EVALUATION OF ANALGESIC, ANTI-INFLAMMATORY AND ANTIPYRETIC ACTIVITIES OF THE ETHANOL EXTRACT FROM SPERANSKIA TUBERCULATA

Authors

  • Yan-Xi Zhou Second Military Medical University
  • Su-Juan Wang
  • Yuan Li
  • Wei Xia
  • Xiong-Yu Meng
  • Cheng Peng
  • Hong Zhang

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21010/ajtcam.v12i3.6

Keywords:

Herb, pain, inflammation, Pyrexia, Safety

Abstract

Background: Speranskia tuberculata (Bunge) Baill, has been used to prevent and treat many diseases in Chinese folk medicine, nevertheless, few investigations had been reported. Materials and Methods: Animals were orally administered STE at the doses of 125, 250, 500 mg/kg. The analgesic effect was estimated in mice by hot-plate test and the acetic acid-induced writhing test. The anti-inflammatory effect was assessed using rat paw edema model elicited by fresh egg white and the mouse ear edema model caused by dimethylbenzene. The antipyretic effect was determined using the lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced rat fever model. In addition, the acute oral toxicity of STE was studied. Results: STE significantly and dose-dependently reduced the number of writhing responses in mice, prolonged reaction time of mice against heat stimulation, depressed egg white-induced paw edema in rats and the dimethylbenzene-caused ear edema in mice, but did not alleviate LPS-induced pyrexia in rats. No death of mice was observed when orally administered STE up to 52.8 g/kg (approximately 2080 times of clinical dose used). Conclusion: STE possesses evident analgesic and anti-inflammatory activities, but has no antipyretic effect. Furthermore STE has a favorable safety. These findings support the applications of Speranskia tuberculata as an analgesic and anti-inflammatory drug in folk medicine.

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Published

2015-04-04

How to Cite

Zhou, Y.-X., Wang, S.-J., Li, Y., Xia, W., Meng, X.-Y., Peng, C., & Zhang, H. (2015). EVALUATION OF ANALGESIC, ANTI-INFLAMMATORY AND ANTIPYRETIC ACTIVITIES OF THE ETHANOL EXTRACT FROM SPERANSKIA TUBERCULATA. African Journal of Traditional, Complementary and Alternative Medicines, 12(3), 49–54. https://doi.org/10.21010/ajtcam.v12i3.6

Issue

Section

Short communications