Abstract :
The bark, leaves, and roots of Albizia adianthifolia are highly sought afer in tropical Africa as herbal medicines. Therefore, the aim of this study was to review the botany, medicinal uses, phytochemistry, and pharmacological properties of A. adianthifolia so as to provide baseline data required for evaluating the therapeutic potential of the species. Information on the botanical profle, medicinal uses, phytochemistry, and pharmacological properties of A. adianthifolia was undertaken using databases such as ScienceDirect,
SciFinder, Pubmed, Google Scholar, Medline, SCOPUS, ETOS, ProQuest, OATD, and Open-thesis. Preelectronic literature search
of conference papers, scientifc articles, books, book chapters, dissertations, and theses was carried out at the University library.
Literature search revealed that A. adianthifolia is used as purgative and herbal medicine for diabetes, eye problems, gastrointestinal
problems, haemorrhoids, headache, neurodegenerative disorders, reproductive problems in women, respiratory problems, wounds
and pain, skin diseases, sexually transmitted infections, and ethnoveterinary medicine. Phytochemical compounds identifed
from the species include apocarotenoids, chalcone, dipeptide, elliptosides, essential oils, fatty acids, favonoids, histamine,
imidazolyl carboxylic acid, prosapogenins, steroids, triterpene saponins, and triterpenoids. Pharmacological studies revealed that
A. adianthifolia extracts and compounds have acetylcholinesterase enzyme inhibitory, anthelmintic, antiamoebic, antibacterial,
antimycobacterial, anti-sexually transmitted infections, antifungal, anti-infammatory, antioxidant, anxiolytic, and antidepressant,
cognitive-enhancing, haemolytic, hypoglycemic and antihyperglycemic, immunomodulatory, and cytotoxicity activities. Detailed
studies on the pharmacokinetics, in vivo, and clinical research involving compounds isolated from A. adianthifolia and extracts of the species are required.