Abstract

Ethnopharmacological relevance Ampelozizyphus amazonicus Ducke is a plant used in Brazilian folk medicine to both prevent malaria and act as a depurative. Aim of the study We have investigated the effects of an ethanol crude extract of roots of Ampelozizyphus amazonicus (CE AaD), a chemically characterized saponin mixture (SAP AaD), as well as a saponin-free fraction (SAP AaD-free) obtained from CE AaD on diuresis in rats. Materials and methods Wistar rats under ad libitum water conditions or water deprivation for 12 h prior to the start of the experiment were volume-expanded with 0.9% NaCl (4% body weight, by gavage) containing either CE AaD, SAP AaD, or SAP AaD-free at the doses indicated in the text. Rats were individually housed in metabolic cages, and urine volume was measured every 30 min throughout the experiment (3 h). Results CE AaD increased urine volume in rats under conditions of both free access to water and under water deprivation. In the latter condition, CE AaD (150 mg/kg) increased the urine volume from zero to 0.9 ± 0.1 ml/120 min, n = 6). Similarly, the SAP AaD-free (50–200 mg/kg) mixture also increased the urine volume. In contrast, SAP AaD (12.5–1000 mg/kg) produced a significant reduction ( p < 0.01) in diuresis under conditions of both water deprivation and with free access to water prior to the start of the experiment. Conclusion Our data indicate that CE AaD contains compounds that cause both diuresis and antidiuresis and that the antidiuretic effect is due mainly to the presence of saponins.

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