11.12.2012 Views

Indian Medicinal Plants An Illustrated Dictionary

Indian Medicinal Plants An Illustrated Dictionary

Indian Medicinal Plants An Illustrated Dictionary

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

G<br />

286 Ginkgo biloba Linn.<br />

Action ◮ Astringent, styptic,<br />

stomachic, febrifuge.<br />

The herb and root was used in Europe<br />

in chronic dysentery, diarrhoea<br />

and intermittent fevers. In India, an<br />

infusion of the rootstock is used as<br />

sudorific in fevers, ague, chills and<br />

catarrh.<br />

Eugenol is present in the root stock<br />

in combination with vacianose as phenolic<br />

glycoside gein. The rootstock<br />

contains tannins (30–40%).<br />

A related species, G. elatum Wall., is<br />

found in the Himalayas from Kashmir<br />

to Sikkim It is used for dysentery and<br />

diarrhoea.<br />

Ginkgo biloba Linn.<br />

Family ◮ Ginkgoaceae.<br />

Habitat ◮ Native to China and Japan;<br />

cultivated in <strong>Indian</strong> gardens as an<br />

ornamental.<br />

English ◮ Maidenhair tree called<br />

Living Fossils (in India), Kew tree.<br />

Action ◮ <strong>An</strong>tagonizes bronchospasm,<br />

used as a circulatory stimulant,<br />

peripheral vasodilator.<br />

Key application ◮ Standardized<br />

dry extract—for symptomatic<br />

treatment of disturbed performance<br />

in organic brain syndrome within<br />

the regimen of a therapeutic concept<br />

in cases of dementia syndromes—<br />

memory deficits, disturbance in<br />

concentration, depressive emotional<br />

conditions, dizziness, tinnitus and<br />

headache. (German Commission<br />

E, ESCOP, WHO.) As vasoactive<br />

and platelet aggregation inhibitor.<br />

(The British Herbal Pharmacopoeia.)<br />

(For pharmocological studies in<br />

humans and clinical studies, see<br />

ESCOP.)<br />

The majority of pharmacological<br />

studies and clinical trials have been<br />

conduced using a standardized extract<br />

which contains 24% flavonoid glycosides<br />

(Ginko flavone glycosides) and<br />

6% terpenoids (ginkgolides and bilobalide).<br />

The extract increases tolerance to<br />

hypoxia and exhibits anti-ischaemic<br />

effect. It simultaneously improves the<br />

fluidity of blood, decreases platelet adhesion,<br />

decreases platelet and erythrocyte<br />

aggregation and reduces plasma<br />

and blood viscosity. The extract protects<br />

erythrocytes from haemolysis.<br />

The extract also decreases the permeability<br />

of capillaries and protects the<br />

cell membrane by trapping deleterious<br />

free radicals.<br />

The extract also increased cerebral<br />

blood flow in about 70% patients evaluated<br />

(patients between 30–50 year age<br />

had 20% increase from the base line,<br />

compared with 70% in those 50- to 70year-olds).<br />

A reversal of sexual dysfunction<br />

with concurrent use of ginkgo with<br />

antidepressant drugs has been reported.<br />

(Am J Psychiatry, 2000 157(5), 836–<br />

837.)<br />

The National Centre for Complementary<br />

and Alternative Medicine,<br />

USA, is conducting a 5-year study<br />

of 3000 people aged 75 and older to<br />

determine if ginkgo, 240 mg daily,<br />

prevents dementia or Alzheimer’s<br />

disease.(www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct/gui/<br />

c/r). 2000.

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!