Abstract

Randia hispida K. Schum (Rubiaceae) is a medicinal plant used by the Ijaws of the Niger Delta area in the southern part of Nigeria for the treatment of inflammation and pyrexia. The plant was extracted sequentially using n-hexane, dichloromethane and 70% methanol. Acute toxicity tests of the extracts were carried out using Lorkes method [1] and LD50 of the extracts were determined for n-hexane (866.02 mg/Kg), dichloromethane (1620.19 mg/kg) and methanolic extracts (2371.7 mg/kg). The anti-inflammatory studies were carried out using xylene-induced ear oedema in mice [2, 3] and egg albumin-induced paw oedema in rats [4]. The extracts were screened at various doses; n-hexane (86.60, 173.21, and 259.81 mg/kg), dichloromethane (162.02, 324.04 and 486.06 mg/kg), and methanolic extracts (237.17, 474.34 and 711.51 mg/kg). The dichloromethane and methanolic extracts displayed equal potency at all the doses used, inhibiting induced edema at 33%, 50% and 67%, the maximum dose showed equal potency with the standard drug dexamethasone (4 mg/kg) which inhibited 67% of xylene -induced inflammation, n-hexane extract gave the least inhibition. On egg albumin induced inflammation in rats, dichloromethane extract showed maximum inhibition of 80.3%, followed by n-hexane 44.9% and methanol extract 35.4%, while the standard drug acetylsalicylic acid 100 mg/kg gave 55.6% inhibition of inflammation.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call