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Is cempasúchil a medicinal plant? The historical, cultural, and scientific contexts of Mexican marigold

  • Daniel López Estrada
    Daniel López Estrada

    Daniel López Estrada is a physician and researcher currently pursuing his Ph.D. at China Medical University in Taiwan. His main research interests focus on traditional medicine, traditional Chinese medicine, and traditional Mexican medicine.

    Michael Heinrich
    Michael Heinrich

    Michael Heinrich is a professor and researcher currently affiliated with the UCL School of Pharmacy, University College London, and Yushan Fellow at China Medical University in Taichung, Taiwan. Heinrich serves as the Editor-in-Chief of the Ethnopharmacology section of Frontiers in Pharmacology and is the President of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research. His main research interests focus on pharmacognosy, ethnopharmacology, and medicinal plant research.

    Wen-Te Chang
    Wen-Te Chang

    Wen-Te Chang is a professor and Chair of the Department of Chinese Pharmaceutical Sciences and Chinese Medicine Resources at China Medical University, Taiwan. He has also served as Deputy Director of the Lifu Museum of Chinese Medicine. His research focuses on plant metabolomics, quality control of traditional Chinese medicine, and plant tissue culture. 

  • 9:30 reading time (ish)
  • Evidence History

Cempasúchil (Tagetes erecta), also known as Mexican or Aztec marigold, is a plant with a rich history of use around the world, prized in medicine today for its use in eye health.

Is Cempasuchil A Medicinal Plant The Historical Cultural And Scientific Contexts Of Mexican Marigold

The use of medicinal plants has been a central element in human history, shaping practices, beliefs, and health systems in numerous cultures. But what defines a plant as ‘medicinal’? One may argue that all plants are medicinal, yet for others, the association between plants and medicine is difficult to conceive.

What defines any substance as medicinal is whether it is used in the treatment of disease, “to cure illness”. However, our perception and use of plants as medicine depends on a complex interaction of factors, including historical and cultural aspects such as rituals, symbolism, and records in ancient texts; ethnobotanical knowledge passed down by indigenous communities through generations; phytochemical properties based on bioactive compounds responsible for therapeutic effects; scientific and clinical validation through laboratory studies and trials; economic impacts related to cultivation and commercialisation; political and legal regulations affecting use and accessibility; and technological innovations that optimise processing for medicinal applications (1,2)

These perspectives demonstrate that the medicinal potential of a plant is not limited to its chemical composition but is shaped by the historical, social, policy-based (regulatory) and scientific contexts in which it is analyzed. This article explores these interactions through a specific example: Mexican marigold (Tagetes erecta), known in Nahuatl, a Mesoamerican dialect spoken since the pre-Hispanic period, still used by over a million people in Mexico, as cempasúchil.

Daniel López Estrada

Daniel López Estrada is a physician and researcher currently pursuing his Ph.D. at China Medical University in Taiwan. His main research interests focus on traditional medicine, traditional Chinese... Read more

Michael Heinrich

Michael Heinrich is a professor and researcher currently affiliated with the UCL School of Pharmacy, University College London, and Yushan Fellow at China Medical University in Taichung, Taiwan.... Read more

Wen-Te Chang

Wen-Te Chang is a professor and Chair of the Department of Chinese Pharmaceutical Sciences and Chinese Medicine Resources at China Medical University, Taiwan. He has also served as Deputy Director of... Read more

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