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Artemisia herba-alba

Species of plant

Artemisia herba-alba

Species of plant

  • Artemisia aragonensis Lam.
  • Artemisia lippii Jan ex Besser
  • Artemisia ontina Dufour
  • Seriphidium herba-alba (Asso) Soják

Artemisia herba-alba, the white wormwood, is a perennial shrub in the genus Artemisia that grows commonly on the dry steppes of the Mediterranean regions in Northern Africa (Saharan Maghreb), Western Asia (Arabian Peninsula) and Southwestern Europe. It is used as an antiseptic and antispasmodic in herbal medicine.

Names

Its specific epithet herba-alba means "white herb" in Latin, as its stems and leaves are white and woolly. Similarly, it is armoise herbe-blanche or armoise blanche in French.

In Arabic, it is ar (الشيح). In Old Testament Hebrew, it is he (לענה) . In Greek, it is apsinthos. "Wormwood" (in the Bible, Rev. 8:10–11).

Botanical description

Artemisia herba-alba is a chamaeophyte that grows to 20 -. Leaves are strongly aromatic and covered with fine glandular hairs that reflect sunlight giving a grayish aspect to the shrub. The leaves of sterile shoots are grey, petiolate, ovate to orbicular in outline; whereas, the leaves of flowering stems, more abundant in winter, are much smaller.

The flowering heads are sessile, oblong and tapering at base. The plant flowers from September to December. The receptacle is naked with 2–5 yellowish hermaphrodite flowers per head.

''Artemisia herba-alba'', the 'white wormwood', in a garden

Phytochemistry

Essential oil of A. herba-alba, from the Sinai Desert, contains mainly 1,8-cineole and appreciable amounts of α- / β-thujone as well as other oxygenated monoterpenes including terpinen-4-ol, camphor and borneol. Davanone, chrysanthenone and cis-chrysanthenol have been described as major constituents in some populations of A. herba-alba from Morocco and Spain. Less common non-head-to-tail monoterpene alcohols have been identified in some populations from Negev desert, such as santolina alcohol and yomogi alcohol.

Several sesquiterpene lactones were found in the aerial parts of A. herba-alba. Mainly, eudesmanolides and germacranolides types were reported in most cases. A variety of flavonoids were also described mainly with methylated (i.e. patuletin) and O-methylated (i.e. hispidulin, cirsilineol) aglycones. The presence of C-glycosides (i.e. isovitexin, schaftoside, isoschaftoside) is also noticeable.

Uses

Artemisia herba-alba is good fodder for grazing animals, mainly sheep, and in the Algerian steppes cattle.

Herbal medicine

This species of sagebrush is widely used in herbal medicine for its antiseptic, vermifuge and antispasmodic properties. Artemisia herba-alba was reported as a traditional remedy of enteritis, and various intestinal disturbances, among the Bedouins in the Negev desert. Based on laboratory assays, essential oil showed antibacterial activity, as well as, antispasmodic activity on rabbits and cytotoxic effect on cancer cells.

Artemisia herba-alba based teas were used in Iraqi folk medicine for the treatment of diabetes mellitus. An aqueous extract of aerial parts of the plant has shown a hypoglycemic effect in alloxan-induced diabetic rabbits and mice.

Culture

Artemisia herba-alba is thought to be the plant translated as "wormwood" in English-language versions of the Bible (apsinthos in the Greek text) due to regional distribution within Mediterranean regions. In the apocalyptic Book of Revelation ending the Bible, the star named "Wormwood" falls to earth and turns a third of its waters bitter. Similarly where the Biblical Hebrew word לענה (la'anah) appears in the Hebrew Bible, it is generally translated into English as "wormwood". The word occurs nine times in the Hebrew Bible, seven times with the implication of bitterness and twice as a proper noun, in the Greek translation apsinthos, naming the physical meteor in its orbit, in Revelation 8:11. The English rendering "wormwood" additionally refers to the dark green oil produced by the plant, which was used to kill intestinal worms.

References

References

  1. [http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/gcc-23310 The Plant List ''Artemisia herba-alba'' Asso ]
  2. {{GRIN
  3. (1999). "A Walk in Sinai". Egyptian Journal of Natural History.
  4. Gallisai, F. Guiso. (2002). "''Artemisia herba-alba'' Asso".
  5. Brown. (1998). "Hebrew Lexicon entry for La'anah". Lockman Foundation.
  6. {{cite CE1913
  7. Feinbrun Dothan, N.. (1978). "Flora Palaestina: part 3. Ericaceae to Compositae". Jerusalem, Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities.
  8. Pottier-Alapetite, G.. (1979). "Flore de la Tunisie: part 2. Dicotyledones, Gamopetales". Tunis, Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research.
  9. (1987). "The Antibacterial and Antispasmodic Activity of ''Artemisia herba-alba'' Asso. II. Examination of Essential Oils from Various Chemotypes". Pharmaceutical Biology.
  10. (1982). "Nouveaux chémotypes d' ''Artemisia herba-alba''". Sci. Aliment..
  11. (2004). "Composition and infraspecific variability of ''Artemisia herba-alba'' from southern Spain". Biochemical Systematics and Ecology.
  12. (1980). "Irregular monoterpene alcohols from ''Artemisia herba-alba''". Phytochemistry.
  13. (2001). "Artemisia". CRC Press.
  14. (1985-01-01). "Flavonoid glycosides of ''[[Artemisia monosperma]]'' and ''A. herba-alba''". Phytochemistry.
  15. (2005). "Two flavonoids from ''Artemisia herba-alba'' Asso with in vitro GABAA-benzodiazepine receptor activity". Journal of Ethnopharmacology.
  16. (2017-09-01). "LC-ESI-TOF-MS and GC-MS profiling of ''Artemisia herba-alba'' and evaluation of its bioactive properties". Food Research International.
  17. (2004). "Interest of ''Artemisia herba-alba'' Asso for the food of cattle in Algerian steppes". Acta Botanica Gallica.
  18. (June 1986). "A preliminary classification of the healing potential of medicinal plants, based on a rational analysis of an ethnopharmacological field survey among Bedouins in the Negev desert, Israel". Journal of Ethnopharmacology.
  19. (July 1979). "Antibacterial activity of ''Artemisia herba-alba''". Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences.
  20. (July 2015). "Comparative Phytochemical Analysis of Essential Oils from Different Biological Parts of ''Artemisia herba-alba'' and Their Cytotoxic Effect on Cancer Cells". PLOS ONE.
  21. Al-Waili, N.S.. (July 1986). "Treatment of diabetes mellitus by ''Artemisia herba-alba'' extract: preliminary study". Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology & Physiology.
  22. (November 1993). "Hypoglycaemic effect of ''Artemisia herba-alba''. I: Effect of different parts and influence of the solvent on hypoglycaemia activity". Journal of Ethnopharmacology.
  23. (July 1994). "Hypoglycaemic effect of ''Artemisia herba-alba''. II: Effect of a valuable extract on some blood parameters in diabetic animals". Journal of Ethnopharmacology.
  24. M, Marrifa H I, Alib B H and Hassan K. (November 1995). "Some pharmacological studies on ''Artemisia herba-alba'' (Asso.) in rabbits and mice". Journal of Ethnopharmacology.
  25. (12 April 2007). "Wormwood". Old Dominion University.
  26. "Revelation 8 Interlinear Bible".
  27. Danker, Frederick W. (2000). "ἀψίνθιον". University of Chicago Press.
  28. (12 April 2007). "Wormwood". Old Dominion University.
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