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Phytochemical and pharmacological uses of medicinal plants to treat cancer: A case study from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, North Pakistan.

AbstractETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE:
Cancer is the top death causing disease in the world, due to its occurrence through various mechanism and form. Medicinal plants have been extensively used for the purifications and isolations of phytochemicals for the treatment and prevention of cancer.
OBJECTIVES:
Consequently, this research was designed to document the traditional practices of anti-cancer plants and its phytochemical essay across the districts of KP, Pakistan.
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
Semi-structured interviews were conducted in 24 districts from the informants mostly the traditional herbalists (key informants). The information were compared with the publish data using various authentic search engines including, google, researchgate, google scholar and NCBI.
RESULTS:
One hundred and fifty-four (154) anti-cancer plants were recognized belonging to 69 families among all, Lamiaceae (13 sp.), Asteraceae (12 sp.) and Solanaceae (9 sp.) were the preferred families. The local inhabitants in the area typically prepare ethnomedicinal recipes from leaves (33.70%) and whole plants (23.37%) in the form of decoction and powder (24.67%), respectively. Herbs stayed the most preferred life form (61.68%) followed by shrub (21.4%). Similarly, breast (29.22%) and lung cancer (14.83%) was the common disease type. Literature study also authorize that, the medicinal plants of the research area were rich in phytochemical like quercetin, coumarine, kaempferol, apigenin, colchicine, alliin, rutin, lupeol, allicin, berbarine, lutolin, vanilic acid, urocilic acid and solamargine have revealed significant activates concerning the cancer diseases, that replicating the efficacy of these plants as medicines.
CONCLUSION:
The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa is rural area and the local inhabitants have very strong traditional knowledge about the medicinal plants for different diseases like cancer. The medicinal plants for significant ranked disorder might be pharmacologically and phtyochemicaly explored to demonstrate their efficacy. Moreover, the local flora especially medicinal plants facing overgrazing, overexploitation and inappropriate way of collection, however, proper management strategies like reforestation, controlled grazing, proper permission from concerned department and rangeland strategies among others may be assumed to enhance the proper usage of medicinal plants.
AuthorsAsif Khan, Sajid Ali, Waheed Murad, Khizar Hayat, Shumaila Siraj, Muhammad Jawad, Rashid Abbas Khan, Jalal Uddin, Ahmed Al-Harrasi, Ajmal Khan
JournalJournal of ethnopharmacology (J Ethnopharmacol) Vol. 281 Pg. 114437 (Dec 05 2021) ISSN: 1872-7573 [Electronic] Ireland
PMID34391861 (Publication Type: Journal Article)
CopyrightCopyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Chemical References
  • Phytochemicals
  • Plant Extracts
Topics
  • Humans
  • Medicine, Traditional
  • Neoplasms (drug therapy, epidemiology)
  • Pakistan (epidemiology)
  • Phytochemicals
  • Phytotherapy
  • Plant Extracts (chemistry, therapeutic use)
  • Plants, Medicinal (chemistry)
  • Socioeconomic Factors

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