Moringa Gateway

Welcome to the Moringa Gateway, a free index of Moringa research article summaries that anyone can write and edit.



View by Category

Search by Keyword






History of 'Fully Acetylated Carbamate and Hypotensive Thiocarbamate Glycosides From Morenga Oleifera'

Add New Summary

Note: Many articles are available from their publishers for a fee. Articles available for free are marked as such.



Fully Acetylated Carbamate and Hypotensive Thiocarbamate Glycosides From Morenga Oleifera

Author(s): Faiz S, BS Siddiqui, R Saleem, S Siddiqui, K Aftab, A Gilani
Published in: Phytochemistry.   Aug 23, 1994
38 4 957-963
0031-9422(94)00729-2

This thesis presents various findings on the isolation of nine glycosides within the Morenga oleifera plant. Six of which are new while the three others are synthetically known to scientists. Each was identified through by the spectrum emitted or absorbed by them through processes called spectroscopic methods.


This is the current summary



Fully Acetylated Carbamate and Hypotensive Thiocarbamate Glycosides From Morenga Oleifera

Author(s): Faiz S, BS Siddiqui, R Saleem, S Siddiqui, K Aftab, A Gilani
Published in: Phytochemistry.   Oct 13, 2008
38 4 957-963
0031-9422(94)00729-2

This thesis presents various findings on the isolation of nine glycosides within the Morenga oleifera plant. Six of which are new while the three others are synthetically known to scientists. Each was identified through by the spectrum emitted or absorbed by them through processes called spectroscopic methods.


Set to this revision Revision: Thu, 16 Oct 2008 15:14:32 +0000



Fully Acetylated Carbamate and Hypotensive Thiocarbamate Glycosides From Morenga Oleifera

Author(s): Faiz S, BS Siddiqui, R Saleem, S Siddiqui, K Aftab, A Gilani
Published in: Phytochemistry.   Oct 13, 2008
38 4 957-963
0031-9422(94)00729-2

Current summary based on abstract only.

This thesis presents various findings on the isolation of nine glycosides within the Morenga oleifera plant. Six of which are new while the three others are synthetically known to scientists. Each was identified through by the spectrum emitted or absorbed by them through processes called spectroscopic methods.


Set to this revision Revision: Mon, 13 Oct 2008 14:48:38 +0000



Disclaimer: Summaries and article information on this page are works of individual users, and do not reflect the work of Trees for Life Journal, its editorial board or board of trustees.

 Copyright © 2024 Trees for Life Journal
 All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners.

Powered By Geeklog