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Abstract - Issue Jan 2018, 39 (1) Back
nstantaneous and historical temperature effects on a-pinene
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Establishing
the botanical identity of plant drugs based on their active ingredients under
diverse growth conditions
M.
Iqbal1*, Rabea Parveen2, Abida Parveen3,
Bushra Parveen4 and I. M. Aref5
1Department of
Botany, Jamia Hamdard, New Delhi-10 062, India
2Department of
Pharmaceutics, Jamia Hamdard, New Delhi-110 062, India
3Faculty of Unani
Medicine,??? Jamia Hamdard, New Delhi-110 062, India
4Department of
Pharmacology, Jamia Hamdard, New Delhi-110 062, India
5Department of
Plant Production, College of Food & Agricultural Sciences, King Saud
University, Post Box 2460, Riyadh, 11451, Saudi Arabia
*Corresponding
Author E-mail: iqbalg5@yahoo.co.in
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Key
words
Active ingredients
Environmental stress
Herbal drugs
Secondary metabolites
Indian medicine
Publication
Data
Paper received :
06.02.2016???????
Revised received :
26.02.2017????
Re-revised received :
28.04.2017
Accepted : 01.07.2017
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Abstract
Higher plants are
the major source of crude drugs used in herbal therapy. Adulteration in
crude-drug material has necessitated scientific characterization of plant
drugs, which is based primarily on morphological, anatomical and
physico-chemical characters studied through microscopy and some analytical
techniques. These criteria are helpful in isolating the adulterants from the
actual drug, but fail to deliver when the very botanical identity of a plant
drug is controversial, and several different plant species are used under a
single drug name. This article suggests how to face this situation and
overcome the problems likely to occur. Quantification of active ingredients
in plant tissues is the only dependable way to identify the actual drug out
of the different species in use. However, the amount of active ingredients in
plants, responsible for the therapeutic efficacy of those plants, may vary
with plant genotype and the habitat ecology, regulated largely by soil
characters and agro-climatic conditions. Even within the individual plant,
concentration of active ingredients often varies with plant parts/organs,
stage of plant development and status of plant nutrition. Besides,
degradation of environment may not only affect the quantity, but even the
composition of the secondary metabolites produced. This situation may alter the
chemical properties, and hence the degree of therapeutic effectiveness of
these bioactive compounds. Thus, a careful estimation of active ingredients,
taking all the above-said situations into account, may decide which species
should be regarded as the actual drug, which as an alternative drug and which
as the non-drug (if the amount of the ingredient in question is just
negligible). It may also indicate which plant organ should preferably be used
and what should be the proper stage for harvesting. Further, environmental
degradation may have a far-reaching influence on the therapeutic potential of
medicinal plants and may also necessitate a re-fixing of drug doses, keeping
in view the overall impact of environmental degradation on the active
ingredients of these plants on one hand, and on the resistance level / immune
system of human beings on the other.
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