Hui Tag
Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences
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Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2009
Nima D. Namsa; Hui Tag; M. Mandal; Pallabi Kalita; Arup Kumar Das
AIM OF THE STUDY Most people especially in rural areas depend on herbal medicines to treat many diseases including inflammation-related ailments such as rheumatism, muscle swelling, cut wound, accidental bone fracture, insect bites, pains and burn by fire and hot water. The objectives of this study were: to catalog ethno-medicinal plants of Lohit community, ecological status, indigenous folk medicinal uses, morphological parts used and to determine their reported pharmacological studies. MATERIALS AND METHODS The ethnobotanical information on traditional medicinal plants exclusively used for management of inflammation-related ailments by the Khampti community of Arunachal Pradesh, India was based on first-hand field survey work through semi-structured interviews. RESULTS AND CONCLUSION A total of 34 species in 32 genera and 22 families were encountered during the field survey. Botanical families such as Asteraceae, Euphorbiaceae, Zingiberaceae and Lamiaceae were represented by the highest numbers of species reported in this study. Thirteen plant species, namely: Bombax ceiba, Canarium strictum, Chloranthus erectus, Xanthium indicum, Lycopodium clavatum, Coleus blumei, Batrachospermum atrum, Chlorella vulgaris, Marchantia palmata, Marchantia polymorpha, Eria pannea, Sterculia villosa and Alpinia galanga are reported for the first time for the treatment of inflammation-related diseases.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2009
Hui Tag; Nima D. Namsa; Arup Kumar Das; Pallabi Kalita; S.C. Mandal
AIM OF THE STUDY Chloranthus erectus (Buch.-Ham.) Verdcourt (Chloranthaceae) is a shrub native to tropical and temperate zone of Eastern Himalaya of India and South-East Asia and have traditionally been used as a folklore medicine to treat localised swelling, joint pain, skin inflammation, fever and bodyache. In this study, an attempt has been made to demonstrate the anti-inflammatory activity of methanol extract obtained from Chloranthus erectus leaves (MECEL) in acute, sub-acute and chronic mouse models. MATERIALS AND METHODS Inflammation in the hind paw of Wistar albino rat was induced by carrageenan, histamine and serotonin, and tissue granuloma pouch was induced by cotton pellet method. Anti-inflammatory drug-phenylbutazone was used as standard drug for comparison. RESULTS In acute carrageenan-induced rat hind paw edema, oral administration of MECEL at 200 mg/kg produced significant inhibition of edema by 38.34% (p < 0.01) while the histamine- and serotonin-induced sub-acute model, the inhibition of paw edema reached 52.54% (p < 0.001) and 25.5% (p < 0.01), respectively. In a 7-day study, MECEL at 20 and 50 mg/kg produced significant suppression of cotton pellet-induced tissue granuloma formation in rats. CONCLUSIONS This preliminary study revealed that the methanol extract of Chloranthus erectus exhibited significant anti-inflammatory activity in the tested models, and may provide the scientific rationale for its popular folk medicine as anti-inflammatory agent.
Indian Journal of Pharmacology | 2010
Hui Tag; Nima D. Namsa; Manabendra Mandal; Pallabi Kalita; Arup Kumar Das; S.C. Mandal
Objective: The main objective of this work was to study the antipyretic and antibacterial activity of C. erectus (Buch.-Ham.) Verdcourt leaf extract in an experimental albino rat model. Materials and Methods: The methanol extract of C. erectus leaf (MECEL) was evaluated for its antipyretic potential on normal body temperature and Brewer’s yeast-induced pyrexia in albino rat’s model. While the antibacterial activity of MECEL against five Gram (−) and three Gram (+) bacterial strains and antimycotic activity was investigated against four fungi using agar disk diffusion and microdilution methods. Result Yeast suspension (10 mL/kg b.w.) elevated rectal temperature after 19 h of subcutaneous injection. Oral administration of MECEL at 100 and 200 mg/kg b.w. showed significant reduction of normal rectal body temperature and yeast-provoked elevated temperature (38.8 ± 0.2 and 37.6 ± 0.4, respectively, at 2–3 h) in a dose-dependent manner, and the effect was comparable to that of the standard antipyretic drug–paracetamol (150 mg/kg b.w.). MECEL at 2 mg/disk showed broad spectrum of growth inhibition activity against both groups of bacteria. However, MECEL was not effective against the yeast strains tested in this study. Conclusion This study revealed that the methanol extract of C. erectus exhibited significant antipyretic activity in the tested models and antibacterial activity as well, and may provide the scientific rationale for its popular use as antipyretic agent in Khamptis’s folk medicines.
Archive | 2016
Arup Kumar Das; Hui Tag; Pankaj Bharali
The lofty mountainous state of India, popularly called a land of the rising sun, Arunachal Pradesh, Northeast India, has exceedingly a diverse geology, topography and climate referred to as “Paradise of the Botanist” which exhibits a plethora of trees, shrubs, herbs, epiphytes, ferns and cryptogams and houses numerous rare, endangered and endemic species. Because 80 % of the people are farmers relying heavily on agriculture especially “jhum” cultivation of the hilly states, therefore the local communities have to depend on wild food and animals as supplement. Bio-resources in Northeast India have been exposed to many challenges in recent years. Many important species of plants having potential medicinal properties, e.g. aromatic plants, cereals and pulses, ornamental plants, timber-yielding plants, etc., are being overexploited in recent years which have resulted in depletion of such species in their natural habitat. Due to enormous prospect of indigenous knowledge on utilization of medicinal plant species and other crop plants, proper conservation measures should be initiated through sustainable utilization of bio-resources so as to prevent exploitation which is a serious concern as regard these species.
Archive | 2016
Jambey Tsering; Hui Tag; Baikuntha Jyoti Gogoi; Vijay Veer
Arunachal Pradesh is a treasure house of biodiversity as well as traditional knowledge. The state harbours over 800 medicinal plants. Rising demands of significant medicinal plants such as Taxus baccata, Paris polyphylla, Swertia chirayita, Neopicrorhiza scrophulariiflora, etc. for developing pharmaceutical drugs have drastically reduced the wild population of these species. Some important medicinal plants of the state, their bioactive efficacy and conservation status are mentioned in this paper. This paper also describes the traditional use of 13 ethnomedicinal plants used by the Monpa tribe of Arunachal Pradesh as antidote against food poisoning, snake bite, scorpion bite and insect bites. Some of the potent antidote plants claimed by the Monpa tribe are Aconitum heterophyllum, Asparagus racemosus, Ligularia amplexicaulis, Rhododendron hodgsonii, Swertia hookeri and Verbascum thapsus. Out of the 13 traditional antidote plants, six are new to science as traditional medicine and are yet to be pharmaceutically validated for their bioactivity. Given the strong traditional cultural use of the plants, it is expected that biochemical and pharmacological studies would reveal the bioactive compounds, which could be further developed as holistic evidence-based drugs to cure some complicated ailments/diseases.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2012
Hui Tag; Pallabi Kalita; P. Dwivedi; Arup Kumar Das; Nima D. Namsa
Archive | 2012
Baikuntha Jyoti Gogoi; Jambey Tsering; Hui Tag; Vijay Veer; Rono Hills; Rajiv Gandhi
World Academy of Science, Engineering and Technology, International Journal of Biological, Biomolecular, Agricultural, Food and Biotechnological Engineering | 2014
Hui Tag; Jambey Tsering; Pallabi K. Hui; Baikuntha Jyoti Gogoi; Vijay Veer
The Initiation | 2010
Gibji Nimachow; Tahong Taga; Hui Tag; Oyi Dai
Journal of Pharmacognosy and Phytochemistry | 2018
Bipul Ch. Kalita; Arup Kumar Das; Debmalya Das Gupta; Pallabi K. Hui; Bhabesh Gogoi; Hui Tag