2006
DOI: 10.1007/s10600-006-0064-z
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Phenolic compounds from Filipendula ulmaria

Abstract: A chromatographically inseparable crystalline mixture of the previously undescribed quercetin-4′-O-β-galactopyranoside and the known quercetin-3-O-β-glucopyranoside (isoquercitrin) in a 7:5 ratio was isolated from the extract of the aerial part of Filipendula ulmaria (L.) Maxim.

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Cited by 30 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Some differences were found in the F. ulmaria sample (flowers from Portugal) studied herein, including the presence of different compounds such as isorhamnetin glucoside derivatives and caffeic acid derivatives. Krasnov et al (2006Krasnov et al ( , 2009 identified and isolated two quercetin glucosides (filimarin and isoquercitrin) from F. ulmaria aerial parts during flowering, and Fecka (2009) reported different ellagitannins such as rugosin A, B, D and E, which were not found in the sample herein studied. Pemp et al (2007) only described flavonols in F. ulmaria sample and they did not identify any ellagitannin.…”
Section: Hydrolyzable Tanninsmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Some differences were found in the F. ulmaria sample (flowers from Portugal) studied herein, including the presence of different compounds such as isorhamnetin glucoside derivatives and caffeic acid derivatives. Krasnov et al (2006Krasnov et al ( , 2009 identified and isolated two quercetin glucosides (filimarin and isoquercitrin) from F. ulmaria aerial parts during flowering, and Fecka (2009) reported different ellagitannins such as rugosin A, B, D and E, which were not found in the sample herein studied. Pemp et al (2007) only described flavonols in F. ulmaria sample and they did not identify any ellagitannin.…”
Section: Hydrolyzable Tanninsmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…ulmaria was traditionally used as a medicinal plant for its anti-inflammatory, anti-rheumatic, analgesic, febrifuge, astringent, stomachic, and diuretic actions (Grieve 1982;Chevalier 1996;Zeylstra 1998). The aerial part is rich in flavonoids (Krasnov et al 2006), tannins, phenolic glycosides (salicylate), volatile oils (Lindemann et al 1982;Valle et al 1988; salicylaldehyde), minerals, and vitamin C (Grieve 1982;Chevallier 1996). Immunomodulatory (Halkes et al 1997), anti-tumor (Bespalov et al 1992), anti-carcinogenic (Bespalov et al 1992;Peresunko et al 1993), anti-coagulant (Kudrjashov et al 1990;Lyapina and Kovalchuk 1993), anti-ulcerogenic (Barnaulov and Denisenko 1980;Barnaulov et al 1984;Vasiliauskas et al 2004), anti-microbial (Csedo et al 1993;Rauha et al 2000), anti-oxidant (Sroka et al 2001;Papp et al 2004), and anti-arthritic (Jasiuleviciute et al 2001) activities of F. ulmaria have also been reported.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ethyl acetate and chloroform fractions have the highest hepatoprotective activity, which is probably related to lipophilicity of phenol constituents (simple phenols, flavonoids, phenyl carboxylic acids, coumarins, etc.) [5,9]. These compounds inhibit the formation of LPO products in lipid-rich hepatocyte membranes, prevent cytolysis and, therefore, improve liver detoxification function.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%