Background
An ethnomedical survey was undertaken in the Gwadabawa/Illela village communities of Sokoto, Northwestern Nigeria to identify and record information on medicinal plants used for treating wounds and fungal related ailment.
Methods
Traditional Medical Practitioners (TMP’s) and other inhabitants both young and adults were interviewed using semi-structured questionnaires complimented by a voice recording device and an open-ended conversation. Field trips were made to the sites where TMP’s or other informants harvest plants.
Results
The survey identified and recorded 40 plants species from 38 genera and 18 families, used for treating wounds and wound related ailments in Gwadabawa/Illela village communities. Among the 40 species, dicots were represented by 38 species belonging to 38 genera and 16 families, while monocots were two species belonging to two genera and two families. Combretaceae and Fabaceae were the dominant families and contributed to wound healing with 7 species each. Life forms, in term of plants habit/habitat showed a record of trees (20 species), shrubs (12 species) and herb (8 species). Only one climber specie was recorded. Plant part use against their therapeutic indications showed that stembark was the most used plant part in 15 preparations with 37.5% to treat wounds, closely followed by the leaves in 12 preparations with 30.0%, the root and whole plant were reportedly use in five and four preparations with 12.5%, and 10% respectively. Fruit and flower were the least used parts in two and one preparation constituting 5.0% and 2.5% respectively. The informants prepared and prescribed the medicine mainly in the form of powder (70.0%), followed by some form of extraction (12.5%), and sap-juice or latex (10.0%), while the lowest preparation form was recorded for paste and oil (0.5% each). The major method of medicinal administration/ route of application was by spraying topically (65.0%), while other description included the use of oil to apply topically (27.5%) as well as washing and drunk (12.5%). Concoction mixtures recorded some 30–40% mode of preparation as against the use of a single plant, which constitute about 60%. Ethnobotanical indices showed Acacia nilotica as having the highest with a use value of UV: 0.27, (with 8 use reports) and a citation frequency/relative importance index of CF: 11.8, RI: 0.56, while the lowest recoded indices of 0.03 UV and 1.5 CF and 0.07 RI was recorded for some of the other plants in comparison.
Conclusions
There is still a deep reliance on the use of the surveyed plant medicines for wound healing by the people, due to the high level of successes recorded by the informants following traditional practices/applications. Hence, a wholistic or selective scientific study is imminent from the established data base of this research.