Ethnopharmacological survey of six medicinal plants used in the traditional treatment of urinary tract infections and other infectious diseases
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Abstract
Benin has attractive ethnobotanical potential with a vast diversity of medicinal plants
widely used to treat human diseases. Urinary tract infections are among the diseases traditionally
treated by medicinal plants. Mangifera indica, Bridelia ferruginea, Alstonia boonei, Morodora
myristica, Xylopia aethiopica and Zanthoxylum zantoxyloides are six plants used in the traditional
treatment of urinary infections in Benin. The general objective of this study was to identify the
ethnopharmacological uses of these six plants used in traditional medicine in South Benin. To
this end, an ethnopharmacological survey was conducted using the semi-structured interview
method among herbalists in the markets of South Benin. The ethnobotanical data collected were
analyzed using the use-value, the informant consensus factor and the medicinal plant fidelity
index. A total of 98 herbalists participated in this study. The six plants studied were involved in
15 different diseases divided into seven disease categories. The most mentioned disease categories
are infectious diseases, blood and digestive diseases. Malaria, ulcers, anemia and urinary tract
infections are the pathologies most commonly treated by these plants. Informants agreed on
the use of these plants in these disease categories. Bark, leafy stems and roots are the parts of
the plants most used to treat diseases. Decoction and maceration are the two main methods of
preparation, and the oral and cutaneous routes are the main routes of administration. These data
constitute ethnopharmacological documentation that can be used for further pharmacological
and toxicological studies.
