Medicinal Use Aloe Plants & Phytopharmacotherapy

Medicinal Use Aloe Plants & Phytopharmacotherapy

Aloe genus plants, distributed in Old World, are widely known and have been used for centuries as topical and oral therapeutic agents due to their health, beauty, medicinal, and skin care properties. Among the well-investigated Aloe species are A. arborescensA. barbadensisA. ferox, and A. vera. Today, they account among the most economically important medicinal use of Aloe plants and are commonly used in primary health treatment, where they play a pivotal role in the treatment of various types of diseases via the modulation of biochemical and molecular pathways, besides being a rich source of valuable phytochemicals. In the present review, we summarized the recent advances in botany, phytochemical composition, ethnobotanical uses, food preservation, and the preclinical and clinical efficacy of Aloe plants. This data will be helpful to provide future directions for the industrial and medicinal use of Aloe plants.

Source: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6163315/

Aloe produces two substances, gel and latex, which are used for medicines. Aloe gel is the clear, jelly-like substance found in the inner part of the aloe plant leaf. Aloe latex comes from just under the plant’s skin and is yellow in color. Aloe vera gel contains powerful antioxidants belonging to a large family of substances known as polyphenols.

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