with high quality cooking oil plant in mpigi
with high quality cooking oil plant in mpigi
- Production Capacity: 5-2000TPD
- Voltage: 220V/380V
- Dimension(L*W*H): standred
- Weight: 9000 KG
- Key Selling Points: Automatic
- Marketing Machinery Test Report: Provided
- Video outgoing-inspection: Provided
- Core Components: Motor, Pump, PLC, Gear, Bearing, Engine, Gearbox
- Function: pressing and pre-pressing
- Pre-pressing capacity: 5-300TPD
- Pressing capacity: 35-45TPD
- MOQ: 1 Set
- Application: Palm grain and oil production line
Ethnobotanical study of selected medicinal plants traditionally used in the rural Greater Mpigi region of Uganda
The aims of this study were two-fold: 1) To document the traditional use of selected medicinal plant species from tropical Uganda, specifically in the Greater Mpigi region; and 2) To undertake an ethnological assessment of the socio-cultural background and medical understanding of diseases treated by traditional healers in the study area. 2.
Ethnopharmacological information on the medicinal use of plant candidates from the Greater Mpigi region in Uganda (with emphasis on infections and symptoms of infections). The stacked histogram ...
A Bibliographic Assessment Using the Degrees of Publication Method: Medicinal Plants from the Rural Greater Mpigi Region (Uganda)
In this study, its application is illustrated through an extensive bibliographic assessment of 16 medicinal plant species that were recently identified in the Greater Mpigi region of Uganda as being frequently used by local traditional healers in the treatment of medical disorders (namely, Albizia coriaria, Cassine buchananii, Combretum molle, E...
Another plant extract highly active in tackling bacterial virulence was the ethyl acetate extract of S. aculeastrum roots (eE006), which scored agr subtype-dependent IC 50 values of 4, 1, 16 and 64 μg/mL.
Safety and Efficacy of Medicinal Plants Used to Manufacture Herbal Products with Regulatory Approval in Uganda: A Cross-Sectional Study
Figure 2 shows the popularity of the plant raw materials for manufacture of herbal products. The plants were ranked based on the number of times they appear on the product label as active ingredients. Of the 33 plant raw materials, Eucalyptus globulus was the most common, followed by Aloe vera and Albizia coriaria in the second place, while Albizia coriaria, Mangifera indica, Warburgia ...
Situated in West-Central Uganda, the tropical Greater Mpigi region displays a high abundance of traditional medicine practitioners and diverse use of a vast amount of medicinal plant species [14 ...
Plants | Free Full-Text | Antiinflammatory Medicinal Plants from the Ugandan Greater Mpigi Region Act as Potent Inhibitors in the COX-2/PGH2 Pathway
Our study investigates 16 medicinal plants via assessment of inhibition of proinflammatory enzymes such as cyclooxygenases (COX). The plants are used by traditional healers in the Greater Mpigi region in Uganda to treat inflammation and related disorders. We present results of diverse in vitro experiments performed with 76 different plant extracts, namely, (1) selective COX-2 and COX-1 ...
Plants 2021, 10, 351 2 of 28 potential for loss of vital information due to lack of records [4,5]. A previous ethnopharma-cological study from the Greater Mpigi region documented the traditional use of 39 heal-ers [5]. In this study, Schultz et al. described the
Edible Plant Oil: Global Status, Health Issues, and Perspectives
Abstract. Edible plant oil (EPO) is an indispensable nutritional resource for human health. Various cultivars of oil-bearing plants are grown worldwide, and the chemical compositions of different plant oils are diverse. The extremely complex components in oils lead to diverse standards for evaluating the quality and safety of different EPOs.
Toxicological studies on the extracts from the plant also revealed the plant is safe for oral administration. Future studies on the therapeutic potentials of P. febrifugum should focus on clinical trials and pharmacological studies of the extract that have only been tested in vitro to harness the medicinal properties of P. febrifugum fully.