Range. Old World tropics; tropical Asia. In Myanmar found in Sagaing.
Uses
Bark: Used for skin conditions, liquid from the crushed bark is given orally, and the seed paste is applied topically. It is also used to clear infections, promote new tissue formation, and heal chronic sores.
Leaf: Used in maturative poultices. Leaf also used to treat poisoning, edema, and eye infections; to purify breast milk, open blocked mammary glands, and increase lactation. New mothers eat the leaves in a variety of forms, including in clear soups, boiled lightly, in salad, fried as fritters, or pickled. Juice from the crushed leaves is used as an eye drop solution to clear infection and to reduce fever. For swollen joints, aches, and pains, the liquid from boiled leaves is taken orally. Powder from the dried leaves is taken with honey or in sweet liqueurs as a tonic for strength and vitality.
Seed: Component of remedies for irregular menstrual periods, liver inflammation, and lung infections.
Root: Used in medicines to treat stomach bloating, tumors, fevers, sores, diabetes, skin irregularities caused by blood problems, and throat ailments, as well as to protect against colds, leprosy, spleen inflammation, and germs. They are also used in remedies to neutralize venom from scorpion stings.
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Origin
Cultivated and wild throughout India.
Action:
Seed and bark—astringent, emmenagogue. Used in menorrhagia, spleen enlargement and diarrhoea.
Leaves—antiinflammatory.
Bark—juice applied to cutaneous eruptions.
Unsaponifiable matter of fixed oil from seeds— cardiac depressant, antibacterial.
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Origin:
Northern sector of Kibale National Park, Uganda
Disease treated:
Malaria: FL
1) DeFilipps, Robert A.; Krupnick, Gary A. / PhytoKeys, v. 102. - - p. 1 - 314, 2018.
2) Khare, C.P./ Indian Medicinal Plants. -- Nueva Dheli: Springer, 2007 . - p602.
3) Jane Namukobe; et al. / Traditional plants used for medicinal purposes by local communities around the Northern sector of Kibale National Park, Uganda. Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 2011(136) p. 242.