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Dive into the research topics where Huda M. Alkreathy is active.

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Featured researches published by Huda M. Alkreathy.


Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2010

Aged garlic extract protects against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity in rats.

Huda M. Alkreathy; Zoheir A. Damanhouri; Nessar Ahmed; Mark Slevin; Soad Shaker Ali; Abdel-Moneim M. Osman

Clinical uses of doxorubicin (DOX), a highly active anticancer agent, are limited by its severe cardiotoxic side effects associated with increased oxidative stress and apoptosis. In this study we investigated whether aged garlic has protective effects against doxorubicin-induced free radical production and cardiotoxicity in male rats. A single dose of doxorubicin (25mg/kg) caused increased both serum cardiac enzymes LDH and CPK activities and a significant increase malonyldialdehyde (MDA) in plasma. However, pretreatment of rats with aged garlic extract (250 mg/kg) for 27 days before doxorubicin therapy, reduced the activity of both enzymes, and significantly decreased of MDA production in plasma. Total antioxidant activity was increased after aged garlic extract administration. Histopathological examination of heart tissue showed that DOX treatment resulted in alteration of cardiac tissue structure in the form of peri arterial fibrosis and apoptotic changes in cardiomyocytes. Pretreatment with aged garlic extract for 27 days ameliorated the effect of DOX administration on cardiac tissue; cardiomyocytes looked more or less similar to those of control. However, still vascular dilatation, mild congestion and interstitial edemas were observed. Our results suggest that aged garlic extract is potentially protective against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity.


Integrative Cancer Therapies | 2012

Mechanisms of Cardioprotective Effect of Aged Garlic Extract Against Doxorubicin-Induced Cardiotoxicity

Huda M. Alkreathy; Zoheir A. Damanhouri; Nessar Ahmed; Mark Slevin; Abdel-Moneim M. Osman

Aged garlic has been extensively studied and has been shown to have a number of medicinal properties, including immunomodulatory, hepatoprotective, antimutagenic, anticarcinogenic, and antioxidant effects. The objective of this study was to investigate the mechanisms of the cardioprotective effect of aged garlic extract (AGE), a widely used herbal medicine with potent antioxidant activity, against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity. Moreover, the study investigated if the cardioprotective effect of AGE might be at the expense of the antitumor effect of the anticancer drug doxorubicin (DOX). Primary cultured neonatal rat cardiac myocytes were treated with DOX, AGE, and their combination for 24 hours. DOX increased p53 and caspase 3 activity–induced apoptotic cell death, whereas AGE pretreatment suppressed the action of DOX. AGE pretreatment did not interfere with the cytotoxic activity of DOX, but it increased the DOX uptake into tumor cells and increased the long term survivors of tumor-bearing mice from 30% to 70%. In conclusion, DOX impairs viability of cardiac myocytes, at least partially by activating the p53-mediated apoptotic signaling. AGE can effectively and extensively counteract this action of DOX and may potentially protect the heart from severe toxicity of DOX. At the same time, AGE did not interfere with antitumor activity of DOX.


BMC Research Notes | 2014

Cardioprotective role of leaves extracts of Carissa opaca against CCl4 induced toxicity in rats.

Sumaira Sahreen; Muhammad Rashid Khan; Rahmat Ali Khan; Huda M. Alkreathy

BackgroundCarissa opaca are used traditionally in Pakistan for the treatment of various human ailments. Therefore, the study is arranged out to assess the cardio protective potential of different fractions of Carissa opaca leaves on CCl4-induced oxidative trauma in kidney.MethodsThe parameters studied in this respect were the cardiac function test (CK (U/l), CKMB (U/l), genotoxicity (% DNA fragmentation), characteristic morphological findings and antioxidant enzymatic level of cardiac tissue homogenate.ResultThe protective effects of various fractions of Carissa opaca (C. opaca) leaves extract against CCl4 administration was reviewed by rat cardiac functions alterations. Chronic toxicity caused by eight week treatment of CCl4 to the rats significantly changed the cardiac function test, decreased the activities of antioxidant enzymes and glutathione contents whereas significant increase was found in lipid peroxidation comparative to control group. Administration of various fractions of C. opaca leaves extract with CCl4 showed protective ability against CCl4 intoxication by restoring the cardiac functions alterations, activities of antioxidant enzymes and lipid peroxidation in rat. CCl4 induction in rats also caused DNA fragmentation and histopathalogical abnormalities which were restored by co-admistration of various fraction of C. opaca leaves extract.ConclusionResults revealed that various fraction of C. opaca are helpful in cardiac dysfunctions.


Frontiers in Neurology | 2017

Characterization of the Antinociceptive Mechanisms of Khat Extract (Catha edulis) in Mice

Elham A. Afify; Huda M. Alkreathy; Ahmed S. Ali; Hassan Alfaifi; Lateef M. Khan

This study investigated the antinociceptive mechanisms of khat extract (100, 200, and 400 mg/kg, i.p.) in four pain models: two thermic (hot plate, tail-flick) and two chemical (acetic acid, formalin) models. Male mice were pretreated intraperitoneally (i.p.) with the opioid receptor blocker naloxone (5 mg/kg), the cholinergic antagonist atropine (2 mg/kg), the selective α1 blocker prazosin (1 mg/kg), the dopamine D2 antagonist haloperidol (1.5 mg/kg), or the GABAA receptor antagonist, bicuculline (1 mg/kg) 15 minutes prior to i.p. injection of khat extract (400 mg/kg). Khat extract reduced the nociceptive response of mice in the four pain tests. Naloxone significantly inhibited the antinociceptive effect of khat extract in the hot plate, tail-flick, and the first phase of formalin tests. Bicuculline significantly antagonized the antinociceptive effect of khat extract on the hot plate and tail-flick tests. Haloperidol significantly reversed the antinociceptive effect of khat extract on the tail-flick test and the first phase of formalin test. These results provide strong evidence that the antinociceptive activity of khat extract is mediated via opioidergic, GABAergic, and dopaminergic pathways. The mechanism of the antinociceptive action of khat may be linked to the different types of pain generated in animal models.


Food Science and Nutrition | 2014

Phytochemical screening and protective effects of Trifolium alexandrinum (L.) against free radical-induced stress in rats.

Shah A; Mushtaq Ahmed; Huda M. Alkreathy; Muhammad Rashid Khan; Rahmat Ali Khan; Samiullah Khan

Trifolium alexandrinum is traditionally used in various human ailments, including renal dysfunctions. The present experiment was designed to investigate antioxidant and nephroprotective effect of T. alexandrinum methanolic extract (TAME) against CCl4-induced oxidative stress in albino rats. Results of in vitro study revealed significant (P < 0.05) antioxidant effects. The ameliorative role of TAME was also examined by investigating the level of antioxidant enzymes catalase (CAT), peroxidase (POD), glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px), glutathione-S-transferase (GST), nonenzymatic antioxidant viz; reduced glutathione contents (GSH) and lipid peroxidation products (TBARS) in the renal tissue homogenate in CCl4-treated rats. The intraperitoneal injection of 1 mL/kg b.w. CCl4 caused a significant depletion in the activity antioxidant enzymes and increased the TBARS contents. Supplementation of TAME at 200 mg/kg b.w. for 2 weeks significantly improved activities of antioxidant enzymes and reduced TBARS formation. Co-treatment of TAME also presented significant protection in maintaining renal urine and serum markers. Antioxidant and nephroprotective effects of TAME are associated with its polyphenolic constituents.


Journal of The Saudi Pharmaceutical Society | 2015

Detection of adverse drug reactions by medication antidote signals and comparison of their sensitivity with common methods of ADR detection.

Lateef M. Khan; Sameer E. Al-Harthi; Huda M. Alkreathy; Abdel-Moneim M. Osman; Ahmed S. Ali

Objective To determine the PPVs of selected ten medication antidote signals in recognizing potential ADRs and comparison of their sensitivity with manual chart analysis, and voluntary reporting recognizing the same ADRs. Method The inpatient EMR database of internal medicine department was utilized for a period of one year, adult patients prescribed at least one of the ten signals, were included in the study, recipient patients of antidote signals were assessed for the occurrence of an ADR by Naranjo’s tool of ADR evaluation. PPVs of each antidote signal were verified. Result PPV of Methylprednisolone and Phytonadione was 0.28, Metoclopramide and Potassium Chloride – 0.29, Dextrose 50%, Promethazine, Sodium Polystyrene and Loperamide – 0.30, Protamine and Acetylcysteine – 0.33. In comparison of confirmed ADRs of antidote signals with other methods, Dextrose 50%, Metoclopramide, Sodium Polystyrene, Potassium Chloride, Methylprednisolone and Promethazine seem to be extremely significant (P value > 0.0001), while ADRs of Phytonadione, Protamine, Acetylcysteine and Loperamide were insignificant. Conclusion Antidote medication signals have definitive discerning evaluation value of ADRs over routine methods of ADR detection with a high detection rate with a minimum cost; Their integration with hospital EMR database and routine patient safety surveillance enhances transparency, time-saving and facilitates ADR detection.


Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences | 2018

Molecular designing, virtual screening and docking study of novel curcumin analogue as mutation (S769L and K846R) selective inhibitor for EGFR

Noor Ahmad Shaik; Huda M. Alkreathy; Ghada Ajabnoor; Prashant Kumar Verma; Babajan Banaganapalli

The somatic mutations in ATP binding cleft of the tyrosine kinase binding domain of EGFR are known to occur in 15–40% of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. Although first and second generation anti-EGFR inhibitors are widely used to treat these patients, their therapeutic efficacy is modest and often results in adverse effects or drug resistance. Therefore, there is a need to develop novel as well as safe anti-EGFR drugs. The rapid emergence of computational drug designing provided a great opportunity to both discover and predict the efficacy of novel EGFR inhibitors from plant sources. In the present study, we designed several chemical analogues of edible curcumin (CUCM) compound and assessed their drug likeliness, ADME and toxicity properties using a diverse range of advanced computational methods. We also have examined the structural plasticity and binding characteristics of EGFR wild-type and mutant forms (S769L and K846R) against ligand molecules like Gefitinib, native CUCM, and different CUCM analogues. Through multidimensional experimental approaches, we conclude that CUCM-36 ((1E,4Z,6E)-1-(3,4-Diphenoxyphenyl)-5-hydroxy-7-(4-hydroxy-3-phenoxyphenyl)-1,4,6-heptatrien-3-one) is the best anti-EGFR compound with high drug-likeness, ADME properties, and low toxicity properties. CUCM-36 compound has demonstrated better affinity towards both wild-type (ΔG is −8.5 kcal/Mol) and mutant forms (V769L & K846R; ΔG for both is >−9.20 kcal/Mol) compared to natural CUCM and Gefitinib inhibitor. This study advises the future laboratory assays to develop CUCM-36 as a novel drug compound for treating EGFR positive non-small cell lung cancer patients.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Ursolic acid rich Ocimum sanctum L leaf extract loaded nanostructured lipid carriers ameliorate adjuvant induced arthritis in rats by inhibition of COX-1, COX-2, TNF-α and IL-1: Pharmacological and docking studies

Aftab Ahmad; Mohammed Abuzinadah; Huda M. Alkreathy; Babajan Banaganapalli; Mohd Mujeeb

Background Ursolic acid (UA) is a promising molecule with anti-inflammatory, analgesic and potential anti-arthritic activity. Methods This study was undertaken to make formulation and evaluation of Ocimum sanctum L. leaf extract (OLE) loaded nano-structured lipid carriers (OLE-NLCs) for improved transdermal delivery of UA. Different surfactants, solid lipids and liquid lipids were used for the preparation of NLCs. The NLCs were developed using emulsion solvent diffusion and evaporation method. Different physicochemical properties, entrapment efficacy, in vitro release evaluation, and ex vivo permeation studies of the prepared NLCs were carried out. The in vivo anti-arthritic activity of OLE-loaded NLC gel and control gel formulation (OLE free NLC gel) against Complete Freunds Adjuvant (CFA) induced arthritis in wister albino rats was also carried out. Results OLE-NLCs were composed of spherical particles having a mean particle size of ~120 nm, polydispersity index of ~0.162 and zeta potential of ~ -27 mV. The high entrapment efficiency (EE) of UA ~89.56% was attained. The in vitro release study demonstrated a prolonged release of UA from the NLCs up to 12 h. The developed formulation was found to be significantly better with respect to the drug permeation amount with an enhancement ratio of 2.69 as compared with marketed formulation. The in vivo biological activity investigations, studies showed that the newly prepared NLCs formulation of OLE showed excellent anti-arthritic activity and the results were found at par with standard marketed diclofenac gel for its analgesic and anti-arthritic activities. These results were also supported by radiological analysis and molecular docking studies. Conclusion The overall results proved that the prepared OLE-NLCs were very effective for the treatment of arthritis and the results were found at par with standard marketed the standard formulation of diclofenac gel.


Cancer Cell International | 2013

Chemosensetizing and cardioprotective effects of resveratrol in doxorubicin- treated animals

Abdel-Moneim M. Osman; Sameer E. Al-Harthi; Ohoud M. Alarabi; Mohamed F. Elshal; Wafaa S. Ramadan; Mohamed N. Alaama; Huda M. Alkreathy; Zoheir A. Damanhouri; Osman H. Osman


Molecular Medicine Reports | 2014

Amelioration of doxorubicin‑induced cardiotoxicity by resveratrol

Sameer E. Al-Harthi; Ohoud M. Alarabi; Wafaa S. Ramadan; Mohamed N. Alaama; Huda M. Alkreathy; Zoheir A. Damanhouri; Lateef M. Khan; Abdel-Moneim M. Osman

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Lateef M. Khan

King Abdulaziz University

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Ahmed S. Ali

King Abdulaziz University

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