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Pharmaceutical Biology | 2010

In vivo antifungal effect of Combretum and Terminalia species extracts on cutaneous wound healing in immunosuppressed rats

P. Masoko; J.A. Picard; Rl Howard; Leseilane J. Mampuru; Jacobus Nicolaas Eloff

Acetone leaf extracts of Combretaceae species Combretum imberbe Wawra, Combretum nelsonii Duemmer, Combretum albopunctatum Suesseng, and Terminalia sericea Burch ex DC and a mixture of asiatic acid and arjunolic acid isolated from C. nelsonii were tested for antifungal activity against Candida albicans, Cryptococcus neoformans, Microsporum canis, and Sporothrix schenckii on wounds of immunocompromised Wistar rats. The therapeutic agents were selected based on low MIC values ranging 0.02–2.5 mg/mL and low toxicity (LC50) ranging 75.7–168.6 μg/mL. Seven circular, full-thickness wounds were made on the back skin of 24 Wistar rats, under general anesthetic and using an aseptic technique. Rats were infected with different fungal pathogens in groups of six. The treatments were administered topically using 20% concentrations of each extract in aqueous cream. Amphotericin B was used as positive control. Erythema, exudate, crust formation, swelling, and ulceration were used to determine the wound healing process. Throughout the experiment, body temperature, measured using a subcutaneous probe, and weight of the rats were found to be within normal ranges. Epithelial closure in all rats occurred by 17 days. There was no significant difference in contraction of the lesion areas treated with different extracts. The variability in erythema at each lesion in rats infected with different fungal pathogens differed with treatments; the lesion without treatment took a longer time to heal in all cases. Exudate formation was observed until day 12 in rats infected with C. albicans and day 8 in rats infected with C. neoformans. In lesions infected with M. canis and S. schenckii, exudate formation was observed until day 10. The treated group presented a rigid, dark, and thick crust formation after day 3 until day 15. During histopathological evaluations, scant fungi were noted in all the wounds, indicating that infection had occurred but had generally cleared. The antifungal potential of crude extracts of selected plants and a mixture of asiatic acid and arjunolic acid on the wounds of immunocompromised rats was confirmed. The extracts of these plants may possibly be further developed into drugs for topical treatment of fungally infected wounds.


Pharmaceutical Biology | 2010

Antimycoplasmal activity of some plant species from northern Nigeria compared to the currently used therapeutic agent.

I. A. Muraina; A. O. Adaudi; M. Mamman; H. M. Kazeem; J.A. Picard; L. J. McGaw; Jacobus Nicolaas Eloff

Context: Mycoplasma spp. are obligate parasites of humans and animals. But due to the special requirements needed to culture Mycoplasma in the laboratory, little or no research has been done to evaluate the efficacy of medicinal plants on the organism. Objective: To screen medicinal plants traditionally used to treat infections for possible antimycoplasmal and cytotoxic activities. Materials and methods: Acetone extracts of 21 Nigerian medicinal plants were analyzed for antimycoplasmal and cytotoxicity activities using the metabolic inhibition and colorimetric methods, respectively. The extract with the best antimycoplasmal activities was also analyzed for its phytochemical constituents using the desktop method. Results: Calotropis procera (Aiton) R.Br (Asclepiadaceae) extract had the best antimycoplasmal effect with a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 80 µg/mL and minimum mycoplasmacidal concentration (MMC) of 160 µg/mL. This extract contained saponins, tannins, cardiac glycosides, alkaloids, and flavonoids. The extract of Vernonia amygdalina Delile (Compositae) was the most cytotoxic with median lethal concentration (LC50) of approximately 17 µg/mL, and that of Anacardium occidentale L. (Anacardiaceae) was the least cytotoxic with an LC50 of approximately 1919 µg/mL. Discussion: Calotropis procera is a promising plant for an alternative antimycoplasmal agent because the crude acetone extract had a higher mycoplasmacidal activity than the conventional drug tylosin, which is currently used in treatment of the disease in Nigeria. Conclusion: The crude extract of Calotropis procera is worth investigating for the development of a potent agent against cattle Mycoplasma, which has long defied solution by conventional chemotherapy.


Phytomedicine | 2009

Development of a reproducible method to determine minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of plant extract against a slow-growing mycoplasmas organism

I.A. Muraina; J.A. Picard; Jacobus Nicolaas Eloff

Mycoplasma species are fastidious bacteria that require a specialized medium for their growth, isolation and identification. There are no standardized tests to evaluate the in vitro susceptibility of mycoplasmas to medicinal plant extracts. A widely used in-broth, microtitre plate, minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) assay was adapted and evaluated using acetone extracts of Anoigeissus leiocarpus on the isolates of Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides small colony variants (MmmSC). Several problems were encountered including the contamination of the medium by Bacillus species found in plants and the fact that the slow-growing mycoplasmas proved to be poor reducers of the indicator tetrazolium salt or resorcinol. We then examined a pH indicator-dependant technique to detect the acid production caused by the growth of the organism after glucose utilization from the broth medium. The method gives a clear cut-off point that was easy to read and interpret and was also reproducible. The MIC value for acetone extract of A. leiocarpus was 0.16 mg/ml. The development of this method now makes it possible to evaluate extracts of several plant species for antimycoplasmal activity.


Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research | 2010

The use of a rat model to evaluate the in vivo toxicity and wound healing activity of selected Combretum and Terminalia (Combretaceae) species extracts

P. Masoko; J.A. Picard; Jacobus Nicolaas Eloff

Wound healing is a fundamental response to tissue injury and several natural products have been shown to accelerate the healing process. The present study was undertaken to determine the safety and efficacy of the topical treatment of acetone leaf extracts of Combretum imberbe, Combretum nelsonii,Combretum albopuntactum and Terminalia sericea based on their in vitro antimicrobial activity. Four circular full-thickness skin wounds were made on the backs of eight anaesthetised Wistar rats using aseptic techniques. The treatments were administrated topically using 10% and 20% concentrations of each extract in aqueous cream in separate treatments. Indications of erythema, exudate, crust formation,swelling and ulceration were used to determine the wound healing process. All of the wounds closed completely within 17 days. Throughout the experiment, a subcutaneous probe was used to determine that the body temperature and body weight of the rats were within the normal range. C. imberbe and C. nelsonii extracts accelerated wound healing, but there was no significant difference in wound contraction using 10% and 20% concentrations of the extracts in cream. The results also showed the potential usefulness of this model to measure accelerating wound healing.The extracts could perhaps overcome defects associated with healing failure in chronic wounds and prevent secondary bacterial and fungal infections.


Journal of The South African Veterinary Association-tydskrif Van Die Suid-afrikaanse Veterinere Vereniging | 2012

An investigation to determine the cause of haemorrhagic enteritis in commercial pig grower units in the northern parts of South Africa

Annemarie Labuscagne; B. Tom Spencer; J.A. Picard; Mark C. Williams

Necropsies were performed on 36 grower pigs that died peracutely on farms in the northern parts of South Africa. All these pigs were suffering from haemorrhagic enteritis and suspected toxaemia. Samples of the duodenum, jejunum and ileum were taken for histopathological examination and a section of ileum was collected for microbiological examination from each animal. Histological lesions characteristic of enterotoxigenic Clostridium infection were found. Large, Gram-positive bacilli were sometimes abundant in sections and mucosal smears of the intestine. However, only 40% of the cultures were positive for Clostridium perfringens.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2005

Antifungal activities of six South African Terminalia species (Combretaceae).

P. Masoko; J.A. Picard; Jacobus Nicolaas Eloff


South African Journal of Botany | 2007

The antifungal activity of twenty-four southern African Combretum species (Combretaceae)

P. Masoko; J.A. Picard; Jacobus Nicolaas Eloff


South African Journal of Botany | 2007

Resistance of animal fungal pathogens to solvents used in bioassays

Jacobus Nicolaas Eloff; P. Masoko; J.A. Picard


Veterinary Microbiology | 2008

The bacteriology and antimicrobial susceptibility of infected and non-infected dog bite wounds: Fifty cases

Bruce Meyers; Johan P. Schoeman; Amelia Goddard; J.A. Picard


Journal of The South African Veterinary Association-tydskrif Van Die Suid-afrikaanse Veterinere Vereniging | 2010

Retrospective study on the incidence of Salmonella isolations in animals in South Africa, 1996 to 2006

Awoke Kidanemariam; M. Engelbrecht; J.A. Picard

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P. Masoko

University of Pretoria

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A Jonker

University of Pretoria

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