Scientific Name  Woodfordia fruticosa (L.)Kurz.   (W.  fruticosa Kurz syn. W.floribunda Salisb.)
Family   Lythraceae
Used Part  Flowers.
Distribution Area      A shrub, commonly occurring     throughout North India, ascending to an altitude of c. 1,500 m. in the     Himalayas, but rather scarce in South India.
Common Uses . The dried flowers are credited with stimulant and astringent
    	properties, and are available in the market. They are often added to     the Ayurvedic Arishtasto cause alcoholic fermentation. The commercial     drug consists of dried fruits, flowers, buds and broken pieces of     inflorescences. It is much used in bowel complaints and haemorrhages     and is also administered in menorrhagia and seminal weakness. An     extract of the plant was found to stimulate the contraction of the     intestinal loop, and investigations have corroborated the clinical use     of the drug in bowel complaints. The drug also shows antipyretic action     which compares favourably with that of acetylsalicylic acid. The dried     flowers are powdered and sprinkled over ulcers and wounds to diminish     discharge and promote granulation. In Madhya Pradesh, a paste of the     flowers is used for the treatment of coughs. The flowers also enter     into an ointment used on the pustules of smallpox.
The dried flowers are used as a popular Indonesian and Malesian    drug `Sidowaya'. The dried flowers are used in dysentery and liver    diseases in Sri Lanka, and in diarrhoea in North eastern India. The    Bhotias of Himalaya use the flower juice as a cold drink in summer.
      	The use of flowers in `Nimba Arishta', an ayurvedic drug used in
    	Srilanka, resulted in a substantial increase of the inhibition of both    human complement activity and chemiluminescence generated by zymosan-    stimulated human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. The increased    biological activity was due to the released immuno active substance    from the flowers.
The blossoms are gathered during February-April and dried.     The dye is prepared by steeping the flowers in cold or hot water. Alum     or lime is added to this solution as a mordant, though in sevcral parts     of India dyeing is done without the mordants. The material to be dyed     is immersed in this solution several times until a pink colour of     desired depth is obtained. The twigs and leaves are also used in     dyeing. 
Pharmacological Effect The leaves show antibiotic activity in vitroagainst Micrococcus pyogenes var. aureus.An extract of the flowers shows activity against Helminthosporium sativum.The plant extract is also active against Ranikhetdisease.
Aqueous and methanolic extract of the flowers
    	showed strong nematicidal activity against the larva of Toxocaria
 
 
 
