Plants Used in Antivenom Therapy in Rural Kenya: Ethnobotany and Future Perspectives

Snake envenomation is one of the neglected tropical diseases which has left an intolerable death toll and severe socioeconomic losses in Kenya. In a continued effort to identify some antiophidic East African botanical species, this study generated ethnobotanical information on antivenom plants repor...

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Main Author: Timothy Omara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of Toxicology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/1828521
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author Timothy Omara
author_facet Timothy Omara
author_sort Timothy Omara
collection DOAJ
description Snake envenomation is one of the neglected tropical diseases which has left an intolerable death toll and severe socioeconomic losses in Kenya. In a continued effort to identify some antiophidic East African botanical species, this study generated ethnobotanical information on antivenom plants reported in Kenya, with a view to identify potential species which could be subjected to in vitro and clinical studies for possible development into antivenoms. Data retrieved through searches done in multidisciplinary databases (Scopus, Web of Science, PubMed, Science Direct, Google Scholar, and Scientific Electronic Library Online) indicated that 54 plant species belonging to 45 genera, distributed among 27 families, are used for the management of snakebites in Kenya. Most species belonged to the family Asteraceae (11%), Malvaceae (11%), Fabaceae (9%), Annonaceae (6%), Combretaceae (6%), and Lamiaceae (6%). The main growth habit of the species is as herbs (35%), shrubs (33%), and trees (28%). Ethnomedicinal preparations used in treating snake poisons are usually from leaves (48%), roots (26%), and stem bark (8%) through decoctions, infusions, powders, and juices which are applied topically or administered orally. The most frequently encountered species were Combretum collinum, Euclea divinorum, Fuerstia africana, Grewia fallax, Microglossa pyrifolia, Solanecio mannii, and Solanum incanum. Indigenous knowledge on medicinal antivenom therapy in Kenya is humongous, and therefore studies to isolate and evaluate the antivenom compounds in the claimed plants are required to enable their confident use in antivenom therapy alongside commercial antivenin sera.
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spelling doaj-art-a1e7a6809e204a5cbf07382e59dcf0b92025-02-03T00:58:40ZengWileyJournal of Toxicology1687-81911687-82052020-01-01202010.1155/2020/18285211828521Plants Used in Antivenom Therapy in Rural Kenya: Ethnobotany and Future PerspectivesTimothy Omara0Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, School of Sciences and Aerospace Studies, Moi University, Eldoret, KenyaSnake envenomation is one of the neglected tropical diseases which has left an intolerable death toll and severe socioeconomic losses in Kenya. In a continued effort to identify some antiophidic East African botanical species, this study generated ethnobotanical information on antivenom plants reported in Kenya, with a view to identify potential species which could be subjected to in vitro and clinical studies for possible development into antivenoms. Data retrieved through searches done in multidisciplinary databases (Scopus, Web of Science, PubMed, Science Direct, Google Scholar, and Scientific Electronic Library Online) indicated that 54 plant species belonging to 45 genera, distributed among 27 families, are used for the management of snakebites in Kenya. Most species belonged to the family Asteraceae (11%), Malvaceae (11%), Fabaceae (9%), Annonaceae (6%), Combretaceae (6%), and Lamiaceae (6%). The main growth habit of the species is as herbs (35%), shrubs (33%), and trees (28%). Ethnomedicinal preparations used in treating snake poisons are usually from leaves (48%), roots (26%), and stem bark (8%) through decoctions, infusions, powders, and juices which are applied topically or administered orally. The most frequently encountered species were Combretum collinum, Euclea divinorum, Fuerstia africana, Grewia fallax, Microglossa pyrifolia, Solanecio mannii, and Solanum incanum. Indigenous knowledge on medicinal antivenom therapy in Kenya is humongous, and therefore studies to isolate and evaluate the antivenom compounds in the claimed plants are required to enable their confident use in antivenom therapy alongside commercial antivenin sera.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/1828521
spellingShingle Timothy Omara
Plants Used in Antivenom Therapy in Rural Kenya: Ethnobotany and Future Perspectives
Journal of Toxicology
title Plants Used in Antivenom Therapy in Rural Kenya: Ethnobotany and Future Perspectives
title_full Plants Used in Antivenom Therapy in Rural Kenya: Ethnobotany and Future Perspectives
title_fullStr Plants Used in Antivenom Therapy in Rural Kenya: Ethnobotany and Future Perspectives
title_full_unstemmed Plants Used in Antivenom Therapy in Rural Kenya: Ethnobotany and Future Perspectives
title_short Plants Used in Antivenom Therapy in Rural Kenya: Ethnobotany and Future Perspectives
title_sort plants used in antivenom therapy in rural kenya ethnobotany and future perspectives
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/1828521
work_keys_str_mv AT timothyomara plantsusedinantivenomtherapyinruralkenyaethnobotanyandfutureperspectives