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1.
Indian J Clin Biochem ; 29(2): 210-2, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24757304

ABSTRACT

The extract of Jatropha Gossypifolia stem was obtained by cutting the stem with a sharp knife and the fluid expressed out. The suitability of the stem latex extract as a precipitant for biochemical analysis was determined. The precipitating efficacy of the extract for creatinine and protein estimation was found to be optimum at 1/4 and 1/5 dilutions respectively aqueous solution. Plasma protein was precipitated with stem extract of J. Gossypifolia at the stated dilution. The mean plasma creatinine values obtained from 0.5 % sodium tungstate as a protein precipitant were compared with the values of plasma creatinine obtained when » dilution of stem extract of J. Gossypifolia was used as protein precipitant. Similarly mean cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and urinary protein values obtained from 3 % Tricholoro-acetic acid as protein precipitant were compared with values obtained from 1/5 dilution of stem extract of J. Gossypifolia as protein precipitant. The values obtained from the stem latex extract at the stated dilutions were comparable with values obtained from the conventional protein precipitants (p < 0.05). The stem latex extract of J. Gossypifolia is suitable as a protein precipitant for creatinine, CSF and urinary protein estimations. However further work need to be done to purify the extract and determine the exact concentration at the stated dilutions as well as the active ingredient in stem latex.

2.
Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol ; 33(12): 1180-3, 2006 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17184498

ABSTRACT

1. The effects of artemether (12.5, 25.0 and 50.0 mg/kg per day, i.m.), administered to different groups of Plasmodium berghei-infected and -uninfected adult Wistar rats for 1 week, were investigated. 2. The parameters evaluated were the feeding, drinking and urinating patterns of the rats and these were compared with those of rats that received normal saline. 3. Artemether caused a significant dose-dependent reduction in food consumption of both P. berghei-infected and -uninfected rats (P < 0.05). Food intake in infected rats was reduced by approximately 7 g/24 h. This reduction in food intake was further reduced during drug treatment with artemether. Artermether also reduced food intake in uninfected rats. The food consumption of rats that received 12.5 and 25.0 mg/kg artemether was restored after stopping treatment, in contrast with rats that received 50.0 mg/kg, in which the significant reduction in food consumption persisted 1 week after drug administration. 4. During treatment with artemether, the water intake of infected rats was significantly lower than that of uninfected rats in the 12.5 mg/kg artemether-treated group, but was significantly higher in infected rats than in uninfected rats dosed with 25.0 and 50.0 mg/kg artemether. 5. For all doses of artemether tested, a significant increase in urine output was observed in infected rats during treatment and 1 week after treatment, whereas in uninfected rats a significant increase in urine output was observed only following 25.0 and 50.0 mg/kg artemether 1 week after drug administration. 6. The present study confirms the anorexic activity of a high dose of artemether in both P. berghei-infected and -uninfected rats. It also indicates that high doses of the drug could cause impaired renal function in rats and that the significant increase in urine output could also be due to other effects of artemether, namely those on thirst, anti-diuretic hormone output and the osmotic pressure of the blood.


Subject(s)
Antimalarials/therapeutic use , Artemisinins/therapeutic use , Malaria/drug therapy , Malaria/physiopathology , Plasmodium berghei , Animals , Artemether , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Drinking , Eating , Female , Malaria/parasitology , Male , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Urine/physiology
3.
Atherosclerosis ; 128(2): 201-11, 1997 Feb 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9050777

ABSTRACT

We assessed the prevalence of coronary heart disease (CHD) risk factors including insulin resistance in 500 (205 males, 295 females) healthy elderly (age > 55 years) indigenous, low socioeconomic group Yorubas residents in either an urban slum (n = 240) or a rural town (n = 260) in southwestern Nigeria. Anthropometric indices, blood pressure and fasting plasma levels of glucose, lipids, insulin and insulin resistance were measured. The results indicated that: (i) gross obesity (4.4%), diabetes (1.6%), hyperlipidaemia (0.2%) and cigarette smoking (4.8%) were relatively uncommon in the population, although the prevalence of hypertension (30%) was higher than previously reported from this population; (ii). the subjects had a relatively high prevalence of multiple CHD risk factors (about 20% had > 4 risk factors), an observation considered paradoxical in view of the reportedly low CHD prevalence in this population; (iii) these CHD risk factors (increased body mass and blood pressure (BP), hyperinsulinaemia and insulin resistance) were more prevalent in the women and in urban residents; (iv) hyperinsulinaemia (20%) and insulin resistance (35%) were common in the population, and were associated, on regression analyses, to such other CHD risk factors as BP and body mass, particularly in women, suggesting, as in Caucasians, that insulin resistance could be an important index of CHD risk; and (v) the excess of multiple CHD risk factors in the women, is due at least in part, to their increased tendency to obesity (8%) and reduced physical activity (83%). This study concludes that: (i) despite the high prevalence of multiple risk factors in this population, CHD prevalence is low, indicating the supremacy of such major risk factors as diabetes and hyperlipidaemia (relatively uncommon here) in the development of CHD; and (ii) potentially the greatest CHD risk is in the elderly women especially if relatively overweight, physically inactive and resident in an urban centre. While further confirmatory studies are necessary in younger subjects and across societal socioeconomic strata, our results nonetheless suggest that attempts to maintain the CHD prevalence at low levels in this population should include efforts directed at reducing excess body weight particularly in women, and advice on maintenance of a traditional diet to keep lipid levels and diabetes prevalence low.


Subject(s)
Cardiovascular Diseases , Insulin Resistance , Age Distribution , Aged , Anthropometry , Blood Pressure , Female , Humans , Insulin/blood , Lipids/blood , Male , Middle Aged , Nigeria/epidemiology , Prevalence , Reference Values , Risk Factors , Sex Factors
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