Abstract
Thymoquinone, one of the biologically active components of black seed oil, has anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties. We aimed to study the effect of thymoquinone on corneal neovascularization in rats and to compare its efficacy with that of triamcinolone acetonide. Chemical cauterization of the cornea was performed with silver nitrate/potassium nitrate sticks in 40 eyes in 40 rats. An examiner blinded to the experiments scored the intensity of the cauterization. Topical instillation of thymoquinone 0.1%, thymoquinone 0.4%, and triamcinolone acetonide was continued for 7 days. The inhibitory effects of the drugs on corneal neovascularization were tested and compared with each other and with controls with a computer program that evaluates percent areas of cornea covered by neovascularization. The means of percent area of corneal neovascularization in the thymoquinone 0.1%, thymoquinone 0.4%, triamcinolone acetonide, and control groups were 60.1%, 45%, 46%, and 72%, respectively. The inhibitory effect of thymoquinone 0.4% was found to be equal to that of triamcinolone acetonide (P = 0.87). The thymoquinone 0.4% and triamcinolone groups were different from the thymoquinone 0.1% and control groups (P < 0.05). There was also a significant difference between the percent area of corneal neovascularization in the thymoquinone 0.1% group and that of the controls (P < 0.05). The mean burn stimulus intensities were not different among the groups (P = 0.54). Thymoquinone was shown to have an inhibitory effect, comparable with that of triamcinolone, on corneal neovascularization in this rat model. However, thymoquinone decreased corneal neovascularization in a dose-dependent manner.
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