Module 2 Flashcards

1
Q

In 1896, the term ‘_____’ was coined by the American botanist _____ describing the study of plant
use by humans.

A

‘ethnobotany’…William
Harshberger

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2
Q

The term is generally based on a detailed observation and analysis of the use of plants used in a society and of all beliefs and cultural practices associated with such use.

A

Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology

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3
Q

investigate the relationship between humans and plants in all its complexity.

A

Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology

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4
Q

The study of materials used by ethnic and cultural groups as medicines.

A

Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology

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5
Q

A branch of ethnobotany, the study of used of plants as medicines.
A multidisciplinary subject involving anthropologists, botanists and pharmacologists.

A

Ethnopharmacology

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6
Q

_____ as a specifically
designated field of research has had a
relatively short history.

• The term ‘_______’ was first
used in 1967 as the title of a book on
hallucinogens: Ethnopharmacological
Search for Psychoactive Drugs

A

Ethnopharmacology

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7
Q

Medicinal plants are an important element of
indigenous medical systems in many parts of
the world, and these resources are usually
regarded as part of the traditional knowledge
of a culture.

A

N/A

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8
Q

Thus, any study that focuses on the documentation and systematic study of local and traditional uses of a plant or a group of
plants can be considered to have
ethnopharmacological relevance

A

N/A

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9
Q

Explorers, missionaries, merchants, but also
knowledgeable experts in the respective healing,
tradition, describe the uses of such medicinal plants;
all this is the basis for ethnopharmacology-based
drug development.

A

N/A

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10
Q

Ethnopharmacology process for Drug discovery:

A

• Sources of information
• Scientifics investigation
• Extraction
• Tests for activity
• Chemical examination

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11
Q

Medicinal plant knowledge in _____ is rooted in along history of health traditions dating back to ancient Greek, Roman and Arabic medical systems and over the centuries has been passed down via both written and oral pathways

A

Europe

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12
Q

• Over time, Sumerian, Chinese, Indian or
American medicines have entered into the
European pharmacopoeia.

• While some of these traditions have survived
throughout the centuries, many others have
changed or disappeared, and new uses of
plants have emerged either from local
experience or imported from other traditions.

A

N/A

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13
Q

European medicinal plants studies
• Medical knowledge appears in the earliest
written records and fortunately some of these
texts have been preserved until today.
• Greek and Roman authors reported an
incredible amount of data about medicinal
plants used at their times.

A

N/A

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14
Q

The physician ____ (AD 40–90) wrote De Materia Medica, which heavily influenced early medicine in Europe and inspired the production of herbal texts, especially during the Middle Ages (AD 500–1400) until the renaissance and can be considered the most important European herbal.

A

Pedanius Dioscorides

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15
Q

• Monasteries became essential during the
Middle Ages since monks and nuns wrote
herbals and their physic gardens were used to
grow medicinal species (Furniss, 1968)
• Many European scholars have contributed to
the field of medicinal plant research. However, ethno botanical studies in a modern sense, substantiated by clear methods, aims and appropriate documentation, were not introduced in Europe until the mid-19th century, a time of increasing scientific exploration in the world.

A

N/A

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16
Q

German doctor _____ (1756–1842), who, after working for several decades as a practicing physician among local peasants, wrote one of the very first systematic medico-ethnobotanical surveys within a specific area in Europe, the Estonian island of Saaremaa

A

Johann Wilhelm Ludwig
von Luce

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17
Q

• The First proper ethno botanical study in Italy was probably that of _____(1845–1907).
• His work describes the traditional plant uses of his hometown, Carpenetod’Acqui (Piedmont), and includes an early attempt to conceptualize the relevance of ethnobotanical studies.
• However, it lacks a clear indication of the
methods used.

A

Giuseppe Ferraro

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18
Q

A few years later the ethnologist _____
(1843–1916)
• described many popular remedies still inuse in
various areas of Sicily in his Medicina Popol are
Siciliana (Sicilian Popular Medicine)(1896).
• His medico-anthropological approach can be
considered a further step towards the
development of ethno medical studies despite it
being more an overview of information than a
proper survey, with methods not being clearly
spelled out.

A

Giuseppe Pitrè

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19
Q

Asian traditional practice of principles which encompass the different practice of medicine
including herbal use.

A

N/A

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20
Q

Indian traditional medical system, ____which means the Science of life, is the oldest medical science in the Indian subcontinent and has been practiced since the 12th Century BC.

A

Ayurveda

21
Q

• Ayurveda is not merely a system of medicine; rather it is a way of life. Its objective is to accomplish physical, mental, social and spiritual well-being by adopting preventive and promotive approaches as well as treating diseases with the holistic approach
• Ayurveda is effective not only in common ailments but also in many incurable, chronic and degenerative diseases as well as iatrogenic conditions.
• It not only takes care of the health of human beings but also of animals and plants, known as Pashu Ayurveda and Vriksha Ayurveda, respectively.

A

N/A

22
Q

Four types of Ayurvedic practitioners existing
various parts of the world:

A

Traditional Ayurvedic practitioners
Tribal healers
Institutionally qualified physicians
Graduates of modern medicine who have
faith in Ayurvedic practice

23
Q

(about 300,000) who are not institutionally trained,
but have gained knowledge through their family traditions;

A

Traditional Ayurvedic practitioners

24
Q

who practice in the tribal areas
using various local medicinal herbs;

A

Tribal healers

25
Q

(around 300,000 throughout the world);

A

Institutionally qualified physicians

26
Q

Ayurveda accepts the metaphysical concept of
creation as proclaimed in ancient Indian treatises

A

N/A

27
Q

The Panchamahabhuta (five basic elements) are evolved from these Panchatanmatras, i.e.,

A

Akash (ether)
Vayu(air)
Agni (fire)
Jala (water)
Prithv

28
Q

are the psychobiological dimensions or biological rhythms regulating the entire functioning of the human body.

A

Tridosha –Vata, Pitta and Kapha

29
Q

has evolved into a unique and complete medical system during the long history of China.

A

Traditional Chinese medicine

30
Q

The _____ was the first monumental classic which
systematically documented the etiology, physiology, diagnosis, treatment and prevention of disease.

A

Huang Di NeiJing(The Yellow Emperor’s Classic of Medicine or Canon of Medicine)

31
Q

Compiled over several centuries by
various authors and consists of two parts:
______ and ______
It takes the form of a dialogue between the legendary Yellow Emperor and his minister, Qi Bo, on the topic of
medicine

A

• Su Wen (Plain Questions) and Ling Shu
• Ling Shu (Miraculous Pivot, also known as Canon
of Acupuncture).

32
Q

One striking difference between TCM and Western medicine is in the way in which the human body is observed, and hence the difference in the concept of health.

A

N/A

33
Q

The concept of _______ is fundamental to the understanding of Chinese medicine. The earliest reference is probably the one in the book “Yi Jing” (Book of Change, 700 BC). The Yellow Emperor’s Classic of Medicine, hence a relative balance between this two is maintained and health is guaranteed.

A

yin and yang

34
Q

is even and well

A

yin

35
Q

is firm

A

yang

36
Q

Medical applications used in Philippine society from the prehistoric times before the Spaniards were able to set a firm foothold on the islands of the Philippines for over 300 years, to the transition from Spanish rule to fifty-year American colonial embrace of the Philippines, and up to the establishment of the Philippine Republic of the present.

A

N/A

37
Q

Traditional Filipino medicine takes a holistic
view of the individual, including environmental factors that affect a person’s physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual well-being. Healing practices were first documented in the 16th century at the start of Spanish colonization, so it’s hard to tell how early they began.

A

N/A

38
Q

who were women but also men who dressed as women or changed genders — maintained culture, religion, and medicine for their tribes, and communicated with spirits that were thought to be associated with natural phenomena.

A

babaylans or shamans

39
Q

• Years before the arrival of the Spaniards in the
Philippines, the use of medicinal plants was the
common way of treating ailments.
• Early Catholic missionaries such as Fr. Francisco
Ignacio Alcina, SJ and Fray José de Valencia, and
Fr. Pablo Clain, SJ were able to compile and publish books regarding these medicinal plants in
the Philippines.
• Alcina and de Valencia published theirs in 1669,
while Clain published his collection in 1712

A

N/A

40
Q

Traditional Filipino medical system was
composed of various specialties:

A

• midwifery
• pulse diagnosis
• bonesetting
• herbology,
• suction cupping
• skin scraping
• herbal steam and smoke
• energy medicine, and other forms of metaphysical
healing.

41
Q

Each area and group of people had their own
set of healers, who passed down their
knowledge to children at an early age.

• Along with other cultural traditions, the
healing arts began to fade in the 17th century,
and continued with the introduction of
hospitals and Western medicine after the
Americans arrived.

A

N/A

42
Q

Set of healers:

A

Hilot
Ventosa
Spiritual Healing
Albularyo (herbalism)
Tuob

43
Q

The study of ancient traditional medicine.
Used by the indigenous people of various cultures
For religious ceremonies or for medicinal purpose
A combination of the social sciences eg. Anthropology and the medical sciences (Western medicine)
Practitioners are known as Ethno-pharmacologists

A

Ethnopharmacology

44
Q

IMPORTANCE OF ETHNOPHARMACOLOGY:

A

Drug Development
Safety and efficacy of herbal preparation
Database on pharmaceutical uses of plants
Detailed information on a small segment of the local flora
Development of autochthonous resources

45
Q

A powerful analgesic. The first commercial pure natural product introduced for therapeutic use (1826). Made by isolation of a yellow-white crystal after submerging it in ammoniated water.

The substance produced was an alkaloid. the first ever derived from a plant source by 1853, the drug was being administered via the newly invented hypodermic needle directly into the bloodstream, increasing the potency

A

Morphine

46
Q

A drug used to reduce pain, fever and inflammation. It was the first semi-synthetic drug. The drug’s key ingredient is salicylic acid, which can be found in jasmine, beans, peas, clover and certain grasses and trees

The aspirin we know came into being in the late 1890s in the form of acetylsalicylic acid. Beginning in 1899, it was distributed as a powder to physicians to give to patients. By 1915, it was sold as over-the-counter tablets

A

Aspirin

47
Q

An anti-malarial drug. It is referred to as “Jesuits’ bark,” “cardinal’s bark,” and “sacred bark.” It has been used in unextracted form by Europeans since the early 17th century. In 1820, two French chemists isolated _____ from cinchona bark

In 1908, P. Rabe theorized the correct chemical structure of _____. In 1944, two American chemists successfully
synthesized the chemical. It is still a widely used anti-malarial today

Recently, a study showed that long-term use of quinine led to increased risk of death

A

Quinine

48
Q

FUTURE USE of Ethnopharmacology:

A
  • More comprehensive analysis will address the effects of ingesting phytochemicals in the maintenance
  • More attention on ecological factors.
  • Connection between social, phytochemical and clinical issues