Bibliometric analysis of scientific publications on the effects of rangeland and wild plants on women’s health

Yasir Tufan(1), Zeynep Tufa(2),


(1) Department of Herbal Production and Technologies, Faculty of Applied Science, Muş Alparslan University, Muş, Türkiye; Department of Field Crops, Faculty of Agriculture, Atatürk University, Erzurum, Türkiye
(2) Tokat Gaziosmanpasa University, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Midwifery, Tokat, Turkey
Corresponding Author

Abstract


This study presents a comprehensive bibliometric assessment of global research on the use of rangeland and wild plants in women’s health from 1996 to 2025. A total of 718 publications retrieved from Web of Science and Scopus were analysed using the Bibliometrix/Biblioshiny platform. Descriptive indicators, co-occurrence networks, thematic evolution, clustering, and Multiple Correspondence Analysis (MCA) were used to map structural and conceptual trends in the field. The findings indicate a steady increase in scientific output, with an annual growth rate of 11.02%. Publications were concentrated in core journals such as Phytomedicine and Journal of Ethnopharmacology, while Iran, India, and China were the leading contributing countries. Keyword and conceptual analyses showed that traditional knowledge, medicinal plants, phytochemistry, and pharmacology form the central research axis. Notably, themes related to women’s health - particularly menopause, pregnancy, infertility, polycystic ovary syndrome, and endometriosis - appeared consistently across trend, thematic, and cluster analyses, indicating a stable and growing research focus. The study highlights the multidimensional nature of ethnopharmacology at the intersection of ecosystem-derived plant resources, cultural knowledge, and clinically relevant women’s health research, underscoring the need for broader geographic representation and interdisciplinary integration in future studies

References


Zwingelberg SB. Diagnosis and Surgical Therapy of Infantile Corneal Opacities. Springer Nature; 2024.

Ekor M. The growing use of herbal medicines: issues relating to adverse reactions and challenges in monitoring safety. Frontiers in pharmacology. 2014;4:177.

Zhang RP, Luo JH, Lu HX, Zhang LR, Dong ZM, Xu AL, Duan BZ and Zhao WZ. Ethnobotanical survey of antifertility medicinal plants in Dali District, Yunnan Province, China. African Journal of Reproductive Health. 2022;26(5):107-19.

Wang B, Yang S, Hu J and Li Y. Multifaceted interaction of the traditional Chinese medicinal herb Schisandra chinensis with cytochrome P450-mediated drug metabolism in rats. Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 2014;155(3):1473-82.

Sirotkin AV and Harrath AH. Phytoestrogens and their effects. European Journal of Pharmacology. 2014;741:230–6.

Ellegaard O and Wallin JA. The bibliometric analysis of scholarly production: How great is the impact? Scientometrics. 2015;105(3):1809–31.

Donthu N, Kumar S, Mukherjee D, Pandey N and Lim WM. How to conduct a bibliometric analysis: An overview and guidelines. Journal of Business Research. 2021;133:285–96.

Aria M and Cuccurullo C. bibliometrix : An R-tool for comprehensive science mapping analysis. Journal of Informetrics. 2017;11(4):959–75.

El Allaoui H, El Ahmadi K, El Abdouni A, Dira I, El Bastrioui M, Bouhrim M, Eto B, Shahat AA, Herqash RN and Haboubi K. Trends and insights in medicinal plant extract research: a ten-year bibliometric and visualization study. Horticulturae. 2024 Nov 1;10(11):1163.

Yeung AW, Heinrich M, Kijjoa A, Tzvetkov NT and Atanasov AG. The ethnopharmacological literature: An analysis of the scientific landscape. Journal of ethnopharmacology. 2020 Mar 25;250:112414.

Oh MR, Park JH, Park SK, and Park SH. Efficacy of plant‐derived dietary supplements in improving overall menopausal symptoms in women: An updated systematic review and meta‐analysis. Phytotherapy Research. 2024;38(3):1294-309.

Mojab F. Pharmacognosy in Iran.Iran J Pharm Res.2010;5(3):e128279.

Baby RM and Akarsh R. Bibliometric analysis of ethnobotanical research in India (1963-2024): Trends, collaborations and themes based on Scopus. Ethnobotany Research and Applications. 2025;31:1-6.

Yeung AWK, Heinrich M, Kijjoa A, Tzvetkov NT and Atanasov AG. The ethnopharmacological literature: An analysis of the scientific landscape. Journal of Ethnopharmacology. 2020; 250: 112414.

Ng JY, Anant S and Parakh ND. Characteristics of the research literature on herbal medicines corresponding with herbal supplements yielding the highest total sales: A bibliometric analysis. Advances in Integrative Medicine. 2023;10(2):64–79.

Musa HH, Musa TH, Oderinde O, Musa IH, Shonekan OO, Akintunde TY and Onasanya AK. Traditional herbal medicine: overview of research indexed in the scopus database. Advances in Traditional Medicine. 2023 Dec;23(4):1173-83.

Aremu AO and Luo B, Mussarat S. Medical ethnobotany. BMC Complement Med Ther. 2024 Jun 5;24(1):216.

Sadahiro R, Matsuoka LN, Zeng BS, Chen KH, Zeng BY, Wang HY, Chu CS, Stubbs B, Su KP, Tu YK and Wu YC. Black cohosh extracts in women with menopausal symptoms: an updated pairwise meta-analysis. Menopause. 2023;30(7):766-73.

Borrelli F and Ernst E. Black cohosh (Cimicifuga racemosa) for menopausal symptoms: A systematic review of its efficacy. Pharmacological Research. 2008;58(1):8–14.


Full Text: PDF

Article Metrics

Abstract View : 562 times
PDF Download : 199 times

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.