Study of Subacute Toxicity in Wistar Rats Challenged with Phyllanthus amarus Schum and Thonn

Dennis, Kpomah Enyohwo and Bridget, Kpomah and Stanislaus, Okonkwo Chisom (2024) Study of Subacute Toxicity in Wistar Rats Challenged with Phyllanthus amarus Schum and Thonn. Journal of Complementary and Alternative Medical Research, 25 (8). pp. 36-46. ISSN 2456-6276

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Abstract

Phyllanthus amarus, a widely used plant in complementary and alternative medicine practice in Southern Nigeria, is used in treating and managing numerous metabolic disorders, and neurodegenerative diseases. This study is designed to assess the subacute toxicity of P. amarus in Wistar rats using body and relative organ weight, renal function, in-vivo antioxidant status and organ histology indices as a baseline. The twenty adult male rats weighing 120.00 ± 6.18 g were apportioned into four groups with five rats per group. Group A (Control) received 1.0 mL of distilled water, group B received 1000 mg/kg group C received 1500 mg/kg and group D received 2000 mg/kg body weight of the crude ethanol extract. The extract from P. amarus was administered orally once daily at 8:30 am using an oral cannula attached to a 2 mL syringe. Subacute toxicity was evaluated after 14 days. The findings showed no visible and noticeable overt signs of toxicity throughout the experimental period, non-significant adverse change in body and relative organ weight, renal function and organ histopathology of the rats in the treated and control groups. However, P. amarus significantly improved in-vivo antioxidant status while significantly reducing the level of malondialdehyde, a biological indicator of oxidative stress in the living system.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Pacific Library > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@pacificlibrary.org
Date Deposited: 07 Aug 2024 06:21
Last Modified: 07 Aug 2024 06:21
URI: http://editor.classicopenlibrary.com/id/eprint/1837

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