Abstract
The aqueous-methanolic leaf extract and fractions of the Rumex vesicarius L. (Rv.Cr) was evaluated for the possible presence of spasmogenic and spasmolytic constituents to rationalize its traditional uses in gastrointestinal disorders. In rabbit jejunum, R. vesicarius caused a dose-dependent (0.03 to 0.3 mg/ml) weak stimulatory effect on spontaneous contractions, followed by relaxation at the next higher dose (1 mg/ml). In the presence of atropine (0.03 µM), the spasmogenic effect was abolished and the relaxant effect was obtained at lower doses (0.1 to 1.0 mg/ml) shifting the dose response curves to the left. The spasmolytic effect on the spontaneous and K+-induced contractions in atropinized preparations was mediated at doses 0.03 to 1.0 mg/ml and 0.3 to 5 mg/ml, respectively which explained the involvement of calcium channel blocking (CCB) effect. The CCB effect was confirmed when pretreatment of the tissue with R. vesicarius produced a dose-dependent shift in the Ca++ dose-response curves to the right in a similar manner as verapamil. Activity-directed fractionations revealed that the spasmolytic effect was concentrated in methanolic fraction, while spasmogenic activity in the aqueous fraction which was remarkably stronger than aqueous-methanolic extract. This data shows that the crude leaf extract of R. vesicarius L. contains spasmogenic and spasmolytic constituents mediating their effect through cholinergic and CCB actions, respectively, which explains its traditional use in the gastrointestinal disorders such as abdominal colics and cramps, constipation and diarrhea, gestroesophagial reflux disease and irritable bowel syndrome/inflammatory bowel disease. Key words: Rumex vesicarius Linn, spasmogenic, Spasmolytic, Cholinergic, CCB.
Highlights
Constipation and diarrhea, colic and cramps are affecting 70% of the population worldwide (Quyang and Chin, 2004)
Preliminary phytochemical screening detected the presence of tannins, phenols, saponins, anthraquinones and coumarins as constituents of the crude aqueousmethanolic extract of R. vesicarius (Rv.Cr), while it tested negative for the presence of alkaloid
Phytochemical analysis of crude leaf extract of R. vesicarius (Rv.Cr) showed the presence of saponins, tannins, anthraquinones, coumarins, phenols, and flavonoid, while the alkaloid was absent as methanolic soluble constituents (Table 1)
Summary
Constipation and diarrhea, colic and cramps are affecting 70% of the population worldwide (Quyang and Chin, 2004). Developing countries such as Pakistan, India and Bangladesh are commonly facing gastrointestinal disorders due to low standard sanitary conditions. Acute diarrhea is usually caused by an infectious agent, even though drugs, poisons or acute inflammatory reactions can contribute a lot (Thapar and Sanderson, 2004). Rotavirus is the major causative agent for infectious diarrhea, especially in young ones.
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