Review on plants with CNS-effects used in traditional South African medicine against mental diseases
The majority of the population in South Africa use traditional health care to treat various mental conditions. In this review, we present ethnobotanical information on plants used by the traditional healers in South Africa to treat mental illnesses, specifically epilepsy, depression, age-related dem...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of ethnopharmacology 2008-10, Vol.119 (3), p.513-537 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The majority of the population in South Africa use traditional health care to treat various mental conditions. In this review, we present ethnobotanical information on plants used by the traditional healers in South Africa to treat mental illnesses, specifically epilepsy, depression, age-related dementia and debilitative mental disorders. Details of the recent scientific studies conducted on some of these plants are reviewed.
Extracts of
Searsia chirindensis,
Cotelydon orbiculata and
Leonotis leonurus have shown
in vivo anticonvulsant activity. Extracts from
Searsia dentata and
Searsia pyroides showed spontaneous epileptiform discharge in mouse cortical slices, and acted as NMDA-receptor antagonists. Apigenin, amentoflavone and agathisflavone with affinity to the benzodiazepine site on the GABA
A-receptor were isolated from
Searsia pyroides. Naringenin with affinity to the GABA
A-benzodiazepine receptor was isolated from
Mentha aquatica.
Agapanthus campanulatus,
Boophone disticha,
Mondia whitei and
Xysmalobium undulatum exhibited antidepressant-like activity in three
in vivo models for depression. Amaryllidaceae alkaloids with activity to the serotonin transporter were isolated from
Boophone disticha. The alkaloid mesembrine, which act as a serotonin reuptake inhibitor, was isolated from
Sceletium tortuosum.
Investigations of plants used to treat age-related dementia and debilitative mental disorders lead to the isolation of a number of Amaryllidaceae alkaloids with acetylcholinesterase inhibitory activity from
Boophone disticha and
Crinum species. Extracts of
Mentha aquatica,
Gasteria croucheri,
Ruta graveolens and
Scotia brachypetala inhibited MAO-B. Naringenin was isolated from
Mentha aquatica as a MAO inhibitor.
Only a small number of the more than 300 southern African plant species reported to treat or affect the CNS have been scientifically evaluated. Very few of the active compounds have been isolated and identified. |
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ISSN: | 0378-8741 1872-7573 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jep.2008.08.010 |