Planta Med 2022; 88(03/04): 185-186
DOI: 10.1055/a-1739-6594
Editorial

Editorial for the Special Issue “Veterinary Phytotherapy”

Matthias F. Melzig
,
Marta Mendel
,
Michael Walkenhorst
Preview

Special editions of Planta Medica focus on specific or current topics in the research areas of medicinal plants or natural products, mostly with regard to human therapeutic use. The present issue takes up a topic that has not yet been the focus of consideration in this journal, but definitely belongs here. Historically, veterinary phytotherapy is a twin sister of human phytotherapy with the same spectrum of methods and almost identical medicinal plants, often even with a longer tradition [1]. Until the end of World War II, medicinal plants had their place in the treatment of both farm animals and small animals in conventional medicine [2], [3]. Recent research shows that animals like apes, goats, and caterpillars even self-medicate with medicinal plants [4], [5]. Why was this field of research for a long time so overshadowed compared to medicinal plant and natural product research with a human therapeutic goal?



Publication History

Article published online:
30 March 2022

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