukkam,  mulaicci, nalnari, narakarantai, narakkaranantai, narukarantai, narunkarantai, pallatarini, parimalamuli, parimalatimuli,  parimali,  peyotati,  peyotaticceti,  piracitta,  pokkumulaicci,  siva  karanthai,  tevankolacceti,  tevankolam,  tirunilakantacceti, tirunilakantan, tivanantamanmuli, vattirapancakacceti,  vattirapancakam,  vencitam,  vicuvanatacceti,  vicuvanatam,  vitaiyurti, vitaiyurticceti, yonippu

Description: Stout herbs, stem terete, branchlets very narrowly winged. Leaves to 9 x 1.5 cm, oblong, spathulate, apex acute, black dotted, distantly serrate. Capitula clustered, ovoid; bracts imbricate, 5 mm long, exserted, ovate, acuminate, spinous; phyllaries 3, membranous; inner bisexual floret 5-dentate, 2 mm long, outer female florets 2 mm long, 2-4 lobed. Achenes of inner floret glabrous, of outer villous.

12 Published articles of Sphaeranthus amaranthoides

Sida spinosa, Nagabala, Otasiida, prickly fanpetals, minyundimi

Sida spinosa L.
Family: Malvaceae

Synonyms: Malva spinosa (L.) E.H.L.Krause, Malvinda alba (L.) Medik., Malvinda angustifolia (Mill.) Medik., Malvinda spinosa (L.) Medik., Malvinda spinosa (L.) Moench, Sida affinis J.A.Schmidt, Sida alba L., Sida angustifolia Lam., Sida angustifolia Mill., Sida bicolor Cav., Sida brachypetala DC., Sida carpinifolia Mill., Sida emarginata Willd., Sida heterocarpa Engelm. ex A.Gray, Sida milleri DC., Sida minor Macfad., Sida pimpinellifolia Mill., Sida subdistans A.St.-Hil. & Naudin, Sida tenuicaulis Hook.f., Sida truncata L'Hér., Sida ulmifolia Mill., Malachodendron corchoroides J.F.Gmel., Malvinda alnifolia Medik., Sida angustifolia var. major C.Presl, Sida carpinifolia f. balbisiana (DC.) Millsp., Sida spinosa var. angustifolia Griseb., Sida spinosa var. spinosa, Stewartia corchoroides Forssk.


English: Indian mallow, prickly fanpetals, prickly mallow, prickly sida, spiny sida, spring sida, yellow barleria
Arabic: ملوخيه ابليس (مِلوخية ابليس) , meloukhiet iblis
Bengali: বন মেথি Bon Methi
Finnish: Otasiida
Gujarati: કાંટાળો બલ Kantalo Bal
Hindi: गुलशकरी Gulsakari, बरयार Baryar
Malayalam: കുറുന്തൊട്ടി Kurunthotti, Valiya-oorakam
Marathi: जंगली मेथी Jungali Methi
Sanskrit: विश्वदेव Visvadeva, सहदेव Sahadeva
Telugu: నాగబల Nagabala
Urdu: بريار Baryar
Burundi: akavumvu
Nigeria: yarfe
Southern Africa: lente sida, sindanibita, stekeltaaiman
Tanzania: minyundimi

Various Indian vernacular names: arivalmanai-poondu,  avishta,  bariari,  bonmethi, chinamootam,  chinamuttama,  chinamuttavapulagam,  chinnamuttama,  chinnamuttamu,  chinnamuttavapulagamu, cinnamuttavapulagamu,  cinnamuttemu,  gorakchaulia,  gulsakari, kadumenthys, kantalo-bal, kantio balkari-kaddigida, kantiobal, katiobal, khar-yashtika, kattuvantiyam, kulbahebarri,  kulbahebarri,  mayir-mamkkam,  nagabala,  pilabarela,  sham-lethe-dashti,  sham  lithedash-ti,  shamlithedashti, shanbalide-barri,  shanbalidebarri,  ternaliabenda,  thernalla benda,  thirinelabenda,  tirinelabenda,  tukati-khareti,  tukhm kharenti, vishvadeva, vishvadevi

Description: Annual or perennial, erect or diffuse herbs or undershrubs, to 60 cm high; stems with 1 or 2 spines at the base of petioles; stems, petioles and pedicels cinereous-stellate-and simple hairy. Leaves alternate, oblong or ovate, acute or subcordate at base, serrate at margin, acute, rounded to truncate at apex, 6-30 x 4-25 mm, stellate-pubescent, sometimes glabrescent above; petioles 2-15 mm long; stipules linear, equal, 1-2.5 mm long, hairy. Flowers axillary, solitary or in clusters of 2-5 on small axillary shoots; pedicels 2-8 mm long, accrescent to 8 mm, jointed above middle. Calyx campanulate, 3-5 mm across; lobes free above middle, deltoid, acute to acuminate with a prominent midnerve, 1-2 x 1.5-2 mm, cinerous-stellate-and simple hairy outside, glabrous except at margin inside. Corolla ca 1 cm across, yellow or yellowish white; petals obovate, rounded or emarginate at apex, ca 6 x 3 mm, glabrous. Staminal column ca 2 mm long, glabrous, antheriferous at apex. Ovary ovoid; styles 5; stigmas globose, purple. Schizocarps ca 5 mm across, enclosed in calyx; mericarps 5, 3-gonous, 2-3 mm long, with 2 divergent awns to 1-1.5 mm long, prominently dorsally reticulate, stellate-hairy at apex; seeds ovoid, slightly 3-gonous, 1-1.5 mm long, glabrous, brownish black.

Used in Ayurveda and Unani. Seed poisonous if ingested.  Decoction of roots for infantile diarrhea, fever, diaphoretic.  Root and root bark used in debility and fever, irritability of  bladder,  genital  disorders;  powdered  rootbark  mixed  with  sugar and taken with milk as a sexual tonic. Leaves demulcent  and  refrigerant,  diaphoretic,  diuretic,  emollient,  stomachic, tonic, used in gonorrhea, for venomous stings, bites,  diarrhea, and to stop early graying of hair. [CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants]

Root—nervine tonic and diaphoretic; used in debility and fevers. Decoction given as a demulcent in irritability of bladder and genitourinary tract. Leaves—demulcent and refrigerant; used for scalding urine. [Indian Medicinal Plants An Illustrated Dictionary]

Aerial plant: emollient, antiphlogistic, antidiarrheal  Dried leaf, decoction: for infections, skin sores and rashes, and antidiarrheal  Leaf + root, infusion: antidiarrheal  and for dysentery  Root juice: for gonorrhea. Entire plant: hypoglycemic activity  [Medicinal Flora of Argentine]

53 Published articles of Sida spinosa

Friday, June 12, 2015

Ocimum gratissimum, Basil, Tulasi

Ocimum gratissimum L.
Family: Lamiaceae

Synonyms: Geniosporum discolor Baker, Ocimum anosurum Fenzl, Ocimum arborescens Bojer ex Benth., Ocimum caillei A.Chev., Ocimum dalabaense A.Chev., Ocimum febrifugum Lindl., Ocimum frutescens Mill., Ocimum gratissimum subsp. gratissimum, Ocimum gratissimum var. gratissimum, Ocimum gratissimum var. hildebrandtii Briq., Ocimum gratissimum var. mascarenarum Briq., Ocimum gratissimum var. suave (Willd.) Hook.f., Ocimum gratissimum var. subdentatum Briq., Ocimum guineense Schumach. & Thonn., Ocimum heptodon P.Beauv., Ocimum holosericeum J.F.Gmel., Ocimum paniculatum Bojer, Ocimum petiolare Lam., Ocimum robustum B.Heyne ex Hook.f., Ocimum sericeum Medik., Ocimum suave Willd., Ocimum suave var. distantidens Briq., Ocimum trichodon Baker ex Gürke, Ocimum urticifolium Roth, Ocimum villosum Weinm. , Ocimum viride Willd., Ocimum viridiflorum Roth, Ocimum zeylanicum Medik.
  • Common name: Ram Tulsi, Wild Basil, African basil, clove basil, shrubby basil, tree basil
  • Arabic: حبق بهيج
  • Assamese: ৰাম তুলসী Ram tulsi
  • Bengali: ৰাম তুলসী Ram tulsi
  • Chinese: 丁香罗勒
  • Hindi: राम तुलसी Ram tulsi, बन तुलसी Ban tulsi
  • Indonesian: Selasih mekah
  • Malayalam: കാട്ടുതുളസി kattu thulasi
  • Manipuri: ৰাম তুলসী Ram tulsi
  • Marathi: ajavala, राम तुलसी ramatulasi, tanatulasu
  • Oriya: sondabhogohulono
  • Persian: اسیموم گراتیسیموم
  • Polish: Bazylia eugenolowa
  • Russian: Базилик эвгенольный
  • Sanskrit: ajaka, ajeka, bilvaparni, doshakleshi
  • Tamil: elumichantulasi, peruntulasi, elumiccam tulaci
  • Telugu: nimma tulasi, రామ తులసి rama tulasi
  • Thai: ยี่หร่า
  • Urdu: Tukhm faranjmushk
  • Vietnamese: Hương nhu trắng

Description: Shrubs, 2 m high; stem glandular-scabrid. leaves elliptic to obovate, base attenuate serrate, acuminate at apex; nerves 6-pairs; thinly tomentose below; petiole to 6 cm long. Racemes terminal, panicled; bracts oblanceolate. Flowers 4-6 at each node; pedicel 4 mm long; calyx 5 mm long, glabrous; upper lip ovate, obtuse, lobes of lower lip acuminate, glandular; corolla white, tube 2-3 mm long, lobes obtuse; filaments glabrous or villous at base; anthers sagittate at base. Nutlets 1.5 x 1 mm, pitted, brown.

Leaves and whole herb bactericidal, anthelmintic, stimulant, local anesthetic, disinfectant, insecticide. Fresh leaf used as a carminative, to treat malaria, coughs, colds, abdominal pains, barrenness, stoach and dental problems; fresh leaves in teas for flu, fever, pneumonia;  leaf  juice  put  in  the  ear  to  cure  earache,  also given for cold and cough; leaves eaten raw for cough; infusion of dried leaves for worms. A root bark extract for curing eczema. Magic, ritual, a charm against evil spirits. [CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants]

Used in neurological and rheumatic affections, in seminal weakness and in aphthae of children. Seed—used in ephalalgia
and neuralgia. Essential oil—antibacterial, antifungal. In homoeopathy, fresh mature leaves are used in constipation, cough, fever, nasal catarrh; also in gonorrhoea with difficult urination.[Indian Medicinal Plants An Illustrated Dictionary]

Therapeutic uses : The whole plant is used in treating sunstroke, headache and influenza. It is also considered to be diaphoretic. It is given in doses ranging from 6 to 12g per day, in the form of an inhalation or decoction. It serves also as material for the extraction of essential oil and cugcnol. Eugenol is used widely in odontology and for the synthesis of vanillin. [Medicinal Plants in Viet Nam]

Stem and Leaf: A tea is made from aerial parts of the plant to treat colds, especially chest colds, and to remedy pains of wind (flatulence) in the stomach. Leaf: Infusion for a sedative and antispasmodic. [Medicinal Plants of the Guianas (Guyana, Surinam, French Guiana) ]

Improves stomach function, blood circulation; alleviates pain, flu, headache. [Taiwanese Native Medicinal Plants]

469 Published articles of Ocimum gratissimum

Colocasia esculenta, Taro, Colocase comestible, Chamadumpa, Aaluki



Colocasia esculenta (L.) Schott
Family: Araceae

Synonyms: Alocasia dussii Dammer, Alocasia illustris W.Bull, Aron colocasium (L.) St.-Lag., Arum chinense L., Arum colocasia L., Arum colocasioides Desf., Arum esculentum L., Arum lividum Salisb., Arum nymphaeifolium (Vent.) Roxb., Arum peltatum Lam., Caladium acre R.Br., Caladium colocasia (L.) W.Wight, Caladium colocasioides (Desf.) Brongn., Caladium esculentum (L.) Vent., Caladium glycyrrhizum Fraser, Caladium nymphaeifolium Vent., Caladium violaceum Desf., Caladium violaceum Engl., Calla gaby Blanco, Calla virosa Roxb., Colocasia acris (R.Br.) Schott, Colocasia aegyptiaca Samp., Colocasia antiquorum var. acris (R.Br.) Schott, Colocasia antiquorum f. acuatica Makino, Colocasia antiquorum var. aquatilis (Hassk.) Engl. & K. Krause, Colocasia antiquorum f. eguimo Makino, Colocasia antiquorum var. esculenta (L.) Schott, Colocasia antiquorum var. euchlora (K.Koch & Linden) Schott, Colocasia antiquorum var. globulifera Engl. & K.Krause, Colocasia antiquorum var. illustris (W.Bull) Engl., Colocasia antiquorum var. multifolia Makino, Colocasia antiquorum var. nymphaeifolia (Vent.) Engl., Colocasia antiquorum f. oyasetage Makino, Colocasia antiquorum var. patens Makino, Colocasia antiquorum f. purpurea Makino, Colocasia antiquorum var. rosea Makino, Colocasia antiquorum var. rupicola Haines, Colocasia antiquorum var. stolonifera Haines, Colocasia antiquorum f. yamamotoi Makino, Colocasia colocasia (L.) Huth , Colocasia esculenta var. acris (R.Br.) A.F.Hill, Colocasia esculenta var. aquatilis Hassk., Colocasia esculenta f. ebiimo Makino, Colocasia esculenta var. euchlora (K.Koch & Linden) A.F.Hill, Colocasia esculenta var. globulifera (Engl. & K.Krause) R.A.Young, Colocasia esculenta var. illustris (W.Bull) A.F.Hill, Colocasia esculenta var. nymphaeifolia (Kunth) A.F.Hill, Colocasia esculenta f. rotundifolia Makino, Colocasia esculenta var. rupicola (Haines) H.B.Naithani, Colocasia esculenta var. stolonifera (Haines) H.B.Naithani, Colocasia euchlora K.Koch & Linden, Colocasia formosana Hayata, Colocasia gracilis Engl., Colocasia himalensis Royle, Colocasia konishii Hayata, Colocasia neocaledonica Van Houtte, Colocasia nymphaeifolia (Vent.) Kunth, Colocasia peltata (Lam.) Samp., Colocasia vera Hassk., Colocasia violacea (Desf.) auct., Colocasia virosa (Roxb.) Kunth, Colocasia vulgaris Raf., Leucocasia esculenta (L.) Nakai, Steudnera virosa (Roxb.) Prain, Zantedeschia virosa (Roxb.) K.Koch

Common name: Green Taro, cocoyam, taro, aivi, dasheen
Bengali: Kachu, Alti kachu, কচু
Chinese: 广菜
Czech: Kolokázie jedlá
French: Colocase comestible, Songe
Gujrati: અળવી
Hindi: अरवी Arvi, Ashukachu, कचालू Kachalu, अरबी सब्जी arabi sabji
Italian: aro d'Egitto
Japansese: sato-imo
Kannada: Kesavedantu, Keshavanagadde, ಕೆಸು
Malayalam: താള്, Chempu, Chempakizhanna
Manipuri: পান Pan
Marathi: आलू aaloo, चेम्पू Chempu, रान आलू Ran aalu
Mizo: Bal, Dawl
Oriya: Jongal saaru
Sanskrit: Aaluki, Alukam, Alupam, kachchi, Kachchi
Tamil: Sempu, chamakkilangu
Telugu: Chamadumpa, Chamagadda, Chamakura

Description: Herbs, rhizome stoloniferous. Leaves few to many, peltate, 20-28 x 10-18 cm, ovate, cordate to sagittate at base, glabrous; nerves 6 pairs, united to form an intramarginal vein; lowest pair with lateral nerves of the basal lobes, intercostae curved; petiole 30-45 cm long, cylindrical, smooth. Peduncle solitary or few together, 10-20 cm long, stout; spathe to 20 cm long, yellow, lanceolate, constricted above the base; limb acuminate. Spadix 10 cm long, cylindrical, appendages terete, obtuse. Male flowers above, to 5-6 cm of the spadix, stamens 6; female flowers on lower, 2 cm of the spadix; ovary 1-celled, ovules many on 2-4 parietal placentas. Neutral flowers many, peltate, between the female and male flowers. Fruit an aggregate of berries, globose

The leaves contain flavones, api- genin and luteolin, also anthocyanins. Leavescausesevereirritation in mouth. Cooked leaves are a source of dietary fibre for diabetics helping in lower- ing post-prandial blood glucose level. A significant increase in total lipids, total cholesterol and triglyceride levels wasobservedin hypercholesterolaemic rats when fed with dried leaf powder. The pressed juice of the petioles is used as an astringent and styptic. All parts of the plant show an acridity. The acridity is removed by boiling and by addition of baking soda. [Indian Medicinal Plants An Illustrated Dictionary]
Milk from grated white cocoes is sometimes mixed with coconut milk and taken for biliousness. Lunan speaks of the use of the "roots" (tubers) in the treatment of asthma and consumption. Fawcett records that the juice of the tubers is laxative.  In the main, however. writers record the value of the tubers and leaf juice as a dressing for ulcers. swellings. burns and as an excellent styptic. The tubers are said to contain some 20 per cent starch together with mucilage which is probably a polyanhydrite of dglucose. They are much used in tropical countries as food. [ Medicinal Plants of Jamaica]
Whole plant: Grated and mixed with coconut oil and soft grease for an ointment to relieve skin ulcers and acute dermatitis. Grated in poultice with soap and soft grease to treat pre-softened abscesses. Makes nutritive soup ingested to increase milk supply of nursing women. [Medicinal Plants of the Guianas (Guyana, Surinam, French Guiana) ]
Antihyperlipemia activity; rhizome: scrofula, furuncles, carbuncle; leaf stalk: urticaria, diarrhea, ulcer [Taiwanese Native Medicinal Plants: Phytopharmacology and Therapeutic Values]


45 Published articles of  Colocasia esculenta

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Vicia sativa, Black-Pod Vetch, common vetch, narrow-leaf vetch, Vesce printannière


Vicia sativa subsp. nigra (L.) Ehrh.
Family: Fabaceae

Common name: Black-Pod Vetch, common vetch, narrow-leaf vetch, spring vetch
Chinese: 苦豆子
French: Vesce printannière, Vesce fausse Gesse

Perennial  non-climbing  herb,  forage,  tender leaves cooked as vegetable. Plant poisonous to cattle. Seeds toxic to human being, lathyrism. Paste of leaves applied to treat cuts, sores, ulcers and wounds. Root juice drunk to cure fever. [CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants]

37 Published articles of Vicia sativa

Anemone tetrasepala, Ratanjot, Four petal Anemone

Anemone tetrasepala Royle
Family: Ranunculaceae

Common name: Four petal Anemone
Chinese: 复伞银莲花
German: Himalaya-Windröschen
Hindi: Ratanjot

Description: Leaves 3--7; petiole 15--30(--40) cm, puberulent or glabrescent; leaf blade deeply 5-lobed, reniform or cordate-reniform, 8--15 × 10--20 cm, leathery, abaxially appressed pubescent usually along veins, adaxially sparsely pubescent, base cordate; central segment 3-cleft, broadly rhombic, lobes with a few acute lobules or teeth; lateral segments unequally 2-parted, obliquely flabellate. Scapes 1 or 2, 25--50(--60) cm, sparsely puberulent; cyme compound, 2- or 3-branched, 7--15-flowered. Involucral bracts 2--4(or 5), 3-parted or 3-lobed, 4--8 cm, leathery, densely pubescent. Bracteoles 3-lobed or undivided, lanceolate, 1.5--2 cm. Pedicel 4--10 cm, pubescent. Sepals 4(or 5), white, obovate-oblong, 12--20 × 6--12 mm, glabrous, basal veins 5--7(--9), vein anastomoses 3--5(--7), base narrowed. Stamens 4--6 mm; filament slightly dilated; anther narrowly ellipsoid. Ovary ovoid, 3--4 mm; style curved, glabrous. Achene body ovoid, obovoid, or cylindric, 7--10 × 4--5 mm, glabrous, base narrowed; wings 1--1.3 mm wide; style hooked, 1.5--2 mm. 

Published articles :

1. Spindle irregularities, chromatin transfer, and chromatin stickiness during male meiosis in Anemone tetrasepala (Ranunculaceae)
By: Rana, Pawan Kumar; Kumar, Puneet; Singhal, Vijay Kumar
TURKISH JOURNAL OF BOTANY  Volume: 37   Issue: 1   Pages: 167-176   Published: 2013

2. Triterpenoid saponins from Anemone tetrasepala
By: Liao, X; Li, BG; Ding, LS; et al.
CHINESE JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY  Volume: 21   Issue: 4   Pages: 299-304   Published: APR 2001

Swietenia macrophylla, Amerikanaitomahonki, Acajou, Mogno, มะฮอกกานีใบใหญ่

Swietenia macrophylla King
Family: Meliaceae

Synonyms: Swietenia belizensis Lundell, Swietenia candollei Pittier, Swietenia macrophylla var. marabaensis Ledoux & Lobato, Swietenia tessmannii Harms

Common name: Big-Leaf Mahogany, Bastard Mahogany, Honduras mahogany
  • Chinese: 大叶桃花心木
  • Esperanto: Grandfolia svitenio
  • Finnish: Amerikanaitomahonki
  • French: Acajou
  • German: Amerikanisches Mahagoni
  • Japanese:  ôba-mahogani
  • Malayalam: മഹാഗണി mahagony
  • Peru:  aguano, caoba, mahogani, pasich, tuxw
  • Spanish: Mogno
  • Tamil: மகாகனி
  • Telugu: Mahagani, Peddakulamaghani
  • Thai: มะฮอกกานีใบใหญ่
  • Vietnamese: Nhạc ngựa (cây gỗ)

Description: Deciduous trees, to 25 m high; bark brown. Leaves paripinnate, alternate, estipulate; rachis 5-13 cm long, slender, glabrous; leaflets 4-10, opposite or subopposite; petiolule 3-4 mm long, slender, grooved above, glabrous; lamina 5.5-12 x 2.5-4.5 cm, obliquely ovate-lanceolate, oblong-acuminate, oblong-lanceolate or falcate; base oblique, apex acuminate or caudate-acuminate, margin entire, glabrous, shining above, dull beneath, coriaceous; lateral nerves 7-12 pairs, pinnate, prominent, intercostae reticulate. Flowers bisexual, pale yellow, to 8 mm across, in axillary panicles to 10 cm; pedicel 2-4 mm; calyx lobes 5, lobes 0.5 mm, suborbicular; petals 5, to 4 mm, oblong; disc annular; staminal tube 3.5-4 mm, apically 10-lobed; stamens 10; ovary superior, 5-celled, ovules many; style to 1.5 mm long, attenuate; stigma some what lobed. Fruit a capsule, 8.5 x 6.5 cm, oblong-globose, 5-valved, woody, rusty out side; seeds many, to 6 cm, winged.
Seeds antidiabetic, hypoglycemic, hypolipidemic, powdered seed in empty stomach successfully employed for the treatment of diabetes. [CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants]

The seeds of Swietenia macrophylla are traditionally used in several indigenous  systems of medicine for the treatment of various ailments such as hypertension, diabetes and malaria. The local folks of Malaysia believe that the seeds  are capable of “curing” hypertension and diabetes. The seeds are usually consumed raw by chewing. A decoction of seeds  of Swietenia  macrophylla  is  reported  to  treat  malaria  in  Indonesia.  Among  the  Amazonian  Bolivian  ethnic  groups,  the  seeds  are  traditionally used to  induce  abortion  by  drinking  a  decoction  of the  seeds  and  to  heal wounds  and  various  ailments  of  the  skin  via  external  application  of  the mashed seeds. Toxicity: Uterine haemorrhage [A Guide to Medicinal Plants an Illustrated, Scientific and Medicinal Approach]

Guatemala highland Indians take bitter bark decoction for fever.Malayans eat seeds to lower blood pressure.  Mexicans apply scorched seeds in grease to bald spots hoping to restore hair.  Mexicans take seed decoction for nervous and pulmonary complaints.  Nicaraguan Garifuna drink the bark decoction for fever. Peruvians suggest concentrated bark decoction for hemorrhoids and VD, for 8 menstrual days, as contraceptive . Peruvians  suggest  concentrated  bark  decoction  with  cedro,  chuchuhuasi,  icoja,  andubos, for leishmaniasis.  Peruvians suggest the bark decoction for intestinal ails. [Duke's Handbook of Medicinal Plants of Latin America]

422 Published articles of Swietenia macrophylla

Lens culinaris, Common Lentil, Masurdal


Lens culinaris Medik.
Family: Leguminosae
Synonyms: Ervum lens L., Ervum lens Wall., Lens culinaris subsp. culinaris, Lens esculenta Moench, Lens lens Huth, Vicia lens (L.) Coss. & Germ.

Common name: Common Lentil
Chinese: 扁豆
Finnish: Linssi
French: Lentille culinaire
German: Linse
Hindi: मसूर
Kannada: ಮಸೂರ ಅವರೆ
Oriya: ମସୁର (ଡାଲି)
Sinhala: මසූර්
Turkish: Mercimek

Desctiption: Annual, Herbs, Taproot present, Nodules present, Stems erect or ascending, Stems or branches arching, spreading or decumbent, Stems prostrate, trailing, or mat forming, Stems less than 1 m tall, Climbing by tendrils, Stems solid, Stems or young twigs sparsely to densely hairy, Stems hairs pilose or spreading, Leaves alternate, Leaves petiolate, Stipules conspicuous, Stipules green, triangulate to lanceolate or foliaceous, Stipules persistent, Stipules free, Leaves compound, Leaves even pinnate, Leaf or leaflet margins entire, Leaflets opposite, Leaflets 5-9, Leaflets 10-many, Leaves glabrous or nearly so, Leaves hairy on one or both surfaces, Flowers solitary in axils, or appearing solitary, Flowers in axillary clusters or few-floweredracemes, 2-6 flowers, Inflorescence axillary, Bracts very small, absent or caducous, Flowers zygomorphic, Calyx 5-lobed, Calyx gla brous, Petals separate, Corolla papilionaceous, Petals clawed, Petals white, Petals blue, lavander to purple, or violet, Banner petal ovoid or obovate, Banner petal suborbicular, broadly rounded, Wing petals narrow, oblanceolate to oblong, Wing tips obtuse or rounded, Stamens 9-10, Stamens diadelphous, 9 united, 1 free, Filaments glabrous, Style flattened, Style sharply bent, Style hairy, Style hairy on one side only, Style persistent in fruit, Fruit a legume, Fruit unilocular, Fruit freely dehiscent, Fruit oblong or ellipsoidal, Fruit exserted from calyx, Fruit glabrous or glabrate, Fruit 2-seeded, Seeds ovoid to rounded in outline, Seed surface smooth, Seeds olive, brown, or black.

 The  seeds  are  mucilaginous  and  laxative.  They are  considered  to  be  useful  in  the  treatment  of constipation and other intestinal affections; made into a paste, they are a useful cleansing application in foul and indolent ulcers.  [Edible Medicinal and Non-Medicinal
Plants Vol-2]

Seeds—mostly used as a pulse. Contain as much as 30% proteins (similar to those of peas and beans). Soup is used in gastric troubles and constipation. Paste or poultice is applied to foul and indolent ulcers. [Indian Medicinal Plants An Illustrated Dictionary]

78 Published articles of Lens culinaris

Smilax perfoliata, Paichooral

Smilax perfoliata Lour.
Family: Smilacaceae

Synonyms: Smilax annamensis Rendle , Smilax laurina Kunth, Smilax prolifera Roxb., Smilax siamensis T.Koyama    

Chinese: 穿鞘菝葜
Malayalam: Paichooral

Description: Stout climbing shrubs. Leaves to 20 x 12 cm, broadly oblong, ovate, apex obtuse, basally 5-7 nerved, thickly coriaceous, cuspidate; petiole to 4 cm, stout, angled, sheathing to the middle, tendrils coiled. Umbels on axillary cymes, to 12 cm; bracts ovate, 1 cm; outer perianth, 6 x 2 mm, broadly oblong, inner ones 6 x 1 mm, apiculate; filaments 5 mm, anthers 2 mm, oblong; female flowers- staminodes 6, linear; ovary 2 mm, globose, stigma 3, recurved.

Root-powder of  Smilax  perfoliata  Lour.  with  rice  powder in the form of cake to cure white and blood discharge with urine. Garos  use  flowers  in  child  birth,  whereas  some  ethnic  communites  of  Madya Pradesh apply roots in veneral diseases. Ethnic communities of Jaintia, Mayurbhanj, Sagar  and  Dehradun  districts  use  different  parts  of  the  plant  in  many  other diseases.Sagar  and  Dehradun  districts  use  different  parts  of  the  plant  in  many  other diseases. [Herbal Cures Traditional Approach]

5 Published articles of Smilax perfoliata

Solanum torvum, Brihati, Sundakkai, 雀茄子, มะเขือพวง, Pokastrauch, Aubergine Sauvage, Ærtenatskygge


Solanum torvum Sw.
Family: Solanaceae
  • Common name: Turkey Berry, susumber
  • Assamese: Bhi-tita
  • Bengali: Tita bagoon
  • Chinese: 水茄
  • Danish : Ærtenatskygge; 
  • Fijian : Kaisurisuri, Katai, Kausoni, Kauvotovotua, Soni; 
  • French :  Aubergine  Sauvage  Épineuse,  Fausse Aubergine, Aubergine Sauvage D’asie, Aubergine, Pois, Mélongène-Diable, Bellangère Bâtarde 
  • German: Pokastrauch, Teufels-Nachtschatten
  • Guatemala : Güis
  • Hindi: Bhurat, Bhankatiya
  • Indonesian: Takokak
  • Japanese: 雀茄子
  • Kannada: Sundekkayi
  • Malayalam: ആനച്ചുണ്ട Anachunda
  • Marathi: Marang
  • Sanskrit: ब्रह्टी Brihati
  • Sinhala: Thibbatu
  • Spanish: terongan
  • Tamil: சுண்டைக்காய் Sundaikkai
  • Telugu: ఉస్తికాయలు Ustikaayalu
  • Thai: มะเขือพวง
  • Tongan: Tisaipale
  • Vietnamese: Cà dại hoa trắng

Description: Shrubs to 2 m tall. Stem densely stellate-hairy when young; prickles few, scattered. Leaves 7-14 x 5-10 cm, ovate, usually coarsely 2-3-sinulate, base obliquely subcordate, apex acute, stellately pubescent on both sides, dense on lower sides, chartaceous, scattered with a few prickles on midrib and on petiole; lateral nerves 4 or 5 pairs; petioles 1.5 - 3.5 cm long. Inflorescence supra-axillary, many-flowered corymbose cymes; peduncle to 5 cm long. Calyx tube 2-2.5 mm long, campanulate, lobes oblong. Corolla white, c. 2.5 cm across; lobes 5-6 mm long, ovate, pubescent outside. Berry 1-1.5 cm across, globose, pale green turning dull orange. Seeds discoid, smooth.

Cubans apply the leaf juice to pimples . Cubans drink root decoction 2–3×/day for cystitis and urethritis . Dominicans use young leaf infusion with . for infantile enterosis .. Dominicans use root infusion for gonorrhea . Garifuna poultice leaf and root decoction to bleeding, burns, rashes, sores, and wounds . Haitians massage crushed leaves and seed to correct fever . Haitians use leaf decoction as sedative and antispasmodic for gastralgia . Jamaicans drink leaf decoction for colds . Nepalese drop flower juice with salt water into eyes . Nepalese poultice ripe fruits onto the forehead for headache . Nepalese use plant juice for asthma, chest, cough, dropsy, gonorrhea, and rheumatism . Nepalese use root juice for vomiting due to weakness . Yucatanese regard leaf decoction as diuretic, narcotic, resolutive, and sudorific. [Duke's Handbook of Medicinal Plants of Latin America]

Plant—digestive, diuretic, sedative. Leaves—haemostatic. Fruits—useful in liver and spleen enlargement (cooked and eaten as a vegetable); decoction used for cough. Root—used for poulticing cracks in feet. [Indian Medicinal Plants An Illustrated Dictionary]

 In Malaysia, a paste of roots of Solanum torvum Sw. is used to soothe cracked feet. In the Philippines, a decoction of roots is drunk to counteract poisoning and to curb bleeding after childbirth. In India, the fruits are used to treat swollen spleen and liver. [Medicinal Plants: Drugs For The Future?]

The leaves me used by some Jamaicans to make tea to improve the appetite. In making tea for colds the leaves are often mixed with those of other "cold bushes" such as Gossypium and Hyptis. [ Medicinal Plants of Jamaica]

250 Published articles of Solanum torvum

Monday, May 25, 2015

Premna corymbosa

 
Premna corymbosa Rottler & Willd.
Family: Lamiaceae

Synonyms: Gumira corymbosa (Rottler & Willd.) Kuntze, Premna scandens Bojer

It is a scandent shrub; leaves glabrous, flowers in cymes, corolla purplish, 1 cm long. Calyx 2 lipped. fruit globose, 0.5 cm across, seated on the persistent calyx.

14 Published articles of Premna corymbosa

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verticillatum Polygonum amplexicaule Polygonum barbatum Polygonum recumbens Pongamia pinnata Portulaca oleracea Portulaca umbraticola Portulacaria afra Potentilla fruticosa Potentilla supina Premna corymbosa Premna tomentosa Primula denticulata Primula floribunda Primula vulgaris Prunus Amygdalus Prunus dulcis Pseuderanthemum carruthersii Pseudobombax ellipticum Pseudocaryopteris foetida Psidium guajava Psidium guineense Pterocarpus santalinus Pterospermum acerifolium Pterospermum lanceifolium Pterygota alata Pulicaria dysenterica Punica granatum Putranjiva roxburghii Pyrostegia venusta Quisqualis indica Ranunculus arvensis Ranunculus laetus Ranunculus sceleratus Raphanus sativus Rauvolfia serpentina Rauvolfia tetraphylla Reinwardtia indica Rhamphicarpa fistulosa Rhodiola trifida Rhodiola wallichiana Rhododendron arboreum Rhynchosia heynei Rhynchosia himalensis Rhynchosia viscosa Ricinus communis Rorippa indica Roscoea purpurea Rosmarinus officinalis Ruellia patula Ruellia prostrata Ruellia tuberosa Rumex dentatus Rumex hastatus Rungia pectinata Saccharum officinarum Saccharum spontaneum Salix denticulata Salix tetrasperma Salvadora persica Salvia involucrata Salvia miltiorrhiza Salvia nubicola Salvia splendens Sambucus canadensis Sambucus mexicana Sambucus nigra Santalum album Sapindus saponaria Saussurea auriculata Saussurea candicans Saussurea obvallata Scadoxus multiflorus Scutellaria baicalensis Scutellaria grossa Scutellaria repens Sedum oreades Semecarpus anacardium Senna auriculata Senna occidentalis Senna siamea Senna sophera Sesbania bispinosa Sesbania grandiflora Seseli diffusum Sesuvium portulacastrum Setaria verticillata Shorea robusta Sida cordata Sida cordifolia Sida retusa Sida spinosa Sideritis hirsuta Silybum marianum Smithia ciliata Solanum chrysotrichum Solanum erianthum Solanum jasminoides Solanum melongena Solanum nigrum Solanum sisymbriifolium Solanum surattense Solanum torvum Solanum tuberosum Solanum villosum Sonchus oleraceus Soymida febrifuga Sphaeranthus amaranthoides Sphenoclea zeylanica Spiranthes australis Spiranthes sinensis Spondias pinnata Stellaria media Stellera chamaejasme Stephania japonica Sterculia alata Sterculia foetida Sterculia villosa Stereospermum tetragonum Stevia rebaudiana Striga asiatica Strophanthus boivinii Strychnos minor Strychnos nux-vomica Strychnos potatorum Suaeda maritima Suregada multiflora Swertia angustifolia Swertia bimaculata Swertia cordata Swertia paniculata Swietenia macrophylla Swietenia mahagoni Syzygium alternifolium Syzygium aromaticum Syzygium cumini Syzygium jambos Syzygium samarangense Tabebuia aurea Tabebuia avellanedae Talinum portulacifolium Tamarindus indica Taxus baccata Tecoma castanifolia Tephrosia calophylla Tephrosia purpurea Teramnus labialis Terminalia alata Terminalia catappa Terminalia chebula Terminalia elliptica Terminalia pallida Teucrium botrys Teucrium royleanum Thalictrum foliolosum Thespesia populnea Thunbergia erecta Thunbergia fragrans Thunbergia grandiflora Thymus linearis Tiliacora acuminata Tiliacora racemosa Tinospora cordifolia Tinospora crispa Tinospora sinensis Toona ciliata Trewia nudiflora Tribulus terrestris Trichodesma indicum Trichosanthes cucumerina Trichosanthes palmata Trichosanthes tricuspidata Trifolium repens Trigonella foenum-graecum Triumfetta rhomboidea Tylophora indica Uraria picta Urena lobata Urena sinuata Urginea coromandeliana Vachellia horrida Valeriana jatamansi Vanda tessellata Veronica serpyllifolia Viburnum coriaceum Vicia bakeri Vicia faba Vicia sativa Vigna radiata Vigna unguiculata Vinca rosea Viola rupestris Viscum album Vitex negundo Vitis vinifera Withania somnifera Wrightia tinctoria Wulfeniosis amherstiana Zamia furfuracea Ziziphus jujuba Ziziphus mauritiana
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