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Engl. & Prantl, Nat. Pflanzenfam. Nachtr. 1: 255 (1897). |
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Passifloraceae |
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Adenia gracilis Harms (1897), Adenia gummifera (Harv.) Harms (1897), Adenia guineensis W.J.de Wilde (1971). |
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Monkey rope, snake climber, wild granadilla (En). Mandali, mkengeti (Sw). |
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Adenia cissampeloides occurs from Senegal east to Somalia, and south throughout Central and East Africa to southern Africa including South Africa. It is also found in the Seychelles. |
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Adenia cissampeloides has many uses in traditional medicine throughout tropical Africa. Most frequently recorded are the uses of an infusion or decoction of the root, stem or leaves for the treatment of gastro-intestinal complaints, such as stomach-ache, constipation, diarrhoea and dysentery. Such infusions or decoctions are also taken to treat various inflammatory ailments, commonly oedema and rheumatism, and for pain relief, particularly against headache and back pain. A decoction of the leaves or root is taken to treat fever and malaria, and as a diuretic. Pounded roots, and sometimes other plant parts, are widely used to dress wounds and sores. For leprosy, a decoction of the leaves is applied to the sores, and a root decoction taken orally together with a vapour bath prepared from the leaves. In Kenya and Tanzania ashes of the bark or root are mixed with castor oil to treat scabies. In eastern Africa a root decoction is drunk to treat cholera and, taken with milk, to treat anaemia. An extract of the root and stems is administered orally to treat intestinal worms. A leaf decoction is drunk to treat liver ailments. In Tanzania a paste of the leaves is applied to broken bones and fractures. In DR Congo, eastern and southern Africa the powdered leaf and stem are macerated and taken to treat complaints of the gall bladder. Bronchitis and other lung ailments are treated with the leaves, eaten raw with salt and palm oil or cooked as a vegetable with meat or fish. Infusions of the root or aerial parts are taken to treat venereal diseases and sterility. In the Central African Republic root shavings are introduced into the vagina, or the uterus rinsed with root decoction, as an abortifacient. A root decoction may also be taken to treat excessive menstruation. In Zimbabwe an infusion of the root and leaves is drunk, and the powdered root and leaves eaten in porridge, to prevent threatened abortion. In Nigeria leaves are rubbed on women’s breasts to stimulate milk flow. A decoction of the peeled root is drunk to treat swollen testicles. An infusion of the leaf is used as a stimulant to treat depression, and, in Zimbabwe, insanity. The Mano people of Liberia use the inner bark to induce amnesia. Roots are chewed to treat snakebites and are used as antidote for Acokanthera arrow poison. In West Africa, the Central African Republic and Ethiopia crushed stems are thrown in water as a fish poison. Leaves, branches, bark, wood and roots may also be used in fish or arrow poisons. In Central, eastern and southern Africa the leaves are cooked and eaten as a vegetable, alone or with other ingredients. The reddish sap is used as a facial cosmetic. In Gabon the stems are made into rope. In Sierra Leone the juice of the stems is used to give a smooth surface to mud floors. Placing crushed twigs near the entrance of a bee hive pacifies the bees for a short time. In Botswana the smoke of burning roots is also used to calm bees before harvesting the honey. |
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A 1980s survey in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, showed that some herbal traders purchased more than 450 sacks of fresh wild-harvested Adenia cissampeloides from gatherers in a year. |
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The stem, leaves, fruit and roots of Adenia cissampeloides contain the cyanogenic glycosides tetraphyllin B (barterin) and epitetraphyllin B (volkenin). The leaves also contain gummiferol, a cytotoxic polyacetylenic di-epoxide, which has shown in vitro anti-cancer activity. Excessive use of Adenia cissampeloides among the Zulu people in South Africa has been associated with liver complaints, and in-vivo tests have confirmed the presence of compounds causing liver damage. Leaves and root bark are rich in iron; the average iron content of the leaves per 100 g dry matter is 32.5 mg, of stem bark 9.9 mg and of root bark 32.1 mg. In a laboratory test aqueous extracts of the plant had a dose dependant depressing effect on the blood pressure of cats. The effect was neutralized by small doses of atropine. A second active principle might be sympathomimetic and have vasoconstrictive action. The effect of the plant against Plasmodium falciparum in vitro is negligable. A diethyl-ether extract from the bark, formulated as an emulsifiable concentrate, is an effective anaesthetic for the African honeybee (Apis mellifera adansonii). Stem pulp showed a significant larvicidal effect on the beet armyworm Spodoptera exigua. |
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Robust liana up to 30 m long, usually dioecious; stem up to 10 cm in diameter, striped bluish-green, older stems often with whitish powder; stems with simple or 3-fid tendrils 10–20 cm long. Leaves alternate, simple; stipules 0.5(–1) mm long, broadly rounded to triangular, irregularly cleft; petiole (1–)1.5–11 cm long; blade entire or more or less deeply 3(–5)-lobed, orbicular to ovate or rhomboid in outline, (1–)3–14 cm long, base cordate to truncate or cuneate, apex obtuse or retuse, rarely acute, with a single gland at base, up to 4 glands on lower leaf surface and 3–7 glands on the margins. Inflorescence an axillary cyme, often with up to 2 (–4) cm long tendrils between the branches, up to 35-flowered in male, 2–6-flowered in female inflorescence; peduncle (0.5–)1–12(–16) cm long; bracts and bracteoles narrowly triangular, 0.5–1 mm long, acute, minutely toothed. Flowers unisexual, regular, 5-merous, pale greenish; pedicel 2–10(–15) mm long in male flowers, slightly shorter in female ones; sepals and petals free; male flowers with sepals up to 8 mm long and petals 8–11 mm long, filaments of stamens fused at base, ovary rudimentary; female flowers with sepals up to 6.5 mm long and petals up to 4.5 mm long, ovary superior, ovoid, 3–6 mm long, 3(–6)-ribbed, stigmas almost sessile, kidney-shaped, stamens rudimentary. Fruit an ovoid capsule 2.5–4.5 cm × 1.5–3 cm, leathery to woody, pale green, 30–50-seeded. Seeds ovoid, 3.5–5.5 mm × 3–4 mm × 2 mm, pitted. |
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Adenia comprises about 95 species, with about 60 species on the African continent, 20 in Madagascar and 15 in Asia. The genus is subdivided in 6 sections. Adenia cissampeloides belongs to section Ophiocaulon. Several other species belonging to this section have medicinal properties. Adenia dinklagei Hutch. & Dalziel occurs from Senegal to Ghana; in Côte d’Ivoire the leaves are ground with salt and water and the liquid is taken to treat palpitations. An infusion of the leaves of Adenia tricostata W.J.de Wilde, occurring in Central Africa and Uganda, is used to treat fever. Adenia bequaertii Robyns & Lawalrée occurs in DR Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, Kenya and Uganda; in DR Congo its leaf sap or a leaf decoction is drunk to treat headache, whereas a leaf decoction and maceration is drunk or used as a bath to treat insanity and possession. |
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Adenia cissampeloides can be found flowering and fruiting throughout the year. |
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Adenia cissampeloides occurs in primary and secondary rainforest, forest margins and in gallery, savanna and swamp forest, from sea-level up to 2200 m altitude. |
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Adenia cissampeloides is retained or cultivated in Chagga homegardens on Mount Kilimanjaro, Tanzania. It can be grown from seed and cuttings. Stem cuttings with 2–3 nodes are treated with growth hormone before being planted in polythene bags, and are watered regularly until sprouting. |
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Adenia cissampeloides is a host plant of passion fruit ring spot virus (PFRSV), to which Passiflora edulis Sims is very susceptible. |
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Adenia cissampeloides roots, stems and leaves are usually used fresh, after collection. |
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Adenia cissampeloides is widespread in a range of habitats, very common in its area of distribution, and not in danger of genetic erosion. Germplasm of plants used as vegetables has been collected in Malawi. |
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Adenia cissampeloides has many interesting medicinal uses. More research into the chemical composition and pharmacological activities of the compounds of Adenia cissampeloides and related species is warranted. Adenia cissampeloides could be grown as an attractive ornamental climber. |
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• Bouquet, A., 1969. Féticheurs et médecines traditionnelles du Congo (Brazzaville). Mémoires ORSTOM No 36. Office de la Recherche Scientifique et Technique Outre-Mer. Paris, France. 282 pp. • Burkill, H.M., 1997. The useful plants of West Tropical Africa. 2nd Edition. Volume 4, Families M–R. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, United Kingdom. 969 pp. • de Wilde, W.J.J.O., 1971. A monograph of the genus Adenia Forsk. (Passifloraceae). Mededelingen Landbouwhogeschool Wageningen 71–18. Wageningen, Netherlands. 281 pp. • de Wilde, W.J.J.O., 1975. Passifloraceae. In: Polhill, R.M. (Editor). Flora of Tropical East Africa. Crown Agents for Oversea Governments and Administrations, London, United Kingdom. 71 pp. • Morah, F.N.I., 1988. Tetraphyllin B from Adenia cissampeloides. Phytochemistry 27: 2985–2986. • Neuwinger, H.D., 2000. African traditional medicine: a dictionary of plant use and applications. Medpharm Scientific, Stuttgart, Germany. 589 pp. • Neuwinger, H.D., 2004. Plants used for poison fishing in tropical Africa. Toxicon 44(4): 417–430. • Nyarko, A.A. & Addy, M.E., 1990. Effect of aqueous extract of Adenia cissampeloides on blood pressure and serum analytes of hypertensive patients. Phytotherapy Research 4: 25–28. • Omolo, O.J., Chhabra, S.C. & Nyagah, G., 1997. Determination of iron content in different parts of herbs used traditionally for anaemia treatment in East Africa. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 58: 97–102. • Robyns, A., 1995. Passifloraceae. In: Bamps, P. (Editor). Flore d’Afrique centrale. Spermatophytes. Jardin botanique national de Belgique, Brussels, Belgium. 75 pp. |
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• Adewunmi, C.O., Agbedahunsi, J.M., Adebajo, A.C., Aladesanmi, A.J., Murphy, N. & Wando, J., 2001. Ethno-veterinary medicine: screening of Nigerian medicinal plants for trypanocidal properties. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 77: 19–24. • Aké Assi, L., Abeye, J., Guinko, S., Riguet, R. & Bangavou, X., 1985. Médecine traditionnelle et pharmacopée - Contribution aux études ethnobotaniques et floristiques en République Centrafricaine. Agence de Coopération Culturelle et Technique, Paris, France. 140 pp. • Cunningham, A.B., 1997. An Africa-wide overview of medicinal plant harvesting, conservation and health care. In: Bodeker, G. & Vantomme, P. (Editors). Medicinal plants for forest conservation and health care. Non-Wood Forest Products 11, FAO, Rome, Italy. 158 pp. • de Wijs, J.J., 1975. The distribution of passionfruit ringspot virus in its main hostplants in Ivory Coast. European Journal of Plant Pathology 81: 144–148. • Fullas, F., Brown, D.M., Wani, M.C., Wall, M.R., Chagwedera, T.E., Farnsworth, N.R., Pezzuto, J.M. & Kinghorn, A.D., 1995. Gummiferol, a cytotoxic polyacetylene from the leaves of Adenia gummifera. Journal of Natural Products 58(10): 1625–1628. • Getahun, A., 1976. Some common medicinal and poisonous plants used in Ethiopian folk medicine. Faculty of Science, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. 63 pp. • Kraft, C., Jenett-Siems, K., Siems, K., Jakupovic, J., Mavi, S., Bienzle, U. & Eich, E., 2003. In vitro antiplasmodial evaluation of medicinal plants from Zimbabwe. Phytotherapy Research 17(2): 123–128. • Kwapata, M.B. & Maliro, M.F., 1997. Indigenous vegetables in Malawi: Germplasm collecting and improvement of production practices. In: Guarino, L. (Editor). Traditional African vegetables. Proceedings of the IPGRI international workshop on genetic resources of traditional vegetables in Africa: conservation and use, 29–31 August 1995, ICRAF, Nairobi, Kenya. Promoting the conservation and use of underutilized and neglected crops 16. pp. 132–135. • Maite, A.L., 1994. An ethnobotanical study of two Passifloraceae species used in traditional medicine in Mozambique. In: Seyani, J.H. & Chikuni, A.C. (Editors). Proceedings of the 8th plenary meeting of AETFAT, 2–11 April 1991, Zomba, Malawi. Volume 1. pp. 267–271. • Morris, B., 1996. Chewa medical botany. A study of herbalism in southern Malawi. Monographs from the International African Institute. LIT Verlag/Transaction, London, United Kingdom. 557 pp. • Noumi, E. & Tchakonang, N.Y.C., 2001. Plants used as abortifacients in Sangmelima region of southern Cameroon. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 76: 263–268. • Olafsdottir, E.S., Andersen, J.V. & Jaroszewski, J.W., 1989. Cyanohydrin glycosides of Passifloraceae. Phytochemistry 28(1): 127–132. • Oliver-Bever, B., 1982. Medicinal plants in tropical West Africa 1. Plants acting on the cardiovascular system. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 5: 1–71. • Raponda-Walker, A. & Sillans, R., 1961. Les plantes utiles du Gabon. Paul Lechevalier, Paris, France. 614 pp. • Ruffo, C.K., Birnie, A. & Tengnäs, B., 2002. Edible wild plants of Tanzania. Technical Handbook No 27. Regional Land Management Unit/ SIDA, Nairobi, Kenya. 766 pp. • Sandberg, F. & Cronlund, A., 1982. An ethnopharmacological inventory of medicinal and toxic plants from equatorial Africa. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 5: 187–204. • Senoo, R.E., 1992. Preliminary studies on the larvicidal effects of Adenia cissampeloides (Planch ex. Hook) on Laphygma exigua (Hubner). B Sc. thesis, Department of Biological Science, Faculty of Science, K.N.U.S.T., Kumasi, Ghana. 45 pp. • Tabuti, J.R.S., Lye, K.A. & Dhillion, S.S., 2003. Traditional herbal drugs of Bulamogi, Uganda: plants, use and administration. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 88: 19–44. • Yeboah-Gyan, K. & Oppong-Boachie, K., 2000. The development of simple field based procedures for extraction of volatiles from Adenia cissampeloides for subduing African honey bee (Apis melifera adansonii). Journal of the Ghana Science Association 2(2): 70–79. |
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• Keay, R.W.J., 1954. Passifloraceae. In: Keay, R.W.J. (Editor). Flora of West Tropical Africa. Volume 1, part 1. 2nd Edition. Crown Agents for Oversea Governments and Administrations, London, United Kingdom. pp. 199–203. |
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Grace, O.M. & Fowler, D., 2007. Adenia cissampeloides (Planch. ex Hook.) Harms. [Internet] Record from PROTA4U. Schmelzer, G.H. & Gurib-Fakim, A. (Editors). PROTA (Plant Resources of Tropical Africa / Ressources végétales de l’Afrique tropicale), Wageningen, Netherlands. <http://www.prota4u.org/search.asp>. Accessed . |
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General importance | |
Geographic coverage Africa | |
Geographic coverage World | |
Vegetables | |
Medicinal use | |
Essential oil and exudate use | |
Fibre use | |
Food security | |