Overview
This content brief was generated on Mar 28, 2020:
Total sources processed: 6
Sources
This brief scanned the following sources (title, domain, description):
Literature review (en.wikipedia.org) - A literature review or narrative review is a type of review article. A literature review is a scholarly paper, which includes the current knowledge including ...
A Literature Review of Retailing Sector and Business Retailing Types (iliriapublications.org) - A Literature Review of Retailing Sector and Business Retailing Types
The Clinical Efficacy and Safety of Tulsi in Humans: A Systematic Review of the Literature (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) - Tulsi, also known as holy basil, is indigenous to the Indian continent and highly revered for its medicinal uses within the Ayurvedic and Siddha medical systems. Many in vitro, animal and human studies attest to tulsi having multiple therapeutic actions ...
Himalayan Aromatic Medicinal Plants: A Review of their Ethnopharmacology, Volatile Phytochemistry, and Biological Activities (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) - Aromatic plants have played key roles in the lives of tribal peoples living in the Himalaya by providing products for both food and medicine. This review presents a summary of aromatic medicinal plants from the Indian Himalaya, Nepal, and Bhutan, focusing ...
Mood disorders and complementary and alternative medicine: a literature review (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) - Mood disorders are a major public health problem and are associated with considerable burden of disease, suicides, physical comorbidities, high economic costs, and poor quality of life. Approximately 30%–40% of patients with major depression have ...
Validated and audit-ready literature monitoring tool for drug safety reporting (dialog.com) - A fully validated and audit-ready literature monitoring software tool to help pharmaceutical companies meet their product safety monitoring requirements.
Topics
High Similarity -- these topics were mentioned in at least one source and are highly related to the core theme:
Literature Review
Literary Review
Herbal Medicine
Medical Literature Monitoring
Sudarshan Kriya Yoga
Herbal Supplements
Literature Monitoring Process
Journal Article
Complementary And Alternative Medicine
Mental Health
Traditional Medicine
Indigenous People
Br J Psychiatry
Systematic Review
Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci
Leaf Extract
Mentha Arvensis
Clinical Guideline
J Clin Psychiatry
Further Study
High Frequency -- these topics were mentioned multiple times across various sources:
Google Scholar
Medicinal Plant
Chemical Composition
Free Article
Controlled Trial
Clinical Trial
Randomized Controlled Trial
Health Care
Experimental Study
Case Study
Outliers -- these topics were mentioned multiple times in one source only:
Drug Safety Triager
Fatty Acid
Omega-3 Fatty Acid
Wildlife Sanctuary
Lipid Profile
Postpartum Depression
Traditional Knowledge
Complement Alternat Med
Thymus Serpyllum
Mentha Longifolia
Aegle Marmelos
Biological Activity
American Psychiatric Association
Diabetic Rats
Pathogenic Fungi
Highlights for top topics
These are snippets for the High importance topics:
Literature Review
A fourth type, the systematic review , is often classified separately, but is essentially a literature review focused on a research question, trying to identify, appraise, select and synthesize all high-quality research evidence and arguments relevant to that question. A meta-analysis is typically a systematic review using statistical methods to effectively combine the data used on all selected studies to produce a more reliable result. [3] (en.wikipedia.org)
Literary Review
For the British magazine, see Literary Review . For the American magazine, see The Literary Review . (en.wikipedia.org)
Herbal Medicine
283. Burlakoti C., Kunwar R.M. Folk herbal medicine s of Mahakali watershed area, Nepal. In: Jha P.K., Karmacharya S.B., Chhetri M.K., Thapa C.B., Shrestha B.B., editors. Medicinal Plants in Nepal: An Anthology of Contemporary Research. Ecological Society; Kathmandu, Nepal: 2008. pp. 187193. [Google Scholar] (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Medical Literature Monitoring
Read a case study from one of the world's biggest pharmaceutical companies, looking at how it used Drug Safety Triager to streamline its global medical literature monitoring for drug safety. (dialog.com)
Sudarshan Kriya Yoga
186. Janakiramaiah N, Gangadhar BN, NagaVenkatesha Murthy PJ, Harish MG, Subbakrishna DK, Vedamurthachar A. Antidepressant efficacy of Sudarshan Kriya Yoga (SKY) in melancholia: a randomized comparison with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) and imipramine. J Affect Disord. 2000; 57 :255259. [ PubMed ] [ Google Scholar ] (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Herbal Supplements
458. Grant K.L. Top-selling herbal supplements . J. Manag. Care Pharm. 1999;5:357366. [Google Scholar] (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Literature Monitoring Process
Drug Safety Triager (DST) was created to make the drug safety literature monitoring process more efficient, cost-effective and compliant. It allows review teams to focus on patient safety issues in scientific literature and streamline the literature monitoring processes for ICSRs, aggregate reports (including PBRER, PSUR and DSUR) and safety signals. For any organisation that has to monitor the safety of medical products and detect changes to their risk-benefit balance, Drug Safety Triager is a vital tool. (dialog.com)
Complementary And Alternative Medicine
82. Saxena R. C., Singh R., Kumar P., et al. Efficacy of an extract of ocimum tenuiflorum (OciBest) in the management of general stress: A Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Study. Evidence-based complementary and alternative medicine . 2012; 2012 :7. doi: 10.1155/2012/894509. 894509 [ PMC free article ] [ PubMed ] [ CrossRef ] [ Google Scholar ] (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Mental Health
39. Hoenders HJ, Appelo MT, van den Brink EH, Hartogs BMA, de Jong JTVM. The Dutch Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) protocol: to ensure safe and effective use of CAM within Dutch mental health care. J Complement Altern Med. 2011; 17 :11971201. [ PubMed ] [ Google Scholar ] (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Competitor Subsections
These are some long-tail subsections used by the brief sources:
Ayurvedic medicine in mood disorders (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Fully validated and audit-ready Literature Monitoring (dialog.com)
Mind-body-spirit approaches in mood disorders (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Add Drug Safety Triager to Your Medical Literature Monitoring Process (dialog.com)
Dietary supplements as CAM therapies (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Omega-3 fatty acids in mood disorders (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Statistics
These are some sentences that contained facts, or statistics:
In particular, HbA1c (35.8%) significantly decreased when tulsi was added as adjunct therapy to hypoglycemic medication compared to drug medication alone [ 67 ]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Conversely, the essential oil from the aerial parts of a sample from Uttarakhand, India was rich in davanone (30.8%), -pinene (15.3%), and germacrene D (5.8%) [48], while the aerial parts essential oil from a sample collected from Kashmir was dominated by artemisia ketone (42.1%), germacrene B (8.6%), and borneol (6.1%) [47]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
In contrast, the essential oil from the aerial parts of A. scoparia cultivated in New Delhi was composed largely of myrcene (24.4%), -terpinene (18.3%), p-cymene (17.4%), and neral (12.5%) [324], while A. scoparia essential oil from Tajikistan was made up of -pinene (21.3%), 1-phenyl-2,4-pentadiyne (34.2%), (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
A leaf oil sample from Hindokhal, Uttarakhand, was dominated by -elemene (42.5%) trans-sabinene hydrate (8.8%), and -cubebene (7.9%) [156], while another sample, from Mussorie, Uttarakhand, was rich in -thujone (22.6%), biformene (7.7%), sabinene (5.8%) [156]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
The essential oil from the aerial parts of A. japonica collected from Milam glacier (Uttarakhand), India, was dominated by the monoterpenoids linalool (27.5%), (E)--ocimene (6.5%), 1,8-cineole (5.5%), and (Z)--ocimene (5.5%), along with germacrene D (11.2%) [51]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
the oil from intermediate elevation (1200 m asl) had mequinyl p-nitrobenzoate (22.1%), cadina-1,4-diene (17.7%), and -eudesmol (12.4%) as the major components, and the sample from higher elevation (2000 m asl) had linalool (32.5%) and isopulegyl acetate (20.7%) as the major components. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
The essential oil from the aerial parts of A. parviflora collected from Pauri, Pauri Garhwal (Uttarakhand, India) was found to contain -caryophyllene (15.3%), germacrene D (14.7%), camphor (11.4%), artemisia ketone (7.8%), and 1,8-cineole (5.8%) [61]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Thus, the leaf oil of A. scoparia collected from Milam glacier, Uttarakhand, India, was composed of capillene (60.2%), -terpinene (11.1%), and 1-phenyl-2,4-pentadiyne (1.0%), while the root essential oil was dominated by capillene (82.9%) and 1-phenyl-2,4-pentadiyne (2.6%) [68]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
The fruit essential oil of C. glaucescens from Nepal was dominated by methyl (E)-cinnamate (40.5%) [100], whereas a commercial fruit essential from Nepal had methyl (E)-cinnamate (14%) 1,8-cineole (13%), and -terpineol (7%) as the major components, while the pericarp oil was rich in 1,8-cineole (56%) [106]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
The leaf essential oil from Nepal was dominated by ascaridole (15.4%), isoascaridole (9.9%), trans-p-mentha-2,8-dien-1-ol (9.7%), and trans-verbenol (8.4%) [43]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
(Munmar, Kerala) was rich in sesquiterpene hydrocarbons: Spathulenol (12%), germacrene D (7.5%), -elemene (2.8%), -caryophyllene (2.4%) [307]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
[major components: linalool (16.3%), -thujone (13.9%), -caryophyllene (7.5%), germacrene D (7.1%)] did show notable antibacterial activity against S. aureus and P. aeruginosa with MIC values of 6.25 and 12.5 g/mL, respectively [55]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Geraniol (30.5%), citronellol (24.1%), neral (10.3%), and geranial (13.6%) have been reported as the major components of C. flexuosus [363], but many chemotypes / cultivars / variants have been reported for C. flexuosus [364,365,366,367,368,369,370,371,372,373]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
[382] and western Nepal [383], and is generally rich in geranial (48%) and neral (33%), with lesser amounts of geraniol (5%) and linalool (3%) [358]. (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
The major components in C. jwarancusa oil are piperitone (45%67%) and elemol (7%29%) (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov)
Links
These links were referenced in the sources:
ILIRIA International Review (iliriapublications.org)
Vol 8, No 1 (2018) (iliriapublications.org)
A Literature Review of Retailing Sector and Business Retailing Types (iliriapublications.org)
Attribution 4.0 International (creativecommons.org)
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