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Historical Studies about Medicinal Part of Chinese Crude Drug \lq\lqUncaria Hook\rq\rq / 日本東洋医学雑誌
Kampo Medicine ; : 25-34, 2008.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-379602
ABSTRACT
Japanese pharmacopoeia prescribes a crude drug, Uncaria hook, or the hook-like structures of Uncaria rhynchophylla (Miq.) Jacks, U. sinensis (Oliv.) Havil., and U. macrophylla Wall., while Chinese pharmacopoeia prescribes the hooks with attached stems of above3species, in addition to2other species of Uncaria hook; U. hirsuta Havil. and U. sessilifructus Roxb (all in the Rubiaceae family). Our herbological study has found that the botanical origin was Uncaria rhynchophylla before the Ming Dynasty, and that the part used was not the hook itself, but the plant's bark till the early Ming Dynasty. Use of the hooks with stems began in the late Ming Dynasty. On the other hand, in Japan, the hooks themselves have been mainly collected from wild U. rhynchophylla plants growing in southern warm-temperate zone of Japan, for use in Kampo medicines. We considered this differing Japanese custom was influenced by the descriptions in the Ben Cao Gan Mu (1596)written in the Ming dynasty by Li Si Chen, which state that the hook itself had medicinally sharp power. And we conclude that use of Uncaria bark alone is reasonable for prescriptions which originated before the early Ming dynasty, such as chotosan.

Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Language: Japanese Journal: Kampo Medicine Year: 2008 Type: Article

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Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Language: Japanese Journal: Kampo Medicine Year: 2008 Type: Article