A comparison of the antibacterial activity of some African black soaps and medicated soaps commonly used for the treatment of bacteria-infected wound

Background: Black soap is a medicinal product that could be harnessed for economic purpose if properly packaged, and misconception about its traditional use by herbalists is thrown overboard. Aims: To promote the relevance of these soaps for economic development, this study compared the antibacteri...

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Main Authors: Olufunmiso O. Olajuyigbe, Morenike O. Adeoye-Isijola, Otunola Adedayo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2017-09-01
Series:Journal of Medicinal Plants for Economic Development
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jomped.org/index.php/jomped/article/view/20
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spelling doaj-34d811a9eeb64c059425ad4e7771e6fb2021-02-02T02:08:11ZengAOSISJournal of Medicinal Plants for Economic Development2519-559X2616-48092017-09-0111e1e810.4102/jomped.v1i1.206A comparison of the antibacterial activity of some African black soaps and medicated soaps commonly used for the treatment of bacteria-infected woundOlufunmiso O. Olajuyigbe0Morenike O. Adeoye-Isijola1Otunola Adedayo2Department of Microbiology, School of Science and Technology, Babcock UniversityDepartment of Microbiology, School of Science and Technology, Babcock UniversityDepartment of Microbiology, School of Science and Technology, Babcock UniversityBackground: Black soap is a medicinal product that could be harnessed for economic purpose if properly packaged, and misconception about its traditional use by herbalists is thrown overboard. Aims: To promote the relevance of these soaps for economic development, this study compared the antibacterial activity of black soaps with medicated soaps widely used against bacterial infections. Methods: The antibacterial activities of these soap samples were determined by agar diffusion and macrobroth dilution methods. Results: In this study, the statistical analysis of the inhibition zones showed that black soaps were significantly (p < 0.05) more active than medicated soaps used against the test bacterial isolates. The black soaps inhibited and killed the isolates better than the medicated soaps at the different concentrations used. The minimum inhibitory concentration for Klebsiella pneumoniae and Enterococcus faecalis ranged between 0.125 mg/mL and 2 mg/mL, Staphylococcus aureus (0.25–4) mg/mL, Escherichia coli (0.125–4) mg/mL and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (1–4) mg/mL. The result showed that K. pneumoniae and E. faecalis were the most susceptible, followed by E. faecalis > E. coli > S. aureus > P. aeruginosa. Conclusion: As a valuable medicinal output derivable from organic waste product that could be converted to wealth, African black soap production, utilisation and commercialisation have tremendous economic potentials. These soaps showed significant antibacterial activity greater than those of the medicated soaps. Hence, their use could be a better option in place of commercially available medicated and antiseptic soaps because of the degree of antibacterial activities they exhibited.https://jomped.org/index.php/jomped/article/view/20Antibacterialnative black soapinfectionsmedicated soapethno-therapeutic usages
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olufunmiso O. Olajuyigbe
Morenike O. Adeoye-Isijola
Otunola Adedayo
spellingShingle Olufunmiso O. Olajuyigbe
Morenike O. Adeoye-Isijola
Otunola Adedayo
A comparison of the antibacterial activity of some African black soaps and medicated soaps commonly used for the treatment of bacteria-infected wound
Journal of Medicinal Plants for Economic Development
Antibacterial
native black soap
infections
medicated soap
ethno-therapeutic usages
author_facet Olufunmiso O. Olajuyigbe
Morenike O. Adeoye-Isijola
Otunola Adedayo
author_sort Olufunmiso O. Olajuyigbe
title A comparison of the antibacterial activity of some African black soaps and medicated soaps commonly used for the treatment of bacteria-infected wound
title_short A comparison of the antibacterial activity of some African black soaps and medicated soaps commonly used for the treatment of bacteria-infected wound
title_full A comparison of the antibacterial activity of some African black soaps and medicated soaps commonly used for the treatment of bacteria-infected wound
title_fullStr A comparison of the antibacterial activity of some African black soaps and medicated soaps commonly used for the treatment of bacteria-infected wound
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of the antibacterial activity of some African black soaps and medicated soaps commonly used for the treatment of bacteria-infected wound
title_sort comparison of the antibacterial activity of some african black soaps and medicated soaps commonly used for the treatment of bacteria-infected wound
publisher AOSIS
series Journal of Medicinal Plants for Economic Development
issn 2519-559X
2616-4809
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Background: Black soap is a medicinal product that could be harnessed for economic purpose if properly packaged, and misconception about its traditional use by herbalists is thrown overboard. Aims: To promote the relevance of these soaps for economic development, this study compared the antibacterial activity of black soaps with medicated soaps widely used against bacterial infections. Methods: The antibacterial activities of these soap samples were determined by agar diffusion and macrobroth dilution methods. Results: In this study, the statistical analysis of the inhibition zones showed that black soaps were significantly (p < 0.05) more active than medicated soaps used against the test bacterial isolates. The black soaps inhibited and killed the isolates better than the medicated soaps at the different concentrations used. The minimum inhibitory concentration for Klebsiella pneumoniae and Enterococcus faecalis ranged between 0.125 mg/mL and 2 mg/mL, Staphylococcus aureus (0.25–4) mg/mL, Escherichia coli (0.125–4) mg/mL and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (1–4) mg/mL. The result showed that K. pneumoniae and E. faecalis were the most susceptible, followed by E. faecalis > E. coli > S. aureus > P. aeruginosa. Conclusion: As a valuable medicinal output derivable from organic waste product that could be converted to wealth, African black soap production, utilisation and commercialisation have tremendous economic potentials. These soaps showed significant antibacterial activity greater than those of the medicated soaps. Hence, their use could be a better option in place of commercially available medicated and antiseptic soaps because of the degree of antibacterial activities they exhibited.
topic Antibacterial
native black soap
infections
medicated soap
ethno-therapeutic usages
url https://jomped.org/index.php/jomped/article/view/20
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