Herbal cardioprotective practices and pharmacology of folk medicine for heart failure management in Uzbekistan: an integrative review of contemporary evidence

Authors

  • Ohunjonov Toxirmalik Abdumalik ugli Fergana Medical Institute of Public Health, Fergana, Uzbekistan

Keywords:

folk medicine, herbal medicine, heart failure, cardiovascular disease, Uzbekistan, pharmacology, ethnobotany, hawthorn, apricot

Abstract

Herbal medicines remain widely used for cardiovascular disease and heart failure (HF) in Uzbekistan, where a rich ethnobotanical tradition coexists with modern cardiology. This narrative review synthesizes data from approximately 30 contemporary publications on folk remedies and pharmacologically characterized medicinal plants relevant to HF, with an emphasis on Central Asian and Uzbek practice. Sources include ethnobotanical surveys, cardiology-focused herbal reviews, and experimental and clinical studies on botanicals such as Crataegus spp., Allium sativum, Terminalia arjuna, Ganoderma spp., and regionally used foods and plants such as apricot, quince, and Atraphaxis pyrifolia. The review outlines mechanisms of action, benefits, dosing where available, adverse effects, drug–herb interactions, and limitations of current evidence. A conceptual framework is proposed that links Uzbekistan’s folk uses to global pharmacologic data, highlighting both convergences and critical gaps. Despite promising preclinical and selected clinical signals for improved symptoms and surrogate outcomes, robust HF-specific randomized trials are scarce, and safety reporting is incomplete. Well-designed local studies in Uzbekistan are needed to define effective, safe, and standardized herbal adjuncts to guideline-directed HF therapy.

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Published

2026-06-22

How to Cite

Ohunjonov , T. (2026). Herbal cardioprotective practices and pharmacology of folk medicine for heart failure management in Uzbekistan: an integrative review of contemporary evidence. International Journal of Medical and Clinical Sciences, 1(5), 27–36. Retrieved from https://journalmed.org/index.php/ijctm/article/view/121