“…This research interest is related to the traditional uses of bark and fruit extracts throughout Africa as remedies for treating sexually transmitted diseases, dysentery, leprosy, miscellaneous microbial and parasitic infections, skin ulcers, and neoplastic diseases [13,14,16,26]. Moreover, extracts from the plant, as well as isolated compounds, have been found to exert a constellation of other pharmacological effects, including antifungal [24], antiprotozoal (against Trypanosoma brucei brucei, Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense [23], and several, including multi-drug resistant, strains of Plasmodium falciparum [27][28][29]), antiinflammatory and analgesic [15,19], hepatoprotective [30], anti-fertility [31], CNS-stimulant, antidiarrheal, and antidiabetic [13,14,32], among others.…”