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An ethnobotanical survey and pharmacological and toxicity review of medicinal plants used in the management of obesity in the North Central Zone of Nigeria.

Anyanwu, Gabriel O.; Anzaku, Dorathy; Bulus, Yanga J.; Girgi, Jemimah N.; Donwell, Chinda C.; Ihuma, Jerome O.; Onyeneke, Eusebius C.; Bermano, Giovanna; Steenkamp, Vanessa

Authors

Gabriel O. Anyanwu

Dorathy Anzaku

Yanga J. Bulus

Jemimah N. Girgi

Chinda C. Donwell

Jerome O. Ihuma

Eusebius C. Onyeneke

Vanessa Steenkamp



Abstract

Obesity is increasing worldwide. Due to the unavailability of affordable obesity drugs in most parts of Nigeria, many overweight and obese people rely on medicinal plants to manage obesity. Thus, the aim of this study is to document medicinal plants traditionally used in the treatment and management of obesity in the North Central Zone of Nigeria, determine the plants to which pharmacological assessment of their use in obesity management has not been reported, and assess their toxicity based on the literature. Semistructured questionnaires and interviews were used to assess sociodemographic information of the 700 herb sellers/practitioners (100 for each state) who consented to participate in the study. Information gathered on plants that are traditionally used in the management of obesity included administration/dosage, method of preparation, plant part used, method of growth, and plant type. The field study was conducted over a one-year period, from March 2018 to March 2019. Reports of pharmacological activity pertaining to obesity as well as toxicity of the plants were obtained from the literature via scientific databases (Scopus, Web of Science, PubMed, Google Scholar, SciFinder, AJOL, PubChem, and other web sources) after the field survey. A total of 39 families and 70 plant species were used to treat or manage obesity. The majority of plant species used resulted in the family Leguminosae. The relative frequency of citation (RFC) and percentage values for the five most frequently used plants were as follows: Citrus aurantifolia (0.0500; 3.56%), Citrus limon (0.0457; 3.26%), Garcinia kola (0.0429; 3.05%), Zingiber officinale (0.0429; 3.05%), and Allium sativum (0.0414; 2.95%). The majority of the medications were prepared as decoctions (50.5%), and cultivated plants (62.86%) were in the majority of plants used. Results showed that 23 plants have no pharmacological report for antiobesity activities while among the five frequently used plants, only Garcinia kola was reported toxic in preclinical models. This paper provides a valuable compilation of the plants used in obesity treatment in the study area by indigenous healers, highlights plants with no reported pharmacological activity pertaining to obesity, and indicates the toxicity profile of used plants. However, further studies on the mechanism of action are warranted, especially where no reports were obtained.

Citation

ANYANWU, G.O., ANZAKU, D., BULUS, Y.J., GIRGI, J.N., DONWELL, C.C., IHUMA, J.O., ONYENEKE, E.C., BERMANO, G. and STEENKAMP, V. 2025. An ethnobotanical survey and pharmacological and toxicity review of medicinal plants used in the management of obesity in the North Central Zone of Nigeria. Journal of obesity [online], 2025 (1), article ID 5568216. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1155/jobe/5568216

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 31, 2024
Online Publication Date Feb 5, 2025
Publication Date Dec 31, 2025
Deposit Date Feb 6, 2025
Publicly Available Date Feb 6, 2025
Journal Journal of obesity
Print ISSN 2090-0708
Electronic ISSN 2090-0716
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 2025
Issue 1
Article Number 5568216
DOI https://doi.org/10.1155/jobe/5568216
Keywords Medicinal plants; Nigeria; Obesity; Pharmacological activity; Survey; Toxicity
Public URL https://rgu-repository.worktribe.com/output/2696008

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