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  J. Med. Plants Res.

 

  Vol. 4 No. 1
 

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  Petkeviciute Z

  Mekas TA

 


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Journal of Medicinal Plants Research Vol. 4 (1), pp. 064–071, 4 January 2010

ISSN 1996-0875 © 2010 Academic Journals  

   

 

Full Length Research Paper

 

 
 

Urban ethnobotany study in Samogitia region, Lithuania

 

Zivile Petkeviciute1, 2*, Nijole Savickiene3, Arunas Savickas1, Jurga Bernatoniene1, Zenona Simaitiene1, 2, Zenona Kalveniene1, Andrius Pranskunas4, Robertas Lazauskas5 and Tauras Antanas Mekas1, 2

 

1Department of Drugs Technology and Social Pharmacy, Kaunas University of Medicine, Lithuania.

2Museum of the History of Lithuania Medicine and Pharmacy, Lithuania.

3Department of Pharmacognosy, Kaunas University of Medicine, Lithuania.

4Kaunas University of Medicine Hospital, Lithuania.

5Department of Physiology, Kaunas University of Medicine, Kaunas, Lithuania.

 

*Corresponding author. E-mail: z.petkeviciute@gmail.com. Tel. +37061863403.

 

Accepted 23 November.2009

 
     
 

Abstract

 
     
 

The urban ethnobotany study provides a generalized survey on ethnobotanical knowledge preserved in Samogitia (Lithuania) and on the practical application of this knowledge in modern therapy. We registered 113 medicinal plants from 57 plant families used for therapeutic purposes. The most commonly used families of medicinal plants were Asteraceae, Lamiaceae and Rosaceae and the most commonly used plants - Calendula officinalis L., Vaccinium vitis-idaea L., Valeriana officinalis L., Hypericum perforatum L., Artemisia absinthium L., Symphytum officinale L., Quercus robur L., Populus x canescens Aiton, Anthemis tinctoria E.C. Buxton, Achillea millefolium L., Acorus calamus L. and Aesculus hippocastanum L. Most commonly, medicinal plants were used for alimentary tract disorders (22%), disorders of the respiratory tract (20%), wounds, other traumas and bites (10%), renal and urinary tract disorders (10%), nervous and emotional disorders (9%). Despite easily accessible modern medical assistance, the inhabitants of the studied region were actively using their experience in traditional herbal medicine for primary healthcare.

 

Keys words: Medicinal plants, urban ethnobotany, Lithuania, Samogitia

 

 

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