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Medicinal and Aromatic Plants of the World

Ákos Máthé
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TLDR
MAPs have become “industrial products” with new concepts like phytotherapy and veterinary medicinal uses, aromatherapy, nutraceuticals, cosmeceuticals, and animal welfare uses widening the scope of the utilization.
Abstract
The history of Medicinal and Aromatic Plant (MAP) utilization dates back to the beginnings of mankind. Our forefathers used natural substances, they could find in nature, to ease, cure their sufferings, illnesses, to heal their wounds. This type of approach has survived in the Traditional Medicinal (TM) uses, until today, since nearly 80 % of the world population still relies on MAPs in their medications. The renaissance of MAP-use in the high-income countries of the world has brought about a different type of use in the form of Herbal Medicines (CAM). MAPs have become “industrial products” with new concepts like phytotherapy and veterinary medicinal uses, aromatherapy, nutraceuticals, cosmeceuticals, and animal welfare uses widening the scope of the utilization. New, innovative, value added applications include their use in functional foods, animal husbandry, as well as plant protection in agriculture. In this regards the versatile utilization of essential oils is promising. Modern approaches in production and uses have brought about an increased focus on the importance of quality, safety and efficacy of both MAPs and their produce. MAPs will also maintain their importance in the search for new, valuable sources of drugs and lead compounds. In view of the steadily increasing demands on these important natural resources, attention should be paid to the sustainable forms of production and utilization.

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Citations
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Antibacterial Activity of Some Flavonoids and Organic Acids Widely Distributed in Plants.

TL;DR: These compounds were generally more active against Gram-negative bacteria: Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa than Gram-positive ones: Enterococcus faecalis and Staphylococcus aureus and the presence of hydroxyl groups in the phenyl rings A and B did not influence on the level of their activity.
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Linalool bioactive properties and potential applicability in drug delivery systems.

TL;DR: The present review focuses on the anti-inflammatory, anticancer, anti-hyperlipidemic, antimicrobial, antinoceptive, analgesic, anxiolytic, antidepressive and neuroprotective properties of linalool.
Journal Article

Plant products as fumigants for stored-product insect control [Erratum: 2008, v. 44, issue 3, p. 304.]

TL;DR: In this article, a review of research studies on plant essential oils and their constituents as fumigants, i.e., compounds acting on target insects in the vapour or gaseous phase, against stored-product insects have been reviewed.
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Overcoming the challenges of phage therapy for industrial aquaculture: A review

TL;DR: In this review, the interest of phage biocontrol for aquaculture is discussed and how can bacterial resistance, ecological, pharmacological and production related issues be solved.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Biexponential Fitting of Diffusion-Ordered NMR Data: Practicalities and Limitations

TL;DR: The limitations imposed on biexponential fitting by finite signal-to-noise ratio and by the distortion of the theoretical form of the signal attenuation as a result of pulsed-field gradient nonuniformity are explored, and the improvement in DOSY spectra produced using bieexponential fitting afforded by compensating for the latter are illustrated.
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NMR methods for unravelling the spectra of complex mixtures

TL;DR: The main methods for the simplification of the NMR of complex mixtures by selective attenuation/suppression of the signals of certain components are presented.
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The influence of salicylic acid elicitation of shoots, callus, and cell suspension cultures on production of naphtodianthrones and phenylpropanoids in Hypericum perforatum L.

TL;DR: The H. perforatum cells were globally more sensitive to salicylic acid elicitation when maintained in an undifferentiated state and particularly in cell suspension cultures, implying that salcylic acid could act at biosynthesis level but not for the accumulation of both hypericin and pseudohypericin.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemistry and geographic variation of floral scent in Yucca filamentosa (Agavaceae)

TL;DR: No differentiation in floral scent was observed between populations pollinated by different yucca moths, nor was there any correlation between chemical distance and geographic distance among populations, so the observed lack of differentiation can putatively explain high moth-mediated gene flow among sites, but it does not explain conservation of odor composition across populations with different pollinators.
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What essential oils promote productivity?

In this regards the versatile utilization of essential oils is promising.