# The Meaning of Plants' Names: A New Discovering Approach to Its Medicinal and/or Toxic Properties

**Authors:** Letícia dos Santos Dantas Lima, Luiz Felipe Domingues Passero, Alexandre Indriunas, Ingrid de Souza Santos, Luíza Francisco Uchôa Coqueiro, Kayo Alexandre Souza da Cruz, Adriana Batista de Almeida, José Carlos Fernandes Galduróz, Eliana Rodrigues

PMC · DOI: 10.1155/2024/6678557 · 2024-02-19

## TL;DR

This study explores how plant names can hint at their medicinal or toxic properties, helping identify potential new drugs.

## Contribution

A novel approach using plant name lexicons to correlate with ethnobotanical and pharmacological data for drug discovery.

## Key findings

- 69.7% of 46 species with pharmacological data matched their name-based medicinal/toxic properties.
- 58.7% of 27 species with ethnobotanical data matched their name-based properties.
- Half of the 90 studied plants showed equivalence across lexicon, ethnobotanical, and pharmacological data.

## Abstract

Some of the vernacular or scientific names are related to possible medicinal and/or toxic properties that can reveal the presence of potential bioactive agents, contributing to the discovery of new drugs and/or knowledge of the risks associated with their use. This study sought to list the scientific and vernacular names of plants whose lexicons are related to those possible properties of plants and to compare them with the “ethno” (ethnobotanical and ethnopharmacological) and pharmacological data available in the scientific literature. A floating reading of the two classical and reference works on Brazilian medicinal plants was performed, and plants with vernacular and/or scientific names related to the possible medicinal and/or toxic properties were listed. Correlations between the meanings of the species' names (lexicon) and their possible biological properties were made from their translation from Latin by consulting dictionaries. A bibliographic survey was conducted on the “ethno” and pharmacological data for each species. Finally, data from these three dimensions (lexicon, “ethno,” and pharmacology) were classified and compared using a bioprospection classification. It resulted in a list of 90 plant species belonging to 47 families. 66 of the 90 species presented “ethno” data from the scientific literature, while 46 species presented pharmacological data. Of these, 46 (69.7%) and 27 (58.7%), respectively, showed equivalence with the possible medicinal and/or toxic properties of plants according to their lexicons. According to this study, half of the plants investigated demonstrate equivalence in the three dimensions analyzed (lexicons, “ethno,” and pharmacological data from the scientific literature). Gastrointestinal and nervous system categories are among the most common in all three dimensions. Plant lexicons may be closely linked to the possible medicinal and/or toxic properties and the study of plant lexicons may represent one more approach for the search for new drugs, mainly considering the gastrointestinal, nervous, and parasites categories.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** infertility (MESH:D007246), Baker (MESH:D011151), ND (MESH:C537849), dermatologic and poisonous problems (MESH:D000168), cramps (MESH:D009120), hernia rupture (MESH:D012421), GYN (MESH:D005831), anti- (MESH:D006679), CAR (MESH:D002318), toxicity (MESH:D064420), dog knot (MESH:D004283), smooth muscle spasms (MESH:D018235), DER (MESH:D009358), carcinogenic (MESH:D011230), syphilis (MESH:D013587), sleep disorders (MESH:D012893), ophthalmic problems (MESH:C535922), MET (MESH:D024821), female pains (MESH:D010146), inflammatory (MESH:D007249), constipation (MESH:D003248), nausea (MESH:D009325), RES (MESH:D012131), death (MESH:D003643), poisoning (MESH:D011041), depression (MESH:D003866), CAN (MESH:D009369), DC (MESH:D054221), diarrhoea (MESH:D003967), INF (MESH:D007239), GAS (MESH:D012817), nervous system (MESH:D009422), allergic reactions (MESH:D004342), gastrointestinal, nervous, and parasites diseases (MESH:D010272), staunch wounds (MESH:D014947), anxiety (MESH:D001007), irritable bowel syndrome (MESH:D043183), vomiting (MESH:D014839), pulmonary disorders (MESH:D008171), Alzheimer's disease (MESH:D000544)
- **Chemicals:** Consolida major Garsault (-), caa (MESH:C013874), physostigmine (MESH:D010830), morphine (MESH:D009020)
- **Species:** Toxicodendron (genus) [taxon 43852], Salvia officinalis (garden sage, species) [taxon 38868], Euphorbia tirucalli (species) [taxon 142860], Antiaris toxicaria (jian xue feng hou, species) [taxon 241857], Achillea ptarmica (species) [taxon 133233], Valeriana officinalis (common valerian, species) [taxon 19953], Asteraceae (daisy family, family) [taxon 4210], Eugenia dysenterica (species) [taxon 866613], Melissa officinalis (common balm, species) [taxon 39338], Urtica urens (species) [taxon 473050], Althaea officinalis (marshmallow, species) [taxon 145745], Gomphrena vermicularis (saltweed, species) [taxon 221764], Elephantopus mollis (devil's grandmother, species) [taxon 318057], Croton antisyphiliticus (species) [taxon 323025], Canna glauca (species) [taxon 160686], Leonurus cardiaca (species) [taxon 587664], Operculina macrocarpa (species) [taxon 1393932], Calendula officinalis (common marigold, species) [taxon 41496], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Achillea millefolium (species) [taxon 13329], Casearia guianensis (species) [taxon 681419], Pseudotrimezia cathartica (species) [taxon 1201201], Cervidae (deer, family) [taxon 9850], Avena sterilis (species) [taxon 83444], Strychnos nux-vomica (species) [taxon 28545], Anthurium parasiticum (species) [taxon 1366181], Jatropha curcas (species) [taxon 180498], Avicennia officinalis (species) [taxon 1134458], Papaver somniferum (opium poppy, species) [taxon 3469], Allamanda cathartica (copa de oro, species) [taxon 52818], Artemisia absinthium (species) [taxon 72332], Aethusa cynapium (fool's parsley, species) [taxon 40954], PX clade (clade) [taxon 569578], Caenorhabditis elegans (species) [taxon 6239], Cerberus (genus) [taxon 46266], Angelica archangelica (wild parsnip, species) [taxon 40949], Cnidoscolus urens (species) [taxon 316878], Lobaria pulmonaria (lung lichen, species) [taxon 86794], Persicaria acuminata (species) [taxon 487988], Valeriana officinalis subsp. officinalis (subspecies) [taxon 323658], Aristolochia cymbifera (mil-homens, species) [taxon 158540], Dysphania ambrosioides (American wormseed, species) [taxon 330163]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10896657/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10896657