• G. H. Posner
  • M. Krasavin
  • M. McCutchen
  • P. Ploypradith
  • J. P. Maxwell
  • J. S. Elias
  • M. H. Parker
Folk medicine is often a rich source of leads for discovery of valuable new drugs (1). Quinine was discovered this way, based on traditional medicinal use of the bark of the Cinchona tree, and the powerful anticancer drug taxol was discovered in Yew trees. Chinese folk medicine has now led to isolation, identification, and clinical use of artemisinin (qinghaosu, 1) (Scheme I), a sesquiterpene 1,2,4-trioxane lactone, for rapid and effective chemotherapy of individuals infected with Plasmodium falciparum malaria parasites (2).
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAntimalarial Chemotherapy
Subtitle of host publicationMechanisms of Action, Resistance and New Directions in Drug Discovery
PublisherHumana Press
Pages255-265
ISBN (Electronic)9781592591114
ISBN (Print)9781617371240
StatePublished - 2001

Publication series

NameInfectious Disease

    Research areas

  • Antimalarial Drug, Cerebral Malaria, Antimalarial Activity, Biomedical Chemistry, Carbonyl Oxide

ID: 4682955