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Indian Traditional Therapies and Bio-Prospecting: Their Role in Drug Development Research

IR@CDRI: CSIR-Central Drug Research Institute, Lucknow

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Field Value
 
Creator Sharma, Chetan
Rajendar, Kandhikonda
Kumari, Tejaswita
Arya, K R
 
Date 2014-06-20T07:22:22Z
2014-06-20T07:22:22Z
2014
 
Identifier International Journal of Pharmaceutical Science And Research, 2014, 5(3): 730-741
http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1287
 
Description Exploration of biological diversity for identification of novel bioactive molecules or therapeutically more potential than the marketed products is a continuous ongoing process for drug development research. Indian traditional therapies have been a part of our lifestyle since ages. Due to their knowing ability and applications, this knowledge has long been used as thriving sources for discovery of new drug molecules. Historical text or traditional knowledge including folklore, ethnobotany or ethnopharmacological studies are proving to be a powerful tool for searching lead molecules for the development of new drugs. This review article presents the contribution on 33 medicinal plants along with their traditional uses, bioactive constituents, biological activities, chemical structures, and 30 marketed drug formulations at national and international markets. A brief note on the recent discovery on osteogenic compounds from Ulmus wallichiana, folk traditional plant used for healing fractured bones in Uttarakhand Himalaya is also discussed in this article.
 
Format 237648 bytes
application/pdf
 
Language en
 
Relation CSIR-CDRI communication no. 8619
 
Subject Bio-Prospection
Traditional Leads
Ethnobotany
Medicinal Plant Biodiversity
Natural Products
Ulmus Wallichiana
 
Title Indian Traditional Therapies and Bio-Prospecting: Their Role in Drug Development Research
 
Type Article