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      Antidiarrheal activity of flowers of Ixora Coccinea Linn. in rats

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          Abstract

          Ixora coccinea Linn (Rubiaceae), a small shrub cultivated throughout India, has been reported to possess a number of medicinal properties. It has traditionally been used for the treatment of diarrhea and dysentery. However the claims of Ayurveda have to be validated by suitable experimental models. The present study was therefore undertaken to evaluate the effect of aqueous extract of I. coccinea for its antidiarrheal potential against several experimental models of diarrhea in albino Wistar rats. Here, we report the effects of aqueous extracts of flowers of I. coccinea in the castor oil induced diarrhea model. The gastrointestinal transit rate was expressed as the percentage of the longest distance traversed by charcoal divided by the total length of the small intestine. Weight and volume of intestinal content induced by castor oil were studied by the enteropooling method. Loperamide was used as a positive control. The plant-extract showed significant ( P<0.001) inhibitor activity against castor oil induced diarrhea and castor oil induced enteropooling in rats at the dose of 400 mg/kg. There was also significant reduction in gastrointestinal motility in the charcoal meal test. Results obtained in this study substantiate the antidiarrheal effect of the aqueous extract and its use by traditional practitioners in the treatment of diarrhea.

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          Most cited references51

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          The magnitude of the global problem of acute diarrhoeal disease: a review of active surveillance data.

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            Antidiarrhoeic activity of Euphorbia hirta extract and isolation of an active flavonoid constituent.

            The antidiarrhoeic activity of the Euphorbia hirta whole plant was investigated. The lyophilized decoction demonstrated antidiarrhoeic activity in experimental models of diarrhoea induced by castor oil, arachidonic acid, and prostaglandin E2. It showed no activity when magnesium sulphate was used to provoke the diarrhoea. The lyophilized decoction delayed small intestinal transit when this was accelerated by castor oil but not in normal conditions. A flavonoid, quercitrin, with antidiarrhoeic activity was isolated from this crude drug.
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              Enteropooling assay: a test for diarrhea produced by prostaglandins.

              An assay (enteropooling assay) to test the diarrheogenic property of prostaglandins is described. Fasted rats are given a prostaglandins either orally or subcutaneously, and are killed 30 min later. The entire small intestine is removed and its contents collected into a test tube. The greater the volume of this intestinal fluid, the more diarrheogenic is the prostaglandin. The assay is simple, rapid, quantitative, and predictive of diarrhea. It can be used to grade the relative diarrhoegenic activity of prostaglandins as well as to test agents that may block this effect. The accumulation of fluid into the small intestine is called "enteropooling". It is the sum of (a) the fluid being excreted from the blood into the lumen, and (b) to a lesser extent, the portion of fluid already into the lumen but whose absorption is inhibited by the prostaglandin. The degree of enteropooling depends also on how much fluid flows from the small to the large intestine. Our results support the hypothesis that the diarrhea observed after administration of high doses of prostaglandins is due to accumulation of abundant fluid into the small intestine, and not intestinal hypermotility. This fluid is then carried into the large intestine and eventually expelled as diarrhea. Agents other than prostaglandins were tested for enteropooling activity. Laxatives such as castor oil, hypertonic solutions and bile salts caused enteropooling.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Ayurveda Integr Med
                JAIM
                Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine
                Medknow Publications (India )
                0975-9476
                0976-2809
                Oct-Dec 2010
                : 1
                : 4
                : 287-291
                Affiliations
                Department of Pharmacology, S. Nijalingappa Medical College and H.S.K Hospital and Research Centre, Navanagar, Bagalkot, Karnataka, India
                [1 ] Department of Pharmacology, Jawaharlal Nehru Medical College, Belgaum, India
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence:Dr. Yasmeen Maniyar, Department of Pharmacology, S. Nijalingappa Medical College and H.S.K Hospital and Research Centre, Navanagar, Bagalkot - 587 101 Karnataka, India. E-mail: yasmeen_maniyar@ 123456hotmail.com
                Article
                JAIM-1-287
                10.4103/0975-9476.74422
                3117321
                21731376
                6e0ef4ef-24d1-4572-9e5c-1134d70fbaf5
                © Journal of Ayurveda and Integrative Medicine

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 11 June 2010
                : 16 September 2010
                : 23 September 2010
                Categories
                Experimental

                Complementary & Alternative medicine
                antidiarrheal activity,small intestinal transit,ixora coccinea linn,enteropooling method,traditional medicine,castor oil induced diarrhea

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