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. 2023 Jan;31(1):21-28.
doi: 10.1016/j.jsps.2022.11.003. Epub 2022 Nov 12.

Medicinal plants used by rural communities in the arid zone of Viesca and Parras Coahuila in northeast Mexico

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Medicinal plants used by rural communities in the arid zone of Viesca and Parras Coahuila in northeast Mexico

Cristian Torres-León et al. Saudi Pharm J. 2023 Jan.

Abstract

This study is the first record of medicinal plants in the southwest of the Coahuila state, an arid zone where extreme dry conditions prevail. One hundred twenty-two residents (in sixteen communities) were interviewed. The residents were questioned with a questionnaire-guided ethnomedical survey protocol about the various plants used. Seventy-seven species of medicinal plants belonging to 36 botanical families were cited. The highest use-value (UV) was calculated for Lippia graveolens Kunth (0.30); Aloe vera (L.) Burm.f. (0.20); Eucalyptus abdita Brooker & Hopper, Chamaemelum nobile (L.) All. (0.16); Mentha spicata L. (0.15) and Salvia officinalis L. (0.10). Informant consensus factor (ICF) about usages of medicinal plants ranges from 0.41 to 0.80; the highest level of agreement was determined between the informants and Respiratory System Diseases (0.80). The highest fidelity level (FL) values (100%) were identified in Flourensia cernua DC., Artisia ludoviciana Nutt., and Parthenium incanum Kunth to Gastro-intestinal System Diseases; Eucalyptus abdita Brooker & Hopper, Bougainvillea berberidifolia Heimerl, and Lippia graveolens Kunth to Respiratory System Diseases (RSD) and Cyclolepis genistoides D.Don and Ephedra antisyphilitica Berland. ex C.A.Mey. to Obstetrics, Gynecology and Urinary tract Diseases. These last two medicinal plant species ("palo azul" and "pitoreal") used by the rural communities in Viesca in the treatment of urinary tract infections and kidney stones have not been reported previously. These findings can provide new research directions for further phytochemical studies. The present study revealed that the residents are rich in ethno-medicinal knowledge and actively use medicinal plants to treat various diseases. New phytochemical and pharmacological research are needed to confirm the therapeutic potential and safety of the identified plants.

Keywords: Arid zone; Coahuila; Ethno-medicinal; Ethnobotany; Medicinal plants; Traditional knowledge.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Graphic location of the study area. The star shows the location of the Research Center and Ethnobiological Garden (CIJE).
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Most frequently treated diseases in southwest Coahuila state, northeast Mexico. Category of Disease: (DSD) Gastro-intestinal System Diseases; (RSD) Respiratory System Diseases; (SST) Skin, Eye, Ear, Nose, and Oropharynx Diseases; (CSD) Cardiovascular System Diseases; (GUS) Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Urinary-tract Diseases; (MCT) Musculoskeletal and Joint Diseases; (IPD) Infectious Diseases; (NSD) Central Nervous System Diseases; (NEP) Malignant Diseases; (IPO) Immunological, poisoning, and others.

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