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Title: | In vivo Antimalarial Activity of Stem Bark of Dry Zone Cedar Pseudocedrela Kotschyi (Meliaceae) in Mice |
Authors: | Dawet, A. Yakubu, D.P Wannang, N.N Mwansat, G.S |
Keywords: | Screening. |
Issue Date: | 12-Jan-2014 |
Publisher: | European Journal of Medicinal Plants |
Citation: | Pp 342-352 |
Series/Report no.: | Vol.4;No.3 |
Abstract: | Malaria infection remains the most devastating infectious parasitic disease
responsible for the death and economic losses among half the world’s population. The
development of resistance to the present antimalarial drugs by Plasmodium species has
necessitated the search for effective antimalarial drugs. The stem bark of dry zone cedar
(Pseudocedrela kotschyi) Meliaceae is used locally for the treatment of fever, hence the
choice of the plant to prove scientifically the traditional claim.
Aim: The aim of the study was to evaluate the antimalarial activity of the stem bark
extracts of P. kotschyi in mice.
Methodology: One hundred and twenty grammes of the plant powder were successively
extracted. A total of three hundred and sixty mice were used for the study, one hundred
and twenty for each extract (ethanol, ethyl acetate and aqueous) and forty per each test
(suppressive, curative and prophylactic). Male and female, albino mice were inoculated
with drug sensitive NK 65 Plasmodium berghei berghei. In each test animals were divided
into five groups, each consisted of eight animals and treated separately with one of thefollowing: 50, 100 and 200 mg/kg extracts, chloroquine / pyrimethamine and normal
saline. Blood films were prepared and examined.
Results: The ethanol, ethyl acetate and aqueous crude extracts of P. kotschyi at 200
mg/kg significantly (P<0.05) inhibited the parasitaemia by 39.43%, 26.99% and 28.36%
respectively in the suppressive test. Ethanol and ethyl acetate crude extracts also showed
significant (p<0.05) cure rate of 29.17% and 20.28% respectively. However there was no
significant (p>0.05) reduction in parasitaemia load in the prophylactic tests, indicating that
the plant is probably not a potential prophylactic subject.
Conclusion: The results of the study showed that P. kotschyi indeed has antiplasmodial
property, which could be exploited in the search for malaria drugs in the present day
scenerio. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/278 |
Appears in Collections: | Zoology Pharmacology
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