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guybrushT | 10 years ago
Can we discover new active ingredients by studying 'traditional' medicine? Should there be a branch of study dedicated to this?
guybrushT | 10 years ago
Can we discover new active ingredients by studying 'traditional' medicine? Should there be a branch of study dedicated to this?
xenadu02|10 years ago
In fact this woman's discovery is exactly that because the malaria parasite is already developing resistance to it which is why the recommended therapy combines it with other drugs to prevent a resistant strain from spreading. That doesn't belittle her accomplishment by any means, but if you stop to check under rocks you'll occasionally find some money hidden there. Doesn't mean we can find billions in free $$$ by sending an army of people out into the world to turn stones.
Much like pyrethrin-based insecticides, this chemical is already being studied and modified in an attempt to discover variants that are easier to make, have fewer side effects, or which organisms can't develop resistance against quite as easily.
misnome|10 years ago
I really like this analogy!
jlg23|10 years ago
India: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_Knowledge_Digital_....
China: research into TCM happens a lot, even in Western laboratories
Amazonian and African plants are cataloged and analyzed for the pharmacological properties. I cannot name specific research projects, but plenty of books from respectable sources can be found. When traveling the Amazon I even met some pharmacologists who scout for plants (all but one working for pharmaceutical companies).
Unfortunately the alternative healing movement got a 20 or 30 year head-start and thus the hardest part for the interested amateur pharmacologist is filtering out all the pseudo-scientific publications in that field. It's not all bad, a lot is even useful as a starting point for serious research, but hard facts are hard to come by.
dalke|10 years ago
I don't think it's really meaningful to say that. To start with, what do you mean by "alternative healing movement"? The label didn't start being used until the latter half of the 1900s. But many of the practice and of course many of the inspirations are a lot older.
On the other hand, ethnobotanists have been cataloging pharmacological properties for over a century. Indeed, this Nobel Prize is for similar research done in the 1960s, so to say 'a 20 or 30 year head-start' would be to say the alternative healing movement started doing this no later than the 1940s.
The confounding problem is that herbalism is a much older practice, with a recorded history stretching back 1000s of years. When did the alternative healing movement not use herbalism?
I don't know enough about the history to really clear things up, but I can point to the 1987 essay on various aspects of the traditional medicinal aspects of celery - http://garfield.library.upenn.edu/essays/v8p164y1985.pdf - to show that it's hard to say that the modern alternative healing movement added anything new to the long and world-wide herbalist tradition.
Gustomaximus|10 years ago
IMO a real boon for medicine will be increasing sophisticated personal monitoring and the data this makes accessible to the world when shared. If sure we'll see some amazing cause/effect relationships from all sort of areas being identified in coming years .
vvilp|10 years ago
Hopefully some would show the true effect to the human beings
LoSboccacc|10 years ago
ekianjo|10 years ago
db48x|10 years ago
The only difference between medicine and "traditional" medicine is that "traditional" medicines are never discarded once they're proven to be ineffective.
semi-extrinsic|10 years ago
petra|10 years ago