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      Evaluación de la toxicidad de extractos de plantas cubanas con posible acción antiparasitaria utilizando larvas de Artemia salina L. Translated title: Evaluation of toxicity of Cuban plant extracts with possible antiparasitic action based on the use of Artemia salina larvae

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          Abstract

          INTRODUCCIÓN: el ensayo de letalidad de Artemia salina es considerado una herramienta útil para la determinación preliminar de toxicidad de extractos de plantas. En nuestros laboratorios se estudian las potencialidades antiparasitarias de varias especies de plantas. OBJETIVO: evaluar la mortalidad causada por extractos etanólicos de plantas medicinales cubanas sobre larvas de A. salina. MÉTODOS: las larvas de A. salina se expusieron durante 24 h a 4 concentraciones de los 35 extractos etanólicos, pertenecientes a 34 especies de plantas. Se determinó la concentración letal media (CL50), lo cual permitió asignar cada extracto a las categorías de extremadamente tóxico, muy tóxico, moderadamente tóxico y no tóxico. RESULTADOS: del total de extractos evaluados solo 5 (Artemisia absinthium, Luffa cylindrica, Melia azedarach, Melaleuca leucadendron y Simarouba glauca) resultaron extremadamente tóxicos o muy tóxicos, 13 moderadamente tóxicos, mientras que 17 extractos (48,5 %) se clasificaron como no tóxicos al exhibir valores de CL50 superiores a 1 000 µg/mL. CONCLUSIONES: la mayoría de los extractos evaluados mostraron baja toxicidad en este modelo, lo cual resulta favorable. Los 5 extractos de mayor toxicidad no serán incluidos en estudios posteriores.

          Translated abstract

          INTRODUCTION: Artemia salina lethality assay is considered a useful tool to determine preliminary toxicity of plant extracts. In our labs some plant species are studied because of their antiparasitic potentials. OBJECTIVE: to evaluate A. salina nauplii mortality caused by ethanol extracts of Cuban medicinal plants. METHODS: A. salina larvae were exposed to four concentrations of 35 ethanol extracts from 34 plant species, for 24 hours. Mean Lethal Concentration (LC50) was determined to classify each extract into the categories of extremely toxic, highly toxic, mildly toxic or non toxic. RESULTS: out of the tested extracts, only 5 (Artemisia absinthium, Luffa cylindrica, Melia azedarach, Melaleuca leucadendron and Simarouba glauca) were classified as extremely or highly toxic, 13 as mildly toxic whereas 17 extracts (48,5 %) were non toxic exhibiting LC50 values over 1 000 µg/mL. CONCLUSIONS: most of the evaluated extracts showed low toxicity, which is a positive result. The five extremely toxic extracts will not be included in further studies.

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          Plantas medicinales aromáticas y venenosas de Cuba

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            Comparative study of the assay of Artemia salina L. and the estimate of the medium lethal dose (LD50 value) in mice, to determine oral acute toxicity of plant extracts.

            Artemia salina L. (Artemiidae), the brine shrimp larva, is an invertebrate used in the alternative test to determine toxicity of chemical and natural products. In this study the Medium Lethal Concentrations (LC50 value) of 20 plant extracts, Aloe vera (L.) Burm. F. (Aloeaceae), Artemisia absinthium L. (Asteraceae); Citrus aurantium L. (Rutaceae); Cymbopogon citratus (DC. Ex Nees) Stapf (Poaceae); Datura stramonium L. (Solanaceae); Justicia pectoralis Jacq. (Acanthaceae); Musa x paradisiaca L. (Musaceae); Ocimum basilicum L.; O. gratissimum L.; O. tenuiflorum L. (Lamiaceae); Pimenta dioica (L.) Merr. (Myrtaceae); Piper auritum Kunth (Piperaceae); Plantago major L. (Plantaginaceae); Plectranthus amboinicus (Lour.) Spreng. (Lamiaceae); Ruta graveolens L. (Rutaceae); Senna alata (L.) Roxb. (Fabaceae); Stachytarpheta jamaicensis (L.) Vahl (Verbenaceae); and Thuja occidentalis L. (Cupressaceae), were determined using Artemia salina L. (Artemiidae), with the objective of relating the results to the LD50 values reported in mice (tested at three concentrations: 10, 100, and 1000 microg/mL, for each extract). We found good correlation between the in vivo and the in vitro tests (r = 0.85 p < 0.05), and this method is a useful tool for predicting oral acute toxicity in plant extracts.
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              Plantas Medicinales aromáticas y venenosas de Cuba

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                mtr
                Revista Cubana de Medicina Tropical
                Rev Cubana Med Trop
                Centro Nacional de Información de Ciencias Médicas (Ciudad de la Habana, , Cuba )
                0375-0760
                1561-3054
                December 2009
                : 61
                : 3
                : 254-258
                Affiliations
                [01] Ciudad de La Habana orgnameInstituto de Medicina Tropical Pedro Kourí. orgdiv1Laboratorio de Malaria orgdiv2Departamento de Parasitología Cuba ayme@ 123456ipk.sld.cu
                [02] Ciudad de La Habana orgnameInstituto de Farmacia y Alimentos orgdiv1Departamento de Farmacia Cuba
                Article
                S0375-07602009000300009 S0375-0760(09)06100309
                b2faab99-d284-446b-b91b-f972a5f0ed94

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 16 July 2009
                : 22 June 2009
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 21, Pages: 5
                Product

                SciELO Cuba

                Categories
                ARTÍCULOS ORIGINALES

                toxicity,plant extracts,Artemia salina,toxicidad,extractos de plantas

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