4.5 Review

Plants and the central nervous system

Journal

PHARMACOLOGY BIOCHEMISTRY AND BEHAVIOR
Volume 75, Issue 3, Pages 501-512

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0091-3057(03)00112-6

Keywords

medicinal plants; plant adaptogens; khat; Ephedra spp.; CNS plants; guarana; ayahuasca; iboga; Passiflora; Valeriana; Kava-kava

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This review article draws the attention to the many species of plants possessing activity on the central nervous system (CNS) In fact, they cover the whole spectrum of central activity such as psychoanaleptic, psycholeptic and psychodysleptic effects, and several of these plants are currently used in therapeutics to treat human ailments. Among the psychoanaleptic (stimulant) plants, those utilized by human beings to reduce body weight [Ephedra spp (Ma Huang), Paullinia spp (guarana), Catha edulis Forssk (khat)] and plants used to improve general health conditions (plant adaptogens) were scrutinized. Many species of hallucinogenic (psychodysleptic) plants are used by humans throughout the world to achieve states of mind distortions; among those, a few have been used for therapeutic purposes, such as Cannabis sativa L., Tabernanthe iboga Baill and the mixture of Psychotria viridis Ruiz and Pav and Banisteriopsis caapi (Spruce ex Griseb.) C.V Morton Plants showing central psycholeptic activities, such as analgesic or anxiolytic actions (Passiflora incarnata L., Valeriana spp and Piper methysticum G Forst.), were also analysed. Finally, the use of crude or semipurified extracts of such plants instead of the active substances seemingly responsible for their therapeutic effect is discussed. (C) 2003 Published by Elsevier Science Inc.

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