Therapeutic Use of Medicinal Plants and Their Extracts

Author(s)

    • Alamgir, A.N.M.

Bibliographic Information

Therapeutic Use of Medicinal Plants and Their Extracts

A.N.M. Alamgir

(Progress in drug research / edited by Ernest Jucker, vol. 73-74)

Springer, c2017-2018

  • Volume 1
  • Volume 2

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

volume1: pharmacognosy

volume2: phytochemistry and bioactive compounds

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

Volume 1 ISBN 9783319638614

Description

This volume focuses on the importance of therapeutically active compounds of natural origin. Natural materials from plants, microbes, animals, marine organisms and minerals are important sources of modern drugs. Beginning with two chapters on the development and definition of the interdisciplinary field of pharmacognosy, the volume offers up-to-date information on natural and biosynthetic sources of drugs, classification of crude drugs, pharmacognosical botany, examples of medical application, WHOs guidelines and intellectual property rights for herbal products.

Table of Contents

  • CHAPTER I Introduction a. Pharmacognosy- a multidisciplinary science of crude drugs b. Traditional and modern pharmacognosy c. Modern trends in pharmacognosy CHAPTER II Defination, scope, importance and history of development of pharmacognosy a. Defination, origin and scope of pharmacognosy b. Subject matter of pharmacognosy c. Importance of pharmacognosy in pharmacy d. History of development of pharmacognosy e. Pharmacognosist, epithecar, pharmacology, pharmacologist, pharmacy and pharmacist f. Drug literature and publication CHAPTER III Medicinal, nonmedicinal, biopesticidic, colors and dye yielding plants
  • secondary metabolites and drug principles
  • medicinal plants in the systems of traditional medicine a. Medicinal plants and their characteristics, secondary metabolites and drug principles b. Factors affecting the production of secondary metabolites in medicinal plants c. Contribution of medicinal plants to modern medicine d. Nonmedicinal or poisonous, hallucinogenic, allergenic, teratogenic and other toxic plants e. Biopesticides f. Natural colors and dyes g. Importance of drugs from natural sources h. Use of herbal preparations in indigenous traditional systems of medicine and complementary and alternative medicine (CAM): Ayurveda, Unani, Homeopathy, Aromatherapy, Siddha, Yoga, Naturopathy, Folk medicine, Native North American medicine, Western herbal medicine i. Use of medicinal plants in the traditional and complementary systems for treatment of some common ailments j. Scientific basis of herbal medicine and its merits and demerits CHAPTER IV Drugs, their natural, synthetic and biosynthetic sources 1. Drugs and crude drugs 2. Sources of drugs a. Biological sources of drugs i. Plant, animal and microbial sources ii. Marine sources (metallic and non-metallic) b. Mineral source- metallic, nonmetallic and miscellaneous sources c. Geographical or habitat sources d. New drug from microbiological conversion, aberrant synthesis in higher plants, cell, tissue and organ culture e. Synthetic and biosynthetic sources CHAPTER V Classification of drugs, nutraceuticals, functional food and cosmeceuticals
  • proteins, peptides and enzymes as drugs 1.Classification of crude drugs a. Alphabetical classification b. Morphological classification- organized and unorganized drugs c. Taxonomic classification d. Pharmacological or therapeutic classification e. Chemical or biogenetic classification and f. Chemotaxonomical classification 2. Classification of modern drugs 3. Nutraceuticals, functional food and cosmeceuticals 4. Proteins, peptides and enzymes as drugs 5.Pharmacological and synergistic activities of herbal products CHAPTER VI Pharmacognosical botany- taxonomy, morphology and anatomy of drug plants a. Taxonomy of drug plants and their families i. Systems of plant classification- artificial, natural and phylogenetic ii.Plant taxa- Species, Genus, Family, Order, Class, Subdivision, Division and Kingdom iii.Taxonomic divisions of the plant Kingdom- Thallophyta, Bryophyta, Pteridophyta, Gymnospermophyta and Magnoliophyta
  • pharmacognostical importance the taxonomic groups iv. Animal phyla and their useful products in traditional medicine b.Morphology of different parts of medicinal plants- morphology of roots, stems, woods, barks, leaves, flowers and fruits c. Structural organization of plants i. The plant cell and cell contents- cell wall, cell membrane, cytoplasm, cytoskeleton, endomembrane system, cell organelles ii. The plant tissues and tissue systems- meristematic and permanent tissue, simple and complex tissue iii. Secretory tissues and cell- glandular tissue, laticiferous tissue (latex cells and latex vessels) d. Waste materials or ergastic substances i. Solid substances-calcium oxalate, calcium carbonate, diosmin, hesperidin, silica ii.Substances in solution in the cell sap- alkaloids and glycosides, tannins, essential oils, resins, gums and mucilage CHAPTER VII Pharmacopoeia, herbal monographs and WHO's guide lines a. Pharmacopoeia b.Pharmacognostical research and development of herbal monographs in different countries c. The aim of herbal monograph- quality, efficacy, safety of herbal products b. WHO's guidelines for herbal monographs c. Monographs of organized drugs d. Monographs of unorganized drugs CHAPTER VIII Fibers, surgical dressings and bandages of natural origin a. Fibers i. Plant fibers ii. Animal fibers iii. Artificial or regenerated fibers iv. Synthetic fibers, etc. b. Surgical dressings ii. Hydrogel dressing iii. Alginate dressings iv. Collagen dressing v. Copmosite dressings vi. The standard dressings of BPC, etc. c. Bandages i. Gauze bandage or common gauze roller bandage (circular, spiral, etc.) ii. Compression bandage iii. Triangular bandage iv. Figure-of-eight bandage v. Tube bandage, etc. CHAPTER IX Production and trade of herbal drugs- cultivation, collection, storage and trade of crude drugs
  • herbal wealth and national economy a. Cultivation < i. Field level cultivation of medicinal plants at commercial scale b. Biotechnology and production of drug principles through cell, tissue and organ culture i. Laboratory techniques and production of active drug principles ii. Plant tissue and organ culture techniques iii. Production of drug principles by tissue, organ culture and production improvement iv. Development and application of tissue cultures technique for naturally rare and slow growing high value plant species for cost-effective production of drug compounds v. Animal tissue culture technique vi. Animal products vii. Fermentation and production of microbial primary and secondary metabolites b. Collection, storage and preservation for quality drugs c. Trade of crude drugs d. Some high value medicinal plants including spices, beverage, aromatic, etc. plants d. Herbal wealth and its role in national economy CHAPTER X Methods of preparation of crude drugs and their evaluation, quality control and standardization a. Preparation of crude drugs for commercial market b. Forms of occurrence of crude drugs in the market c. Adulteration of crude drugs d. Evaluation, quality control and standardization of crude drugs i. Organoleptic evaluation (with the application of sense organs) - morphological, microscopic, scent, taste and other examinations of crude drugs ii. Chemical evaluation iii. Biological evaluation iv. Physical evaluation v. Quality control and standardization of crude drugs CHAPTER XI Microscopy in pharmacognosy a. Morphological and microscopic examination of crude drugs b. Techniques of microscopy c. Microscopic measurement d. Microscopic authentication of crude drugs CHAPTER XII Intellectual property a. Intellectual property (IP) and intellectual property right (IPR) b. Traditional knowledge (TK), traditional medical knowledge, genetic resources and traditional knowledge digital library c. Types of intellectual property rights (IPRs): patents, trademarks, designs, copy rights, etc. d. Intellectual property rights for herbal products and traditional medicine Bibliography Index
Volume

Volume 2 ISBN 9783319923864

Description

This book starts with a general introduction to phytochemistry, followed by chapters on plant constituents, their origins and chemistry, but also discussing animal-, microorganism- and mineral-based drugs. Further chapters cover vitamins, food additives and excipients as well as xenobiotics and poisons. The book also explores the herbal approach to disease management and molecular pharmacognosy and introduces methods of qualitative and quantitative analysis of plant constituents. Phytochemicals are classified as primary (e.g. carbohydrates, lipids, amino acid derivations, etc.) or secondary (e.g. alkaloids, terpenes and terpenoids, phenolic compounds, glycosides, etc.) metabolites according to their metabolic route of origin, chemical structure and function. A wide variety of primary and secondary phytochemicals are present in medicinal plants, some of which are active phytomedicines and some of which are pharmaceutical excipients.

Table of Contents

  • I. Introduction.- II. Plant constituents, metabolic pathways, chemistry and their application of plant constituents
  • bioactive compounds.- III. Chemistry drug principles derived from animal, marine organisms, microorganisms synthesized drugs or laboratory sources and minerals.- IV. Vitamins, food additives, enzymes, anaesthetic aids and cosmetics.- V. Poisons, hallucinogens, teratogens, allergens and pesticides
  • biogenous and xenobiotic drugs and their metabolism.- VI. Biotechnology and herbal way of disease management.- VII. Molecular pharmacognosy - a new borderline discipline between molecular biology and pharmacognosy.- VIII. Methods of qualitative and quantitative analysis of plant constituents. Bibliography.- Index

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  • Progress in drug research

    edited by Ernest Jucker

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    Available at 9 libraries

Details

  • NCID
    BB24747941
  • ISBN
    • 9783319638614
    • 9783319923864
  • Country Code
    sz
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    [Cham]
  • Pages/Volumes
    v.
  • Size
    25 cm
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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