Materia Medica, Pharmacology & Bio-Prospecting Main MenuIntroductionStudent ProjectsAn Investigation of Five Plants from Rumphius' The Ambonese HerbalBy Jasmine Mariko Reddy, Riya Shah, Emily Burns, Jessica Wakefield and Sareen ManuelThe Importance of Plantago in Medieval European MedicineBy Chris Jamali, Eryn Wilkinson, Swetha Sundaram, Osvaldo Sanchez Fernandez, and Fiza Zahra BalochRe-discovery of Huang Hua Hao: "Qing Hao," Artemisinin, and MalariaBy Anna Yu, Yasaman Moradian, Arman Soltanzadeh, Maya Barajas-Tavera, and Medha VallurupalliJasmine Mariko Reddyb0281e9dbf771b6dad85840110cc9e3d58f55c50Riya Shahc4935b725a6a886968209b1201e4d171adb9da73Emily Burns36af36617134a2bbfd98d24be85866b56ab19858Jessica Wakefield80f49fd19bd630d958c7325599404bef4648009cSareen Manuel2c5a5acc2c71c72acdd64318e7d8aea41b7ef039Chris Jamali02467fca8849d6d56e058865b66250768fdff764Eryn Wilkinsonf420cd237ff4a148ab803b96fae71be4b88fa19bSwetha Sundaram9db3b0c7023f421b67616e34a07fd459b84b7f42Osvaldo Sanchez Fernandez667e0bfed7f4b6edb09b1ad7d53ff0c9e16b3be0Fiza Zahra Baloch8ade266c845a4eab0029266abdab1f9a03773bb7Anna Yuca7a106787bf0a1a2d8077ad646be4f62af171c6Yasaman Moradian41a5b6b8f173c61476252b8ce3915cae39a3eaa9Arman Soltanzadehea0481f5e1a561c616b81a8f76be08abebe530f1Maya Barajas-Tavera952495e26ba3bdc14ebef7f5445a33f92e6f2386Medha Vallurupallibac3343fdf840677331343a4c047d6aee40ac352Chien-Ling Liu Zelenyb41fb6e9789888538ccab835b41e1a49b128a7bf
Artemisia Annua L.
12021-06-08T15:01:31-07:00Maya Barajas-Tavera952495e26ba3bdc14ebef7f5445a33f92e6f2386392124This image shows a live, mature Artemisia annua L. from base to tip in the branching growth phase (before flowering).plain2021-06-08T18:42:26-07:00School of Chinese Medicine Medicinal Plant Images Database https://libproject.hkbu.edu.hk/was40/detail?lang=en&record=1&channelid=1288&searchword=herb_id%3D%27D00676%27+OR+herb_id%3D%27D00990%27Chien-Ling Liu Zelenyb41fb6e9789888538ccab835b41e1a49b128a7bf
1media/D00676.jpeg2021-05-24T10:27:13-07:00Huang Hua Hao from the School of Chinese Medicine at HKBU43by Maya Barajas-Taveraplain2021-06-29T13:37:00-07:00All parts of the mature Artemisia annua L. are used in traditional Chinese medicine and are revered for their antibacterial, antiviral, antiparasitic, antitumor, antiarrhythmic, immune-boosting, and cooling properties.
While the entire plant is often used year-round, the leaves, flowers, and fruit must be picked seasonally, sun-dried, and stored for future use. The “whole plant,” which includes the leaves, stems, and flower buds, can be harvested in the budding season, as the leaves are present from November to August, but fall during the flowering season of August to October. Except for in the roots, all parts of the plant contain terpenoids like qinghaosu, artemisinin, arteannuin, and artemisinin C, as well as flavonoids, like chrysosplenol, chrysosoplenol D, and casticin, coumarins and volatile oils. As a treatment, the whole plant is regarded as bitter and is used to treat heat stroke, “damp-warm syndrome,” and fevers associated with jaundice, malaria, and the kidney disease yin asthenia. The whole plant can be decocted and administered orally (6g-15g), or externally by administering a powdered, triturated, or decocted form to affected areas.
Particularly regarding the flowers and roots of the plant, the flowers (qinghaozi), which bloom from October to November, turn into spherical, pale green or yellow fruit about 2mm in diameter. The fruit is sweet, and can be used as an oral decoction to treat heatstroke, pyrexia, dysentery, ulcers, sarcoidosis, bastard measles, poor eyesight, and parasite infections. The roots (qinghaogen) are also used in medicinal treatments and are typically harvested in autumn or winter before being sliced and sun-dried. The root contains compounds such as canthin-6-one and 10-hydroxy canthin-6-1 which have antimicrobial and antitumorigenic properties. The root is used to treat pyrexia, arthralgia, and bloody stool. Typically, 3 to 15g of the roots are decocted and administered orally for treatment.
WORKS CITED
Hong Kong Baptist University. "Artemisia Annua L." In School of Chinese Medicine: Medicinal Plant Images Database. Last modified 2007. https://libproject.hkbu.edu.hk/was40/detail?lang=en&record=1&channelid=1288&searchword=herb_id%3D%27D00676%27+OR+herb_id%3D%27D00990%27.
Hong Kong Baptist University. "Artemisinin" In School of Chinese Medicine: Phytochemical Images Database. Last modified 2007. https://libproject.hkbu.edu.hk/was40/detail?rid=P00396&lang=eng&record=1&channelid=22253&searchword=artemisinin+C&extension=all