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| Herbal
Scientific Journals |
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It is probably
not possible to stay abreast of all of the
information that continues to be published about
herbs in peer-reviewed scientific journals. There
are any number of such publications, with areas of
specialization that extend from a plant’s basic
botany and nomenclature to research on its
chemical make-up and cultivation, and then into
human uses, whether by the indigenous people where
a plant is first found, or in a clinical setting
with an emphasis on evaluating safety and
efficacy. Although even the list that follows
would require extensive hours to
review, Youherbal.com believes that each of
the following journals can provide valuable
scientific information about
herbs.
American
Journal of Botany http://www.amjbot.org/ The American Journal
of Botany publishes significant, novel
research of interest to a wide audience of plant
scientists in all areas of plant biology
(structure, function, development, diversity,
genetics, evolution, reproduction, systematics),
all levels of organization (molecular to
ecosystem), and all plant groups and allied
organisms (cyanobacteria, algae, fungi, and
lichens).This internationally recognized journal
of the Botanical Society of America is accepting
refereed research papers on all aspects of plant
biology and has published monthly since 1914.
Economic
Botany http://www.econbot.org/_publications_/index.php?sm=01 Economic
Botany
is the official organ of the Society for Economic
Botany (SEB), which was “established in 1959 to
foster and encourage scientific research,
education, and related activities on the past,
present, and future uses of plants, and the
relationship between plants and people, and to
make the results of such research available to the
scientific community and the general public
through meetings and publications.” If you want to
read any single journal on economic botany then
this is the one, worth the price (incredibly
reasonable as far a journals go, and sold below
cost to students) for the book reviews alone. It’s
a journal (and a society) with lots of
heart.
Fitoterapia http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0367326X Initially a free non-peer reviewed
industry publication that was founded in 1929 by
the Italian botanical extract company Indena SpA,
Fitoterapia
has grown into a respectable quality botanical
science journal that began co-publishing with
Elsevier in 1999. Expanded from 6 to 8 issues a
year in 2001 it no longer (since the early ‘80s)
features a different botanical illustration on
each cover but does publish “original research in
chemistry, pharmacology and use of medicinal
plants and their derivatives.” The cost of a
subscription is not as heart stopping compared to
many other scientific/technical journals, but it
is a long way from free.
HerbalGram http://www.herbalgram.org/herbalgram/ More than any other
single publication, and for over two decades, HerbalGram
has communicated current botanical issues to the
widest possible audience in a strikingly
attractive manner. Included with the cost of a
membership to the American Botanical Council
(ABC), HerbalGram
reads like a popular magazine in that it has
‘departments’ and pretty pictures but with
high-quality content as the norm. Each issue of HerbalGram
is a keeper. Its appeal is universal (“the public,
researchers, educators, healthcare professionals,
industry, and media”) in successfully carrying out
the mission of “education using science-based and
traditional information to promote the responsible
use of herbal
medicine.”
The Journal
of Alternative & Complementary
Medicine http://www.liebertpub.com/publication.aspx?pub_id=26 This bimonthly
publication “includes observational and analytical
reports on treatments outside the realm of
allopathic medicine which are gaining interest and
warranting research to assess their therapeutic
value.”
An excellent communication tool among
practitioners and for others with an interest in
complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), its
utility as scientific tool is limited as it
doesn’t usually offer critical evaluations of the
CAM treatments it reports on. The official journal
of the Society for Acupuncture Research, it
“includes current concepts in clinical care,
including case reports that will be valuable for
health care professionals and scientists who are
seeking to evaluate and integrate these therapies
into patient care protocols and research
strategies.”
The Journal
of AOAC International http://www.aoac.org/pubs/JOURNAL/years.htm Analytical methods of
analysis are most useful to the most people when
they have been performance-tested against defined
criteria. Such ‘official methods’ can be trusted
to deliver reliable results on the materials for
which they have been validated. AOAC International
is the organization that manages Official Methods
of AnalysisSM testing
(“Multi-laboratory validation for nonproprietary
and commercial proprietary methods where the
highest degree of confidence in performance is
required to generate credible, defensible, and
reproducible results”), and the Journal of
AOAC International “publishes fully
refereed contributed papers in the fields of
chemical and biological analysis: on original
research on new techniques and applications,
collaborative studies, authentic data of
composition, studies leading to method
development, meeting symposia, newly adopted AOAC
approved methods and invited
reviews.”
This journal is essential to any
individual, company or organization directly
involved in chemical analysis of botanical and
other dietary supplement
ingredients.
Journal
of Ethnopharmacology http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03788741 As the official journal
of the International Society of Ethnopharmacology,
the Journal of Ethnopharmacology publishes
research on “people's use of plants, fungi,
animals, microorganisms and minerals.”
Acknowledging the value of early empirical
knowledge about the uses of natural substances and
the need to preserve this knowledge and the local
rights of indigenous people, this journal
emphasizes research in the “documentation of
indigenous medical knowledge, scientific study of
indigenous medicines in order to contribute in the
long-run to improved health care in the regions of
study, as well as search for pharmacologically
unique principles from existing indigenous
remedies.” The Journal of Ethnopharmacology
therefore publishes “original articles concerned
with the observation and experimental
investigation of the biological activities of
plant and animal substances used in the
traditional medicine of past and present
cultures.”
Journal
of Natural Products http://pubs.acs.org/journals/jnprdf/index.html The Journal of Natural
Products, a joint publication of the American
Society of Pharmacognosy (ASP) and the American
Chemical Society (ACS) “is edited specifically for
natural product chemists, biochemists,
pharmacologists, taxonomists, and ecologists.” It
is one of the top medicinal chemistry journals
reporting “natural product research relating to
the chemistry and/or biochemistry of naturally
occurring compounds or the biology of living
systems from which they are obtained.” Highly
technical, the articles it contains “will describe
secondary metabolites of micro-organisms,
including antibiotics and mycotoxins;
physiologically active compounds from higher
plants and animals; biochemical studies, including
biosynthesis and microbiological transformations;
fermentation and plant tissue culture; the
isolation, structure elucidation, and chemical
synthesis of novel compounds from nature; and the
pharmacology of compounds of natural origin.” It
is available at reduced rates for ASP and ACS
members.
Pharmaceutical
Biology http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=t713721640 Formerly the International
Journal of Pharmacognosy, this publication is
more about the study of naturally occurring
bioactive materials (pharmacognosy) than the study
of drugs, as might be suggested in its present
title of Pharmaceutical
Biology. Content-wise it covers similar topics
to those found in other natural products/
medicinal chemistry journals such as the
isolation, identification, and activity of
materials from nature that have medicinal
properties. The pharmacology of medicinal plants
and their extracts from countries around the world
are often presented as are studies on materials
from particular regions. The biological tests
employed are usually in vitro or animal studies.
Publication rose from 6 issues a year to 8, plus a
supplement, in 2002; now it seeks to publish 10
issues annually. Cleary international in
scope and expressly reporting on pharmacognosy,
it’s hard to imagine why the title was ever
changed.
Phytochemical
Analysis http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/jhome/5152 Phytochemical Analysis is exactly what the title suggests,
“devoted to the publication of original articles
on the utilization of analytical methodology in
the plant sciences. The spectrum of coverage is
broad, encompassing methods and techniques
relevant to the extraction, separation,
purification, identification and qualification of
substances in plant biochemistry, plant cellular
and molecular biology, plant biotechnology, the
food sciences, agriculture and horticulture.”
Completely geared toward the analysis of plants,
plant-derived extracts and plant products
“(including those which have been partially or
completely refined for use in the food,
agrochemical, pharmaceutical and related
industries)” it includes “forms of physical,
chemical, biochemical, spectroscopic, radiometric,
electrometric and chromatographic investigations
of plant products (monomeric species as well as
polymeric molecules such as nucleic acids,
proteins, lipids and carbohydrates),” and has been
publishing bimonthly since
1990.
Phytochemistry http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/273/description#description Published since 1961, Phytochemistry
began twice monthly publication in 1997. An
official Journal of the Phytochemistry Society of
Europe and the Phytochemistry Society of North
America, Phytochemistry
“is the international journal of pure and applied
plant chemistry, plant biochemistry and molecular
biology” and is divided into sections that include
Review articles, Protein Biochemistry, Molecular
Genetics and Genomics, Metabolism, Chemotaxonomy,
Bioactive Products, and Chemistry. By scientists
and for scientists, it is probably safe to say
that Phytochemistry
is THE international journal of pure and applied
plant chemistry … and that its coverage is
generally on the molecular
level.
Phytomedicine http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/701794/description#description For those interested in
the practical aspects of plant medicines, Phytomedicine
is a standout. Filling an underpopulated niche, Phytomedicine
“publishes research results on phytotherapy
(clinical trials), phytopharmacology,
pharmacognosy, standardization and
phytotoxicology, obtained with plant extracts as
well as isolated compounds from these extracts and
phytopharmaceuticals.” It is divided into sections
that include Clinical Studies, Case Reports,
Screening Studies, Analysis and Standardization of
Plant Drugs and Phytopharmaceuticals, and Reviews.
The papers it publishes are said to be “useful to
drug regulatory authorities in deciding whether to
approve certain phytomedicines or not.” First
published in 1994, volume 12 in 2005 was delivered
as 10 issues, up from 8 the year before. Compared
to many other scientific journals, it is available
at a reasonable price, especially considering the
welcome value of what it
delivers.
Phytotherapy
Research http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/jhome/12567 Phytotherapy
Research is an excellent
technical journal presenting “original medical
plant research, including biochemistry and
molecular pharmacology, toxicology, pathology, and
the clinical applications of herbs and natural
products to both human and animal medicine.”
Somehow it feels less practical than Phytomedicine
with a more academic presentation that is more
often pharmacologic (studies of medicinal
activity) than clinical, but a review of article
titles doesn’t bear this sense out.
“Phytotherapy Research publishes
full-length original research papers, short
communications, reviews and letters on medicinal
plant research. Clinical papers, on the
applications of herbs and natural products to both
human and animal medicine, may vary from case
histories to full clinical trials.” Initiated in
1987 it began 12 issues a year in 2004. Individual
subscriptions are not inexpensive.
Planta
Medica http://www.thieme-connect.com/ejournals/toc/plantamedica Planta Medica, Natural
Products and Medicinal Plant
Research “is one of the leading
international journals in the field of medicinal
plants and natural products with original research
papers, letters, rapid communications, reviews,
minireviews and perspectives from researchers
worldwide.” It is the official organ of the
Society for Medicinal Plant Research, the German
medicinal plant society also known as the Deutsche
Gesellschaft
für Arzneipflanzenforschung (GA). The GA hosts an
annual meeting that is generally considered to be
the most relevant to the medicinal plant industry.
This is not surprising as many of the society
members are either with academia and working on
medicinal plants, or from the European (mostly
German) phytopharmaceutical industry. Its coverage
is divided between Pharmacological
and Clinical Studies, Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology, Physiology, in vitro Biotechnology,
Natural Products Chemistry, and Analytical
methods. First published in 1953, it began to be
issued 12 times a year in 2002. Reduced
subscription rates are available to GA
members. | |