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Preclinical efficacy of African medicinal plants used in the treatment of snakebite envenoming: a systematic review protocol.

Auwal Adam BalaMustapha MohammedSaifullahi UmarMarzuq A UngogoMohammed Al-Kassim HassanUmar S AbdussalamMubarak Hussaini AhmadDaha U IshaqDillos ManaAbubakar Sha'abanAbubakar I JatauMurtala JibrilBinta KurfiIsmaila RajiSani MalamiGodpower C MichaelBasheer Z A Chedi
Published in: Therapeutic advances in infectious disease (2022)
The findings of the study will be communicated through publication in peer-reviewed journal and presentation at scientific conferences. Medicinal plants have been important sources for the development of many effective drugs currently available in orthodox medicine. Botanically derived medicines have played a major role in human societies throughout history. Plants components used in traditional medicine gained much attention by many toxinologists as a tool for designing potent antidotes against snake envenoming. Our systematic review will provide a synthesis of the literature on the efficacy of these medicinal plants. We will also appraise the prospects of African medicinal plants with pharmacologically demonstrated activity against snakebite and envenoming.
Keyphrases
  • systematic review
  • endothelial cells
  • meta analyses
  • working memory
  • drinking water
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • current status
  • cell therapy
  • stem cells
  • pluripotent stem cells
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • drug induced