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IJPR-Iranian Journal of Pharmaceutical Research. 2014; 13 (4): 1357-1367
en Inglés | IMEMR | ID: emr-151755

RESUMEN

Toxicity and drug resistance against pentavalent antimonials, medications of choice in treatment of leishmaniasis for more than 5 decades, have become important subjects globally. This study was a randomized, open labeled trial that was designed to determine efficacy and safety of IMOD as a novel herbal immunomodulator drug for treatment of canine visceral leishmaniasis [CVL]. Twenty healthy mongrel dogs were infected with Iranian strain of L. Infantum amastigotes and randomly divided to 5 groups with four animals for each included on: I: negative control [non-infected] II: Glucantime[registered sign] III: Glucantime[registered sign] plus IMOD [immune-chemotherapy] IV: IMOD and V: positive control [non-treated]. Physical examination, hematological, biochemical, serological, parasitological, pathological and imaging evaluations were performed pre-/post- interventions every month for 3 months. Comparing with control groups [IandV], immune-chemotherapy group [Glucantime[registered sign] plus IMOD] showed significantly higher efficacy in resolving the clinical signs and hematobiochemistry factors. Based on our results, using IMOD in combination with meglumine antimoniate [Glucantime[registered sign]] has significantly improved CVL than the latter drug alone. So, it seems this new herbal medicine is useful as adjuvant therapy for canine visceral leishmaniasis

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