Summary: | <p>Abstract</p> <p>The archives of Flora Medicinal, an ancient pharmaceutical laboratory that supported ethnomedical research in Brazil for more than 30 years, were searched for plants with antimalarial use. Forty plant species indicated to treat malaria were described by Dr. J. Monteiro da Silva (Flora Medicinal leader) and his co-workers. Eight species, <it>Bathysa cuspidata</it>, <it>Cosmos sulphureus</it>, <it>Cecropia hololeuca</it>, <it>Erisma calcaratum</it>, <it>Gomphrena arborescens</it>, <it>Musa paradisiaca</it>, <it>Ocotea odorifera</it>, and <it>Pradosia lactescens</it>, are related as antimalarial for the first time in ethnobotanical studies. Some species, including <it>Mikania glomerata</it>, <it>Melampodium divaricatum</it>, <it>Galipea multiflora</it>, <it>Aspidosperma polyneuron</it>, and <it>Coutarea hexandra</it>, were reported to have activity in malaria patients under clinical observation. In the information obtained, also, there were many details about the appropriate indication of each plant. For example, some plants are indicated to increase others' potency. There are also plants that are traditionally employed for specific symptoms or conditions that often accompany malaria, such as weakness, renal failure or cerebral malaria. Many plants that have been considered to lack activity against malaria due to absence of in vitro activity against <it>Plasmodium </it>can have other mechanisms of action. Thus researchers should observe ethnomedical information before deciding which kind of screening should be used in the search of antimalarial drugs.</p>
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