C E J Van Rensburg1, J R Snyman, T Mokoele, A D Cromarty. 1. Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Pretoria, PO Box 2034, Pretoria, 0001, South Africa. cmedlen@postillion.up.ac.za
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The effects of two humate products were compared to that of prednisolone on a contact hypersensitivity rat model. METHODS: Rats, sensitized with dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB), were placed on a daily oral treatment of 61 mg/kg BW of humate derived from either leonardite or bituminous coal or on prednisolone at one mg/kg BW and challenged 6 days later with a topical application of DNFB to the right ear. The inflamed ears were measured daily. In a toxicity study rats were exposed to daily oral treatment of leonardite humate at 1,000 mg/kg BW for 1 month. A teratogenicity study was done where pregnant rats were treated with 500 mg/kg BW on days 5 to 17 of pregnancy. RESULTS: Only the leonardite humate compared favourably with prednisolone in suppressing contact hypersensitivity. No signs of toxicity were observed and weight gain was normal during the 6-day and 1 month treatments and during the teratogenicity study with the leonardite humate. However, the rats on the other two products experienced slower weight gain. CONCLUSION: The identification of a naturally occurring nontoxic compound with anti-inflammatory activity is exciting and merits further evaluation in the treatment of patients suffering from inflammatory conditions.
OBJECTIVES: The effects of two humate products were compared to that of prednisolone on a contact hypersensitivityrat model. METHODS:Rats, sensitized with dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB), were placed on a daily oral treatment of 61 mg/kg BW of humate derived from either leonardite or bituminous coal or on prednisolone at one mg/kg BW and challenged 6 days later with a topical application of DNFB to the right ear. The inflamed ears were measured daily. In a toxicity study rats were exposed to daily oral treatment of leonardite humate at 1,000 mg/kg BW for 1 month. A teratogenicity study was done where pregnant rats were treated with 500 mg/kg BW on days 5 to 17 of pregnancy. RESULTS: Only the leonardite humate compared favourably with prednisolone in suppressing contact hypersensitivity. No signs of toxicity were observed and weight gain was normal during the 6-day and 1 month treatments and during the teratogenicity study with the leonardite humate. However, the rats on the other two products experienced slower weight gain. CONCLUSION: The identification of a naturally occurring nontoxic compound with anti-inflammatory activity is exciting and merits further evaluation in the treatment of patients suffering from inflammatory conditions.
Authors: E S Trofimova; M V Zykova; A A Ligacheva; M G Danilets; E Yu Sherstoboev; L A Logvinova; M V Belousov Journal: Bull Exp Biol Med Date: 2022-01-10 Impact factor: 0.804
Authors: Maria V Zykova; Konstantin S Brazovskii; Kristina A Bratishko; Evgeny E Buyko; Lyudmila A Logvinova; Sergey V Romanenko; Andrey I Konstantinov; Sergei V Krivoshchekov; Irina V Perminova; Mikhail V Belousov Journal: Polymers (Basel) Date: 2022-08-12 Impact factor: 4.967