“…The 1,4‐naphthoquinones are the most significant and broadly dispersed chemical class in the quinone family. Their derivatives have been reported to have a range of biological activities such as antiallergic (Lien, Huang, Teng, Wang, & Kuo, ), antibacterial (Janeczko et al, ; Novais et al, ; Yildirim et al, ), anticancer (Benites, Valderrama, Ramos, Muccioli, & Buc Calderon, ; Manickam et al, ), dual anticancer and antibacterial (Bayrak et al, ), antifungal (Huang, Kuo, Hsiao, & Lin, ), anti‐inflammatory (Sasaki, Abe, & Yoshizaki, ; Tandon, Chhor, Singh, Rai, & Yadav, ), antithrombotic (Jin, Ryu, Moon, Cho, & Yun, ; Yuk et al, ), antiplatelet (da Silva et al, ; Lien et al, ), antiviral (Ilina et al, ; Inbaraj & Chignell, ; Tandon, Singh, Rai, Chhor, & Khan, ; Yuk et al, ), apoptotic (Gao, Hiromura, Yasui, & Sakurai, ; Kim et al, ; Kim et al, ), lipoxygenase inhibitory (Richwien & Wurm, ; Wurm & Schwandt, , radical scavenging (Song et al, ), and anti‐ringworm (Inbaraj & Chignell, ) activities.…”