Antinociceptive Activity of the Hydro-Ethanolic Extract of the Leaves of Mallotus Oppositifolius (Geiseler) Mull. Arg. In Acute And Chronic Pain Models
Date
2019-07
Authors
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Publisher
University of Ghana
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mallotus oppositifolius is a medicinal plant commonly used in folk
medicine to treat disorders involving pain and inflammation, among other ailments. However,
the potential of this herb for the treatment of pain has only rudimentary scientific validation.
The study sought to investigate the analgesic activity of the hydro-ethanolic extract of the
leaves of M. oppositifolius (MOE) in order to provide detailed scientific justification for its
traditional folkloric use.
METHODS: Preliminary phytochemical screening was conducted on the MOE.
Antinociceptive activity of MOE (30, 100 and 300 mg/kg) in acute pain models was evaluated
using the formalin test, the acetic acid-induced writhing assay and the hot plate test. The
mechanism of antinociception was evaluated by employing various antagonists in the formalin
test including naloxone (2 mg/kg), glibenclamide (8 mg/kg), theophylline (10 mg/kg),
ondansetron (0.5 mg/kg), yohimbine (3 mg/kg), nifedipine (10 mg/kg) and atropine (5 mg/kg).
For the chronic pain model, peripheral neuropathy was induced in ICR mice using paclitaxel
(2 mg/kg, i.p.) for 5 days and the effect of the extract on paclitaxel-induced peripheral
neuropathy was evaluated daily for 5 days post induction using the Randall-Selitto test for
mechanical hyperalgesia, hot plate test for thermal hyperalgesia and cold water at 4℃ for cold
allodynia with pregabalin (10, 30 and 100 mg/kg) as the positive control. Sub-chronic toxicity
study was carried out with male Sprague-Dawley rats divided into four groups; group 1
received vehicle p.o. while groups 2-4 were orally treated with MOE daily at 30, 100 and 300
mg/kg for 90 days consecutively. At the end of the test mice were sacrificed for their organs
for histopathological analysis and their whole blood and serum for haematological and
biochemical analysis respectively.
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RESULTS: Phytochemical screening confirmed the presence of secondary metabolites
including saponins, alkaloids, flavonoids, glycosides, sterols, tannins and reducing sugars.
MOE together with morphine and diclofenac (positive controls) showed significant (P<0.05)
and dose-dependent decrease in the nociceptive scores in the formalin test, the acetic acid
induced writhing assay and an increase in antinociceptive scores in the hot plate test. Naloxone,
theophylline, ondansetron, glibenclamide, atropine, yohimbine and nifedipine failed to block
the antinociceptive effects of MOE (100 mg/kg) in the formalin test. The extract significantly
(P<0.05) and dose-dependently increased the paw withdrawal latencies to mechanical and
thermal hyperalgesia after the 5–day induction of neuropathy with paclitaxel in mice. In the
90-day sub-chronic toxicity study, data analysis of mortality, body weight gain, clinical
observations, haematology, biochemistry, organ weights and histopathological findings did not
show significant differences between control and treated groups.
CONCLUSION: The oral administration of a hydro-ethanolic leaf extract of Mallotus
oppositifolius produces dose-dependent antinociceptive effects in formalin, acetic acid-induced
and thermal acute pain tests, and also significantly inhibited mechanical and thermal
hyperalgesia in paclitaxel-induced peripheral neuropathy in mice. There was no extracttreatment
related toxicity in rats following a 90-day daily oral administration. The findings
support the traditional uses of the plant in alleviating pain.
Description
MPhil, Pharmacology
Keywords
Rudimentary, scientific validation, Phytochemical, Mallotus