Xavier Lozoya
Mexican Social Security Institute
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Xavier Lozoya.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 1996
Victor Navarro; Ma. Luisa Villarreal; Gabriela Rojas; Xavier Lozoya
Twelve methanolic plant extracts from botanical species used in traditional medicine in Morelos, México to cure infectious diseases have been subjected to a screening study to detect potential antimicrobial activity against Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Candida albicans. The antimicrobial activity of the products was evaluated using colonies growing in solid medium, establishing the minimal concentration required to inhibit their in vitro growth (MIC). The results showed that extracts from Eucalyptus globolus Labill, Punica granatum L., Artemisia mexicana Wild., and Bocconia arborea Watt. possess strong in vitro antimicrobial activity against the tested microorganisms.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2002
Xavier Lozoya; Hortensia Reyes-Morales; Marco Antonio Chávez-Soto; María del Carmen Martínez-García; Yolanda Soto-Gonzalez; Svetlana Vladislavovna Doubova
Ancestral medicinal use of guava (Psidium guajava L. Fam. Myrtaceae) is today supported by numerous biomedical studies concerning the properties of leaf extracts. However, insufficient clinical studies are reported on the use of this plant resource in the treatment of gastrointestinal ailments. The present work reports a randomized, double-blinded, clinical study performed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a phytodrug (QG-5) developed from guava leaves, standardized in its content of quercetin and orally administered to a group of adult patients with acute diarrheic disease. Capsules containing 500 mg of the product were administered to 50 patients every 8 h during 3 days. Results obtained showed that the used guava product decreased the duration of abdominal pain in these patients.
Contraception | 1983
Héctor Ponce-Monter; Hortensia Girón; Xavier Lozoya; Raúl G. Enríquez; Ezra Bejar; Angel V. Estrada; Alfredo J. Gallegos
Differences in uterotonic activity were observed between zoapatle Montanoa (Cerv.), plants growing in their natural habitat and plants growing in an experimental agricultural plot. Details of an in vitro analogic model for assaying uterotonic potency in guinea pig strips is described. Important species differences on the uterine response to zoapatle aqueous crude extract were noticed in rats, hamsters, guinea pigs, cats and Rhesus monkeys. The need for proper biological evaluation of chemical substances already isolated from zoapatle specimens, is mentioned, and the advantages of working with zoapatle specimens grown under controlled ecological conditions are pointed out.
Contraception | 1983
Xavier Lozoya; Raúl G. Enríquez; Ezra Bejar; Angel V. Estrada; Hortensia Girón; Héctor Ponce-Monter; Alfredo J. Gallegos
Kauradienoic acid was obtained from the hexanic extract of M. tomentosa (Cerv) leaves by chromatographic separation. This substance influenced the in vitro contractility of the rat, dog and guinea pig uterine strips. It also induced strong contractions of the guinea pig uterus in vivo when administered intravenously, without changes on arterial blood pressure. The effects produced by the plant infusion, the hexanic extract and pure species were compared. The hexanic of other utero-active compounds in M. tomentosa in addition to those already described is discussed.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 1992
Xavier Lozoya; Victor Navarro; M. García; M. Zurita
An ethnobotanical field study carried out in 200 rural communities determined that the leaves of Solanum chrysotrichum Schldl. are used in Mexican traditional medicine for the treatment of skin mycosis, being particularly recommended to cure Tinae pedis. Clinical trials were performed using a cream containing 5% of a methanolic leaf extract of this plant. Results showed that 45% of the patients were completely cured after 4 weeks of topical treatment. The rest of the cases improved notably in comparison with the control group of patients using the habitual miconazole treatment. The same plant extract inhibited the growth in vitro of the dermatophytes Trychophyton mentagrophytes, T. rubrum and Microsporum gypseum at MICs under 15 mg/ml.
Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 1984
Ezra Bejar; Raúl G. Enríquez; Xavier Lozoya
Montanoa tomentosa (zoapatle) is a Mexican plant popularly used for antifertility purposes and with promising characteristics for the development of a new oral contraceptive agent with uteroevacuant properties. In a previous pharmacological report we established the ambivalent myometrial response to zoapatle leaves aqueous extract (ZACE) depending on the animal species used and on the existence or absence of pregnancy. This fact could be useful in determining an appropriate medical use of zoapatle and suggests an interesting possible hormonal dependence in its mechanism of action. To elucidate the ZACE effect upon the pattern of uterine contractility in different hormonal stages, the rat uterus in vitro during oestrus cycle was studied. The aqueous crude extract of Montanoa tomentosa leaves produced different (or even opposite), effects on uterine motility during the distinct phases of the oestrus cycle in the rat. Furthermore, pure grandiflorenic acid (GA), obtained from the phytochemical work up of this plant reproduced the uterine responses induced by ZACE. The action of zoapatle is discussed in relation to hormonal stage and to a probable adrenergic mechanism involved.
Journal of Chromatography A | 1983
M.L. Romero; L.I. Escobar; Xavier Lozoya; R.G. Enríquez
Abstract The imidazolic derivatives present in the seeds and leaves of Casimiroa edulis (Rutaceae), a antihypertensive popular remedy, were successfully separated and estimated by high-performance liquid chromatography. Dimethylhistamine, methylhistamine and casimiroedine were separated by paired ion chromatography while histamine was derivatized and determined in the reversed-phase mode using fluorimetric detection. In addition, the flavonoid glycoside rutin, an important constituent of the leaves, was determined by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography.
International Immunopharmacology | 2003
Ana María Puebla-Pérez; Xavier Lozoya; Marı́a Martha Villaseñor-Garcı́a
We evaluated the effects of Ginkgo biloba extract (EGb 761) on the cellular immune response of rats with immunosuppression induced by activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. Groups of five rats were subjected to chronic stress by the application of daily electric shocks (ES) over 7 days. This stress produced a significant decrement in the delayed-type hypersensitivity response (DTH) to dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB), and a decrease in the proliferation index of splenocytes. Treatment with oral doses of the phytopharmaceutical EGb 761 (100 mg/kg per day over 7 days) restored both the DTH response to DNFB and the proliferation index. EGb 761 has stress-alleviating properties through its moderation of corticosterone levels. It also possesses antioxidant activity that may contribute to its effects on the immune response. Our observations indicate that the phytopharmaceutical EGb 761 possesses immunostimulatory properties.
International Journal of Immunopharmacology | 2000
Marı́a Martha Villaseñor-Garcı́a; Ana María Puebla-Pérez; Lucila Sandoval-Ramírez; Xavier Lozoya
The apoptotic index (AI) of peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) and plasma corticosterone (CS) levels were determined in Wistar rats treated with phenytoin (PHT) at therapeutic and toxic doses (100 or 200 mg/kg/day, respectively, over a period of 7 days) and stressed by bifrontal electric shock (60 Hz/40 mA/0.2 seg). The values of CS and AI were found to be significantly higher in rats submitted to electric shock (ES) and in rats treated with therapeutic and toxic doses of PHT plus ES, than in rats treated only with PHT (P<0.001). The plasma concentrations of PHT were found to be significantly higher in rats treated with toxic doses than in those treated with therapeutic doses (P<0.001), while the control group (without treatment) and vehicle group (propilenglycol-ethanol-water, 40:10:50), showed low levels of CS, and less than 1% of AI. The DNA analysis by electrophoresis in agarose in all the groups was positive, displaying the ladder pattern characteristic of apoptotic process (200 bp), except in the control groups (no treatment and vehicle treated). Our results demonstrate that chronic stress, caused by ES, produces an elevation of CS. The values of apoptosis were correlated with the CS levels, suggesting that the apoptotic inductor process is a consequence of an increase in the concentration of corticosterone in plasma, in response to the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenals (HPA) axis activation, while phenytoin at therapeutic doses is only a moderate apoptosis inductor.
Contraception | 1983
Angel V. Estrada; Raúl G. Enríquez; Xavier Lozoya; Ezra Bejar; Hortensia Girón; Héctor Ponce-Monter; Alfredo J. Gallegos
A collection of Montanoa (Cerv) specimens was conducted throughout Mexico. Twenty-one specimens were classified, some of them grown in the greenhouse and transplanted in an agricultural experimental field station in the Valley of Mexico. In vitro uterotonic potency was assayed and the results expressed as equivalents of oxytocine, by using estrogenized guinea pig uterine strips. A great variation of uterotonic potency was observed among the wild plants. A clear decrease and uniformity of uterotonic potency was found in plants grown in the experimental field. The study points out the importance of ecological variations in expression of the plants biological activity.