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Botanical Name |
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Entada pursaetha DC. |
English
Name |
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Garbee Bean |
Synonym(s) |
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Entada scandens Benth, Entada schefferi Ridl. |
Family |
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Mimosaceae |
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General Info
Description |
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A gigantic, umarmed climber, with twisted, angled stems, and glabrous branches; bark brownish, fibrous, often rough at the base. Leaves bipinnate, ending in a woody tendril; petioles 5 to 9 cm long; leaf rachis 15 cm long; pinnae 2 to 3 pairs, 10 cm long; leaflets 3.8 to 7.5 cm long and 2 to 3.2 cm wide, elliptic-obovate, glabrous, subaucte or emarginate at apex. Flowers yellowish-white, borne in peduncled, simple or panicled spikes up to 30 cm wide. Fruits (pods) woody, jointed, up to 1.5 m long and 10 cm wide; seeds 5 to 30, circular, flattened. |
Herb Effects |
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The seeds are used as a tonic, emetic, antiperiodic, and anthelmintic; stimulates the central nervous and cardiovascular systems (aerial part); alleviates spasms. (seed) |
Chemistry
Active Ingredients |
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A saponin of entagenic acid, L-tyrosine-O-glucoside, beta-sitosterol, entamin, quercetin, gallic acid, alpha-amyrin, lupeol and cyanidin chloride (seed). |
Chemistry
of Active Ingredients |
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Name |
CAS# |
IUPAC Name |
Formula |
Structure |
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beta-Sitosterol |
5779-62-4 |
17-(5-ethyl-6-methyl -heptan-2-yl)-10,13- dimethyl-2,3,4,7,8,9 ,11,12,14,
15,16,17 -dodecahydro-1H-cycl openta[a]phenanthren -3-ol |
C29H50O |
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Quercetin |
Not Available |
2-(3,4-dihydroxyphen yl)-3,4,5-trihydroxy -chromen-7-one |
C15H10O7 |
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Gallic acid |
149-91-7 |
3,4,5-trihydroxybenz oic acid |
C7H6O5 |
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alpha-Amyrin |
638-95-9 |
4,4,6a,6b,8a,11,12,1 4b-octamethyl-2,3,4a ,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12, 12a,14,14a
-tetrade cahydro-1H-picen-3-o l |
C30H50O |
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Lupeol |
Not Available |
Not Available |
C30H50O |
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Cyanidin chloride |
528-58-5 |
[2-(3,4-dihydroxyphe nyl)-3,7-dihydroxy-c hromen-5-ylidene]oxo nium chlor
ide |
C15H11ClO6 |
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Pharmacology
Medicinal Use |
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Epilepsy, cancer, anasarca and dropsy (plant); its paste is applied locally to relieve inflammatory and glandular swellings and also used as an emetic. The juice extracted from the bark and wood is applied externally to relieve ulcers. |
Reference |
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Chandel et al., Biodiversity in Medicinal and Aromatic Plants in India. |
Dealers
Products
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