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Dive into the research topics where Juliano de Souza Gracioso is active.

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Featured researches published by Juliano de Souza Gracioso.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2003

Evaluation of the analgesic and antiedematogenic activities of Quassia amara bark extract.

Walber Toma; Juliano de Souza Gracioso; Clélia Akiko Hiruma-Lima; F. D. P. Andrade; Wagner Vilegas; A.R.M. Souza Brito

We evaluated the possible antiedematogenic, antinociceptive and/or sedative effects of four different extracts obtained from the bark of Quassia amara namely, 70% ethanol (70EtOH), 100% ethanol (100EtOH), dichloromethane (DCM) and hexane extracts (HEX). The oral administration (100, 250 and 500 mg/kg) of these extracts did not show significant effects in any experiment. However, when administered intraperitoneally, the HEX extract decreased the paw edema induced by carrageenan, showed antinociceptive effects on the hot-plate test and on acetic acid-induced writhing, and showed sedative effects on pentobarbital-induced sleep. Naloxone did not reverse the antinociceptive effect of this extract. In conclusion, although the mechanisms are uncertain, the results demonstrated that these effects are apparently related to sedative and muscle relaxant or psychomimetic activities of the HEX extract of the plant.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2000

The juice of fresh leaves of Boerhaavia diffusa L. (Nyctaginaceae) markedly reduces pain in mice

Clélia Akiko Hiruma-Lima; Juliano de Souza Gracioso; E.J.B. Bighetti; L. Germonsén Robineou; A.R.M. Souza Brito

The decoction or juice of leaves of Boerhaavia diffusa L. (Nyctaginaceae) is used in Martinican folk medicine for its analgesic and anti-inflammatory properties. In the present investigation we studied the acute oral (p.o.) toxicity of a crude extract obtained from a lyophilized decoction (DE) and from the juice (JE) of fresh leaves. We observed no signs of toxicity up to the dose of 5000 mg/kg (p.o.) in mice. At the dose of 1000 mg/kg, neither extract altered sleeping time evoked by the administration of pentobarbital sodium (i.p.). The DE and JE of B. diffusa were assessed in standard rodent models of algesia and inflammation. We investigated the antinociceptive effect of DE and JE in chemical (acetic acid) and thermal (hot plate) models of hyperalgesia in mice. Dipyrone sodium (200 mg/kg), JE (1000 mg/kg) and DE at the same dose (p.o.), produced a significant inhibition of acetic acid-induced abdominal writhing in mice (100, 50 and 47% inhibition, respectively) when compared with the negative control (P<0.001). In the hot-plate test in mice, morphine and JE produced a significant increase in latency during the observation time. The DE, however, only raised the pain thresholds during the first period (30 min) of observation (P<0.05). The extracts of B. diffusa were also investigated for their anti-edematogenic effect on carrageenan-induced edema in mice. However, neither extract inhibited the paw edema induced in mice (P>0.05). In the acetic acid-induced abdominal writhing in mice, pre-treatment of the animals with naloxone (5 mg/kg, i.p.) significantly reversed the analgesic effect of morphine and JE but not that of DE. These data show that the active antinociceptive principle of B. diffusa is present mainly in the juice of fresh leaves and has a significant antinociceptive effect when assessed in these pain models. The mechanism underlying this analgesic effect of fresh leaves of B. diffusa remains unknown, but seems to be related to interaction with the opioid system.


Phytomedicine | 2002

Effect of essential oil obtained from Croton cajucara Benth. on gastric ulcer healing and protective factors of the gastric mucosa

Clélia Akiko Hiruma-Lima; Juliano de Souza Gracioso; E.J.B. Bighetti; Dora Maria Grassi-Kassisse; Domingos Savio Nunes; A.R.M. Souza Brito

The bark of Croton cajucara Benth. (Euphorbiaceae) is used widely in Amazonian folk medicine for the treatment of a wide range of gastrointestinal symptoms. Infusions of C. cajucara bark contain dehydrocrotonin (DHC), the furan diterpene, and an essential oil, a rich mixture of sesquiterpenes. Although the antiulcerogenic activity of the essential oil has been studied in different gastric ulcer models in mice and rats, its mechanism remains unclear. In this work, we examined the ability of this essential oil to increase PGE2 release from mucus cells, as well as its effects on the amount of gastric mucus and on the healing of acetic acid-induced gastric ulcers. The essential oil (100 mg/kg body wt., p.o), significantly increased PGE2 production by glandular cells (by 102% as compared to control) and the amount of Alcian blue binding to the gastric mucus. In chronic gastric ulcers, a single daily oral dose of essential oil (100 mg/kg body wt.) for 14 consecutive days accelerated ulcer healing to an extent similar to that seen with an equal dose of cimetidine. Thus, the protective and healing actions of the essential oil from C. cajucara bark on gastric lesions resulted mainly from an increase in PGE2 release and gastric mucus formation which would protect the gastric mucosa.


Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology | 1999

Anti‐inflammatory and Antinociceptive Effects in Rodents of the Essential Oil of Croton cajucara Benth

E.J.B. Bighetti; Clélia Akiko Hiruma-Lima; Juliano de Souza Gracioso; Alba Regina Monteiro Souza Brito

The plant Croton cajucara Benth. (Euphorbiaceae) is widely used in Amazonian folk medicine for the treatment of a wide range of illnesses. In this investigation the analgesic and anti‐inflammatory properties of the essential oil from the bark of C. cajucara Benth., administered orally, were determined in several standard rodent models of pain and inflammation.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2000

Gastroprotective effect of essential oil from Croton cajucara Benth. (Euphorbiaceae).

Clélia Akiko Hiruma-Lima; Juliano de Souza Gracioso; J.A Rodrı́guez; Marcela Haun; Domingos Savio Nunes; A.R.M. Souza Brito

The gastroprotective activity of the essential oil from the bark of Croton cajucara Benth (Euphorbiaceae) was assessed in three different models of experimentally induced gastric ulcer in mice. At oral dose of 100 mg/kg the essential oil reduced gastric lesions induced by hypothermic restraint stress and HCl/ethanol significantly. In the HCl/ethanol model a dose-dependent gastroprotective effect was found. Moreover, significant changes in gastric parameters such as pH, secretion rate and total gastric acid were found after intraduodenal administration of essential oil under ligated pylorus (Shay) conditions. The acute toxicity of essential oil was assessed in mice. The LD50 values were 9.3 and 680 mg/kg for oral and intraperitoneal administrations, respectively. The cytotoxicity of essential oil was studied also. A dose-dependent cell viability inhibition was found in V79 fibroblast cell cultures with an IC50 of 22.9 microg/ml. Our results support the pharmacological study of this essential oil.


Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology | 1999

Effects of an Essential Oil from the Bark of Croton cajucara Benth. on Experimental Gastric Ulcer Models in Rats and Mice

Clélia Akiko Hiruma-Lima; Juliano de Souza Gracioso; Domingos Savio Nunes; A.R.M. Souza Brito

Croton cajucara Benth. (Euphorbiaceae) is widely used in Amazonian folk medicine for the treatment of a wide range of gastrointestinal symptoms. The essential oil from its bark was investigated for acute toxicity in mice and for its ability to prevent the formation of ulceration of the gastric mucosa in different models of experimentally induced gastric ulcer in mice and rats.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2003

Antiulcerogenic effect and cytotoxic activity of semi-synthetic crotonin obtained from Croton cajucara Benth.

Ana Beatriz Albino de Almeida; Patrícia da Silva Melo; Clélia Akiko Hiruma-Lima; Juliano de Souza Gracioso; Ligia Carli; Domingos Savio Nunes; Marcela Haun; Alba Regina Monteiro Souza Brito

Trans-dehydrocrotonin, the major diterpene isolated from the bark of Croton cajucara, has good antiulcerogenic activity which, however, is accompanied by toxic effects. On the basis of these results, a semi-synthetic crotonin, named 4SRC, was prepared to determine whether this substance has similar antiulcerogenic activity with lower or no toxicity. The natural crotonin was also isolated from the bark of C. cajucara but was not used due to the small amount obtained. The cytotoxic effect of semi-synthetic crotonin, expressed as cell viability, was assessed in (a) lung fibroblast cell line (V79) derived from Chinese hamsters, a system commonly used for cytotoxicity studies, and (b) rat hepatocytes isolated from male Wistar rats. After treatment, cell viability was determined by 3-(4,5-dimethyl-2-thiazolyl)-2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazolium bromide reduction (MTT reduction), total acid content and neutral red uptake assays. To evaluate V79 cell viability, different concentrations of semi-synthetic crotonin were incubated with the cells. To evaluate the antiulcerogenic effects of semi-synthetic crotonin (50, 100 and 200 mg/kg), we used the models of gastric ulcer induced by ethanol/HCl, stress, indomethacin/bethanechol, and ethanol in male Swiss mice and male Wistar rats. The substance had an IC(50)=500 microM in the neutral red uptake and MTT reduction tests and an IC(50)=200 microM in the nucleic acid content test. With regard to hepatocyte viability after treatment with semi-synthetic crotonin at different concentrations, semi-synthetic crotonin had an IC(50)=10-500 microM in the nucleic acid content and MTT reduction tests and an IC(50)=120 microM in the neutral red uptake test. In another experiment, V79 cells were incubated with the metabolites produced by hepatocytes treated with different concentrations of semi-synthetic crotonin. After a 4-h incubation, semi-synthetic crotonin had an IC(50)=500 microM in the MTT reduction and neutral red uptake tests and an IC(50)=370 microM in nucleic acid content test. The substance had significant antiulcerogenic activity in all models studied, suggesting the presence of a possible antisecretory effect combined with a cytoprotective effect. For this reason, the effect of semi-synthetic crotonin was also evaluated on biochemical parameters of gastric juice and gastric wall mucus, both obtained from pylorus-ligated mice. No significant differences were observed in these parameters between semi-synthetic crotonin-treated and control animals. The results obtained with semi-synthetic crotonin are promising, with a significant preventive effect against gastric ulcer induced by different agents. Our data also show that semi-synthetic crotonin was less toxic than dehydrocrotonin and that the cytotoxic effects decreases with the time that isolated hepatocytes were in culture.


Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology | 1998

Natural Products: Antinociceptive Effect in Mice of a Hydroalcoholic Extract of Neurolaena lobata (L.) R. Br. and its Organic Fractions

Juliano de Souza Gracioso; Marçal de Queiroz Paulo; Clelia Akiko Hiruma Lima; Alba Regina Monteiro Souza Brito

An infusion of the aerial parts of Neurolaena lobata (L.) R. Br. (Compositae‐Asteraceae) is used in Caribbean folk medicine to treat several kinds of pain. In this investigation we studied the acute oral toxicity of the hydroalcoholic extract of the plant and the antinociceptive effect of the extract and of its hexane‐ and chloroform‐partitioned fractions, given orally, in nociception and inflammatory models in mice.


Zeitschrift für Naturforschung. C. A journal of biosciences | 2002

Flavonoids and arbutin from Turnera diffusa.

Sonia Piacente; Ely Eduardo Saranz Camargo; Aurelia Zampelli; Juliano de Souza Gracioso; Alba Regina Monteiro Souza Brito; Cosimo Pizza; Wagner Vilegas

The infusion of the aerial parts of Turnera diffusa was phytochemically examined. Chromatographic procedures led to the isolation of a new flavone glycoside, five known flavonoids and p-arbutin. Structures were determined by 1D- and 2D NMR experiments, as well as ES-MS and UV spectra.


Phytomedicine | 2000

Antiulcerogenic effect of a hydroalcoholic extract and its organic fractions of Neurolaena lobata (L.) R.BR.

Juliano de Souza Gracioso; Clélia Akiko Hiruma-Lima; A.R.M. Souza Brito

Neurolaena lobata is a species used widely in Caribbean folk medicine to treat gastric pain and ulcers. The hexane (HxF), chloroform (ClF) and aqueous (H2OF) fractions of a hydroalcoholic extract (HE) of N. lobata aerial parts were investigated for their ability to prevent ulceration of the gastric mucosa. In the stress-induced gastric model the HE, HxF and ClF fractions produced a significant reduction of gastric lesion formation by 48, 70 and 52%, respectively. HE, HxF and ClF fractions (41, 57 and 51%, respectively) also reduced significantly the gastric lesions induced by the combination of indomethacin and bethanechol, and the ulcers induced by HCl/ethanol solution by 77, 86 and 83%, respectively (P < 0.05). The pylorus-ligature experiment demonstrated that the HE, HxF and ClF fractions changed significantly the gastric juice parameters, such as pH values (increases to 5.4, 4.9 and 4.8, respectively) and acid output (decreased by 4.6, 5.8 and 6.2 mEq mL(-1) 4h respectively) and gastric content (increased by 400, 410 and 390 mg, respectively) in animals. In the animals pre-treated orally with the HxF fraction, prostaglandin synthesis was increased significantly, by 104%, and free mucus production was increased by 54 % in the gastric mucosa (P < 0.001). The H2OF did not exhibit activity in any of the experimental models assayed. The data suggest that the HE and mainly the HxF of fractions from N. lobata present a significant anti-ulcer effect when assessed in these ulcer-induced models. Although the mechanism underlying this antiulcerogenic effect remains unknown, it seems to be related to an increased activity of the defensive mechanisms of the stomach, such as prostaglandin synthesis and mucus production.

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A.R.M. Souza Brito

State University of Campinas

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Walber Toma

State University of Campinas

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Anna Paula

State University of Campinas

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E.J.B. Bighetti

State University of Campinas

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Everardo M. Carneiro

State University of Campinas

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Adolfo H. Müller

Federal University of Pará

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