Hemidesmus indicus

Hemidesmus indicus, Indian sarsaparilla is a species of plant that is found in South Asia. It is a slender, laticiferous, twining, sometimes prostrate or semi-erect shrub. Roots are woody and aromatic. The stem is numerous, slender, terete, thickened at the nodes. The leaves are opposite, short-petioled, very variable, elliptic-oblong to linear-lanceolate. The flowers are greenish outside, purplish inside, crowded in sub-sessile axillary cymes. It occurs over the greater part of India, from the upper Gangetic plain eastwards to Assam and in some places in central, western and South India.

Indian sarsaparilla
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Gentianales
Family: Apocynaceae
Genus: Hemidesmus
Species:
H. indicus
Binomial name
Hemidesmus indicus
Synonyms
  • Periploca indica

The root is a substitute for sarsaparilla (the dried root of the tropical species of Smilax, Smilacaceae; in India Smilax aspera L., and Smilax ovalifolia Roxb.). It should be distinguished from Mexican Sarsaparilla Smilax aristolochiifolia Mill. and Jamaican Sarsaparilla Smilax ornata Hook.f..[1]

Names

Hindi: anantamul (अनंत मूल) or anant bel (अनंतबेल); Tamil: nannaari (நன்னாரி) or nannetti (நன்நெட்டி); Telugu: సుగంధి; Malayalam: നറുനീണ്ടി, Kannada: haaluballi (ಹಾಲುಬಳ್ಳಿ); Sinhala: iramusu (ඉරමුසු); क्षीरिणी Kshirini, कराला Karala, اُشبا Punjabi; Konkani: dukshiri.

In Ayurveda it goes by the name of ananthamoola (अनंत मूल), also known locally in Southern India as naruneendi or nannari,[2] (Sanskrit meaning: endless root). It is also known as anant vel (अनंतवेल)/maeen mool (माईन मूळ) in Marathi. In southern states of India (particularly Tamil Nadu), sarsaparilla roots are called maahali or mahani kizhangu. It is also called the false sarsaparilla.

Traditional uses

Hemidesmus indicus is used to make beverages like nannari sharbat, and also used in traditional medicine. It is administered in the form of powder, infusion or decoction as syrup. It is one of the Rasayana plants of Ayurveda.[3] In southern states of India (particularly Tamil Nadu), the pickled roots are served along with rice dishes. It is sometimes confused with another Ayurvedic herb called white sariva. The alcoholic extract of Hemidesmus indicusR.Br. possesses a significant antinociceptive activity.[4] The extracts from the root are used in syrup with sugar and a dash of lemon (Sharbat) and served at most small refreshment shops in South India.

Chemical constituents

The roots of H. indicus contain hexatriacontane, lupeol, its octacosanoate, α-amyrin, β-amyrin, its acetate and sitosterol. It also contains new coumarino-lignoid-hemidesminine, hemidesmin I and hemidesmin II50, six pentacyclic triterpenes including two oleanenes, and three ursenes. The stem contains calogenin acetylcalogenin-3-0-β-D-digitoxopyrannosyl-0-β-D-digitoxopyronsyl-0-β-D-digitoxopyranoside. It also afforded 3-keto-lup-12-en-21 28-olide along with lupanone, lupeol-3-β-acetate, hexadecanoic acid, 4-methoxy-3-methoxybenzalaldehyde and 3-methoxy-4-5methoxybenzalaldehydglycosides-indicine and hemidine. The leaves contain tannins, flavonoids, hyperoside, rutin and coumarino. Leucoderma lignoids such as hemidesminine, hemidesmin I and hemidesmin II are rare group of naturally occurring compounds present in leaves.[5][6]

References

  1. Puri 2003
  2. Ayurvedic Medicinal Plants Naruneendi Nannari
  3. Kottakkal, [edited by] Vaidyaratnam P S Varier's Arya Vaidya Sala (1996). Indian medicinal plants : a compendium of 500 species. Vol.3 (1. publ. ed.). Madras: Orient Longman. ISBN 9788125003021. Retrieved 26 May 2013.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  4. Verma, Prashant R.; Joharapurkar, Amit A.; Chatpalliwar, Vivekanand A.; Asnani, Alpana J. (November 2005). "Antinociceptive activity of alcoholic extract of Hemidesmus indicus R.Br. in mice". Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 102 (2): 298–301. doi:10.1016/j.jep.2005.05.039. PMID 16081231.
  5. "Sariva (Hemidesmus indicus)". National R&D Facility for Rasayana. Government of India. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  6. "Anantmool". Konark Herbal and Healthcare. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
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