1."Medicinal Part-Habitat-Tissue-Component" Correlations of Aquatic Chinese Medicinal Plants
Lin CHEN ; Baoyu JI ; Lixin PEI ; Shuangquan XU ; Tangshuai LI ; Suiqing CHEN ; Chengming DONG
Chinese Journal of Experimental Traditional Medical Formulae 2024;30(22):212-221
ObjectiveTo explore the correlations between the medicinal parts, habitats, tissue, components, and medicinal properties (natures, tastes, and effects) of 100 aquatic Chinese medicinal plants, thus providing evidence for the relationship between image and analogy and laying a theoretical foundation for the clinical use and development of aquatic Chinese medicinal plant resources. MethodThe Aquatic Plants of China, Flora of China, and related literature were searched, and a total of 100 aquatic Chinese medicinal plants included in the Chinese Pharmacopoeia (2020 edition), Chinese Materia Medica, National Compilation of Chinese Herbal Medicines, Dictionary of Chinese Materia Medica, and local standards were screened out. The medicine-taxonomic status-life habit associations and nature-component-traditional Chinese medicine classification-pharmacological effect associations were analyzed respectively. ResultThe aquatic Chinese medicinal plants mostly had a cold nature, bitter, pungent, and sweet tastes, and tropism to the liver meridian. The whole plant or aerial part was mainly used for medicinal purposes, and these plants generally had well developed aerenchyma. These plants mainly contained flavonoids, alkaloids, and volatile oils and had the effects of clearing heat, detoxifying, and promoting urination. ConclusionThere are correlations between the medicinal parts, habitats, tissue, components, medicinal properties, and effects of aquatic Chinese medicinal plants, which provide reference for the development and utilization of aquatic Chinese medicinal plant resources.
2.Based on "Medicinal Part-Chemical Component-Pharmacological Activity-Nature, Taste, and Effect" Correlations of Thorny Medicinal Plants
Tangshuai LI ; Baoyu JI ; Lin CHEN ; Shuangquan XU ; Jianglong HE ; Suiqing CHEN ; Chengming DONG ; Lixin PEI
Chinese Journal of Experimental Traditional Medical Formulae 2024;30(22):222-230
ObjectiveTo make statistics on the biological characteristics, medicinal parts, chemical components, and other aspects of thorny medicinal plants and systematically analyze the correlations between their natures, tastes, and meridian tropism, so as to provide a theoretical basis for the clinical application and resource development of these plants. MethodThe Chinese Pharmacopoeia (2020 edition) and the processing standards of various provinces and cities and other related documents were reviewed, on the basis of which 46 species of thorny medicinal plants were selected. The natures, tastes, meridian tropism, medicinal parts, chemical components, pharmacological activities, and geographical distribution of these plants were summarized and analyzed in Excel 2013 and SPSS Statistics 26.0. ResultThe 46 species of thorny medicinal plants belonged to 25 families, 1 class, 1 phylum of 1 kingdom. In terms of the location of thorns, the frequency of these medicinal plants followed the trend of leaf thorns>peel thorns>branch thorns>fruit thorns. In terms of the nature, taste, and meridian tropism, the frequency of these plants was in the orders of warm>plain>cold>cool>hot, bitter>sweet>pungent>sour>salty, and liver>lung>spleen=large intestine>heart>kidney, respectively. In terms of the medicinal parts, the frequency followed the trend of roots and rhizomes>fruits>whole plants>flowers>leaves. The thorny medicinal plants were mainly distributed in north and southwest China. The thorny medicinal plants mainly contained flavonoids, alkaloids, and saponins and had the effects of clearing heat and detoxifying, resolving stasis and eliminating carbuncle, moving Qi and relieving pain, and alleviating edema and expelling pus. Moreover, 24 of them had anti-tumor activity. ConclusionMost of the thorny medicinal plants belong to Compositae, Leguminosae, and Rosaceae, have leaf thorns, a warm nature, a bitter taste, tropism to the liver meridian, and roots as the medicinal part. These plants are mainly distributed in north China, with the effects of clearing heat and detoxifying, resolving stasis and eliminating carbuncle. In summary, the thorn location, distribution, and medicinal parts of thorny medicinal plants are correlated with the natures, tastes, and meridian tropism. The findings provide clues for the development and utilization of these plants.