Traditional herbal medicines found to be just as, if not more, effective in treating various infections than chemical drugs
A recent study from Pakistan revealed the
therapeutic potential of three plants commonly used in traditional medicine in the region. In a study published in
BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine, the team from the
University of Malakand identified
Eryngium caeruleum (eryngo),
Notholirion thomsonianum (rosy Himalayan lily), and
Allium consanguineum (dunna) to have potent antibacterial and antifungal properties.
The researchers obtained fractions from the plants and subjected these to multiple assays to evaluate their therapeutic potential. To determine their antibacterial potential, the following strains were used:
- Enterococcus faecalis: A bacteria known to cause life-threatening infections such as urinary tract infections, blood poisoning (septicemia), and meningitis.
- Esherichia coli: While most strains of E. coli are harmless, there are others that can cause diarrhea, respiratory illness, and pneumonia.
- Proteus mirabilis: A member of the same bacterial family as E. coli responsible for more complicated cases of urinary tract infection.
- Salmonella typhi: A virulent bacteria responsible for typhoid fever, a life-threatening disease that causes delirium and a state where a person lies motionless with his eyes half-closed (typhoid state).
- Klebsiella pneumonia: Most infections that happen in hospital settings are caused by K. pneumoniae. Since the 1970s, bacterial strains that are resistant to antibiotics have emerged, with the most recent one being resistant to carbapenem, a powerful last-line antibiotic.
- Pseudomonas aeuruginosa: An opportunistic pathogen that infects those with compromised immune systems. The bacteria are resistant to many types of antibiotics, and cases have a mortality rate of around 50 percent.
Samples containing the plant extracts, together with the bacterial strains, were incubated at 37 C overnight, and minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) for each were analyzed. MIC refers to the
lowest concentration of the extract needed to inhibit bacterial growth.
To determine the plants' antifungal activity, researchers used the plant samples against these fungal strains:
The plant samples and the fungal strains were incubated at 25 C for eight days and were observed for fungal growth. The maximum concentration of the sample at which no fungal growth was noted was recorded, with the antifungal drug nystatin being positive control.
Among the three plants,
N. thomsonianum exhibited the strongest antibacterial and antifungal results. In particular, the results posted by the chloroform fraction were parallel to that of the control drugs used, in terms of antifungal and antibacterial activities.
E. caeruleum and
A. consanguineum, similarly, had sufficient antibacterial and antifungal potentials. Aside from the chloroform fraction, researchers also observed that ethyl acetate contained high activity for each plant samples.
Plants make better medicines than synthetic drugs
The findings revealed by the current study add evidence to a truth that Big Pharma doesn't want to be told: Plants are the more natural, safer, and more affordable choice, compared to toxic and synthetic pharmaceuticals.
What's even better is that
plants can even sythesize powerful medicines -- at a molecular level. A recent podcast by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, explained how a plant can produce medicines that help with its overall health and protect it from disease and other vectors.
“Every plant that survives, or virtually every plant, creates its own antibiotics,” Adams explained. “Have you ever thought about that?
That makes every plant and tree a “pharmaceutical manufacturer,” he said.
Find other plants that have antibacterial and antifungal properties at
Herbs.news.
Sources include:
Science.news
MedicalNewsToday.com
CDC.gov
ASMScience.org
MayoClinic.org
VeryWellHealth.com
EHAGroup.com
BMCComplementAlternMed.BioMedCentral.com
ScienceDirect.com
Immunology.org
News-Medical.net
OnlineLibrary.Wiley.com