4.6 Article

Medicinal Plants as an Alternative to Control Poultry Parasitic Diseases

Journal

LIFE-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life12030449

Keywords

alternative control; medicinal plants; parasitic diseases; poultry

Funding

  1. Nanjing Agricultural University [804131, 80900219]

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This review highlights the potential impacts and usage of herbal medicines in the treatment of parasitic infections in poultry. It emphasizes the importance of herbal medicines and their environmentally friendly characteristics. However, there is a lack of knowledge on the effectiveness and safety of traditional medicine, requiring further research and utilization of herbal medicines in the treatment of parasitic infections in poultry.
Parasitic infections are a major public health concern affecting millions of people universally. This review elaborates on the potential impacts of plants and their bioactive components that have been widely used in the cure of several parasitic infections of poultry. The medicinal importance of natural herbs depends upon their bioactive ingredients, which are originated from crude plants, consequently leading to the specific action on the body. Due to the limited availability of effective drugs and high cost, the development of drug resistance in several harmful parasites and microbes leads to huge economic losses in the poultry industry. This will impose the development of innovative sources for drugs to overwhelm the therapeutic failure. Moreover, the environment-friendly feed additives which can be applied as a substitute to antibiotic growth promoters (AGP) for broilers were proven. The application of natural products with therapeutic characteristics is an ancient practice that is appropriately gaining more acceptance. Globally, it is assessed that some 20,000 species of higher plants are used medicinally, although traditional medicine has a scarcity of knowledge on its efficiency and wellbeing. This review explores the usage of medicinal herbs for parasitic infections, emphasizing the recent knowledge available while detecting the research gaps which may be explored to find the usage of herbal medicines for parasitic infections in poultry. In conclusion, herbal medicines are the effective source of prime components for drug detection and the formation of phytopharmaceuticals in the control of devastating parasitic infections. There is a prerequisite to applying the traditional medicine information in clinical applications via value addition.

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