Evaluation of In Vivo Antidiarrheal Activities of Hydroalcoholic Leaf Extract of L.(Sapindaceae) in Swiss Albino Mice

Traditionally people used Dodonaea viscosa for the treatment of various ailments, including diarrhea. Therefore, this study was aimed to evaluate the antidiarrheal activity of the 80% methanolic leaf extract of D viscosa against castor oil-induced diarrhea in mice models. Different doses of 80% meth...

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Main Author: Jemal Abdela BPharm, MSc
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-12-01
Series:Journal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2515690X19891952
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spelling doaj-a08e9fafb51341a19778994baf9a612a2020-11-25T03:36:12ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine2515-690X2019-12-012410.1177/2515690X19891952Evaluation of In Vivo Antidiarrheal Activities of Hydroalcoholic Leaf Extract of L.(Sapindaceae) in Swiss Albino MiceJemal Abdela BPharm, MSc0 School of Pharmacy, Haramaya University, Harar, EthiopiaTraditionally people used Dodonaea viscosa for the treatment of various ailments, including diarrhea. Therefore, this study was aimed to evaluate the antidiarrheal activity of the 80% methanolic leaf extract of D viscosa against castor oil-induced diarrhea in mice models. Different doses of 80% methanolic leaf extract of D viscosa (100, 200, and 400 mg/kg) were evaluated for their antidiarrheal activities using castor oil–induced diarrhea, gastrointestinal transit, and enteropooling models in Swiss albino mice. At all test doses, the plant extract showed significant ( P < .05) inhibition in the frequency of defecation of wet feces and total fecal output as compared to the control group. Similarly, at all dose ranges used the plant extract demonstrated significant ( P < .05) reduction in an intraluminal fluid accumulation as compared to the untreated group. Besides, at higher doses, the plant extract also indicated significant ( P < .05) antimotility activity in comparison with the control. In conclusion, these findings illustrated that the 80% methanolic leaf extract of D viscosa supported the traditional claim of antidiarrheal activity of the plant though further investigations are warranted.https://doi.org/10.1177/2515690X19891952
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jemal Abdela BPharm, MSc
spellingShingle Jemal Abdela BPharm, MSc
Evaluation of In Vivo Antidiarrheal Activities of Hydroalcoholic Leaf Extract of L.(Sapindaceae) in Swiss Albino Mice
Journal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine
author_facet Jemal Abdela BPharm, MSc
author_sort Jemal Abdela BPharm, MSc
title Evaluation of In Vivo Antidiarrheal Activities of Hydroalcoholic Leaf Extract of L.(Sapindaceae) in Swiss Albino Mice
title_short Evaluation of In Vivo Antidiarrheal Activities of Hydroalcoholic Leaf Extract of L.(Sapindaceae) in Swiss Albino Mice
title_full Evaluation of In Vivo Antidiarrheal Activities of Hydroalcoholic Leaf Extract of L.(Sapindaceae) in Swiss Albino Mice
title_fullStr Evaluation of In Vivo Antidiarrheal Activities of Hydroalcoholic Leaf Extract of L.(Sapindaceae) in Swiss Albino Mice
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of In Vivo Antidiarrheal Activities of Hydroalcoholic Leaf Extract of L.(Sapindaceae) in Swiss Albino Mice
title_sort evaluation of in vivo antidiarrheal activities of hydroalcoholic leaf extract of l.(sapindaceae) in swiss albino mice
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Evidence-Based Integrative Medicine
issn 2515-690X
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Traditionally people used Dodonaea viscosa for the treatment of various ailments, including diarrhea. Therefore, this study was aimed to evaluate the antidiarrheal activity of the 80% methanolic leaf extract of D viscosa against castor oil-induced diarrhea in mice models. Different doses of 80% methanolic leaf extract of D viscosa (100, 200, and 400 mg/kg) were evaluated for their antidiarrheal activities using castor oil–induced diarrhea, gastrointestinal transit, and enteropooling models in Swiss albino mice. At all test doses, the plant extract showed significant ( P < .05) inhibition in the frequency of defecation of wet feces and total fecal output as compared to the control group. Similarly, at all dose ranges used the plant extract demonstrated significant ( P < .05) reduction in an intraluminal fluid accumulation as compared to the untreated group. Besides, at higher doses, the plant extract also indicated significant ( P < .05) antimotility activity in comparison with the control. In conclusion, these findings illustrated that the 80% methanolic leaf extract of D viscosa supported the traditional claim of antidiarrheal activity of the plant though further investigations are warranted.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2515690X19891952
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