Aim: The current study was prepared to collect ethnomedicinal data from tribal peoples in the Niyamagiri hill region of Kalahandi district, Odisha, India. The tribals of this region have been using medicinal plants to treat various kinds of diseases since time immemorial.
Background: Traditional medicine implementations involve
therapeutic methods using predictable medicines that have been used orally
through generations. In view of indigenous segregation over several years,
these apply to different groups and communities, which have continued to date.
Methods: To the study records the information on the medicinal
uses of plants by leading healers by conducting interviews and recording
comprehensive knowledge about the medicinal properties of different plants with
the snowball technique and sampling method. Plants were recognized by the local
practitioner also known as Kabi Raja or Vaidya, on the forest floor and were
classified botanically.
Results: The present study recorded the use of different parts of
150 plant species belonging to 131 genera of 78, unlike flowering plant
families, against various diseases, with special reference to diarrhoea,
dysentery, cold, cough, piles and fever. The practitioners use these plants to
treat kinds of ailments like asthma, skin diseases, piles, constipation,
diabetes, fever, cough, toothache, wound healing, headache, infertility in
women, mouth ulcers, stomach disorders, indigestion, insect bites, ring worms,
thirst, eczema, dysentery and diarrhoea. Since there are no contemporary
medical facilities nearby, all of these medicinal plants are employed as
sources of healing. Each of these plants has a unique lclimate that promotes
growth, especially in the district's hilly woodland. The current record of
ethnomedicinal data specified that the backward and tribal local people
commonly used plants for the treatment of diarrhoea and dysentery are A. salvifolium, A. spinosus, A.
paeoniifolius, A. paniculata, B. acutangula, B. purpuria, B. malabarium, B.
pinnatum, B. lanzan, C. arborea, C. fistula. For cold and cough the plants are
A. indica, A. sativum, A. galanagal, A. mexicana, A. integrifolia, B.
acutangula, B.campestris, B. pinnatum.
Conclusion: The use of herbal therapies, their advantages, side
effects and other details almost have the same traditional values as the
previous workers with a little difference. The efficiency and
safety of all the
listed ethnomedicinal plants need to be evaluated for phytochemical
studies.
Author
(s) Details
Sangeeta Das
Department of Botany, Berhampur University, Berhampur, Odisha, 760007,
India.
Shaikh Ameeruddin
Department of Botany, Berhampur University, Berhampur, Odisha, 760007,
India.
Sivaprasad Das
Department of Chemistry, Utkal University, Bhubaneswar, Odisha, 751004,
India
A. Leelaveni
Department of Botany, Berhampur University, Berhampur, Odisha, 760007,
India.
Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/crpbs/v5/131
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