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LOGANIACEAE(Logania family)• Medicinal / Folk-medicinal aspects: Plant material derived from several species has been used in external treatments for boils, ulcers, sloughy wounds, pruritus, and other cutaneous affections; and for certain eye and ear conditions. Anti-parasitic uses have also been reported. • The composition of this family of trees, shrubs, lianes, and herbs has in recent years repeatedly been revised by taxonomists. Brummitt (1992) recognised 20 genera. This number rose to 29 genera and 570 species in the late 1990s before the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (2003) reduced the family to about 420 species in 13 genera. Mabberley (2008) regards the family as comprising 400 species in 14 genera. This smaller family now includes several genera previously classified in their own distinct families, namely the Antoniaceae, Gardneriaceae, Geniostomaceae, Spigeliaceae, and Strychnaceae. The plants occur naturally in tropical and warm regions. The principal genera are Strychnos L. (190 spp.), Mitrasacme Labill. (54 spp.), Spigelia L. (50 spp.), and Geniostoma J.R. Forst. & G. Forst. (24 spp.). The roots of Spigelia anthelmia L. and Spigelia marilandica L. have been used in anthelmintic (vermifuge) preparations, the roots of the latter species formerly being official in the US Pharmacopeia (see Remington et al. 1918). [Information available but not yet included in database] [Information available but not yet included in database] Pammel (1911) noted that this species is irritant, but he may have been referring to gastro-intestinal rather than dermatologic effects.
[Information available but not yet included in database] The genus comprises 190 species found in tropical regions (Mabberley 2008). Some are spiny, for example:
According to Irvine (1961), on the Ivory Coast the sap is rubbed on guinea worm sores [= dracunculiasis or dracunculosis or dracontiasis, caused by Dracunculus medinensis, fam. Dracunculidae. The guinea worm is a threadworm or filiarial worm. Human infestation is caused by drinking raw water containing water fleas infested with this worm]. [Information available but not yet included in database]
This large climbing shrub, which is a native of the Philippine Islands, is the source of Ignatia beans. Formerly official in many pharmacopoeias, they have been used as an alternative to Nux Vomica (see Strychnos nux-vomica L. below). [Further information available but not yet included in database] [Information available but not yet included in database]
The seeds of this plant are a source of the exceedingly poisonous, bitter-tasting alkaloids strychnine and brucine. Known as Nux Vomica, Semen Nucis Vomicae, or Semen Strychni, they were formerly official in various Pharmacopoeias as was strychnine (see Remington et al. 1918, Wade 1977). [Further information available but not yet included in database]
The name of the plant refers to its traditional use as a water purifier: one of the dried nuts is rubbed hard for a short time around the inside of the earthenware water pot; on settling, the water is left pure and tasteless (Remington et al. 1918, Gupta & Chaudhuri 1992). [Further information available but not yet included in database] [Further information available but not yet included in database]
[Further information available but not yet included in database]
Lakshminarasimhan (2003) drew attention to the confusion over a period of 250 years regarding the identity of Strychnos colubrina, formally proposing that the name be rejected in favour of Strychnos wallichiana. [Further information available but not yet included in database] References
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