| Literature DB >> 34555996 |
Prakash Chandra Gupta1, Ashish Kar2, Nisha Sharma1, Prashant Kumar Singh1, Naba Kumar Goswami2, Satyanshu Kumar3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIM: The fruit of Garcinia is a rich and valuable source of bioactive compounds and is traditionally used for treating wounds and ulcers. The present study was carried out to investigate the protective effect of chromatographically standardized fruit extract of Garcinia cowa (GCE) on ethanol-induced gastric lesions in rats and its possible mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: Ethanol; Garcinia cowa; antioxidant; gastric lesion; malondialdehyde
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34555996 PMCID: PMC8475150 DOI: 10.1080/07853890.2021.1981548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Med ISSN: 0785-3890 Impact factor: 4.709
List of drugs commonly used for gastric ulceration therapy with side effects and drug interaction.
| Name of drug | Side effects | Drug interaction |
|---|---|---|
| Cimetidine | Cancer occurrence, Bradycardia, Psychosis, acute pancreatitis, etc. | Phenytoin, warfarin, Theophylline, Analgesics, etc. |
| Ranitidine | Hepatitis, cardiac arrest, delirium, bone marrow aplasia, etc. | Nifedipine, Ketoconazole, quinolones, etc. |
| Omeprazole | Enteric infection, sustained achlorhydria, renal failure, chronic constipation, etc. | Phenytoin, warfarin, diazepam, etc. |
| Antacids | Osteomalacia, Hyperaluminaemia, etc. | Allopurinol, iron, norfloxacin, etc. |
| Sucralfate | Osteomalacia, hypophosphataemic Pneumonia, oesophageal bezoars | Cimetidine, thyroxin, norfloxacin, ciprofloxacin, etc. |
| Pirenzipine | Increased heart rate in ventilated patients | Amantadine, antidepressants, etc. |
| Misoprostol | Colic, diarrhoea, miscarriage, uterine bleeding | Indomethacin, ibuprofen, chlorpropamide, paracetamol, etc. |
Figure 1.(a) HPTLC fingerprint chromatogram of GCE under UV 254 nm. (b) HPTLC chromatogram of amentoflavone and gallic acid present in GCE scanned at 366 nm.
Figure 2.HPLC-PDA chromatogram of GCE and standard alpha mangostin and xanthochymol.
Effect of GCE and ranitidine on ethanol-induced ulcers in experimental rats.
| Treatment (mg/kg) | Ulcer index | % Protection | pH of gastric content |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normal control | 0.00 | 3.731 ± 0.15 | |
| Ulcer control | 27.03 ± 0.82 | – | 2.87 ± 0.13# |
| GCE 200 | 21.91 ± 0.98b | 18.94 | 3.63 ± 0.12b |
| GCE 400 | 15.13 ± 0.56c | 44.02 | 3.92 ± 0.09c |
| RAN 50 | 12.61±.73c | 52.12 | 4.64 ± 0.09c |
Values are expressed as means ± S.E.M. (n = 6 in each group). Statistical comparison was analysed by a one-way ANOVA followed by Tukey’s multiple comparison tests.
#p < .001 compared to the respective control group.
bp < .01, cp < .001 statistically significant in comparison with the ulcer control group.
Figure 3.Effect of GCE on the macroscopic appearance of the stomach mucosa in ethanol-induced stomach mucosa injuries in rats. (A) Normal control group exhibited no injuries to the gastric mucosa. (B) Ulcer control group had severe injuries to stomach mucosa. (C) 200 mg/kg and (D) 400 mg/kg doses of GCE had moderate to mild disruption of surface epithelium in the gastric mucosa in dose-dependent manner. (E) Ranitidine showed mild disruption of surface epithelium in gastric mucosa. Red circle points to the haemorrhagic bands.
Figure 4.Effect of GCE on gastric wall mucus in the EtOH-induced ulcer group. Values are expressed as means ± S.E.M. (n = 6 in each group); +p < .001 compared to the respective control group. ap < .05, bp < .01 compared to the respective EtOH-induced ulcer control group.
Effect of GCE on the level of non-protein sulfhydryl (NP-SH) in gastric mucosa of rats treated with ethanol.
| Treatment (mg/kg) | Non-protein sulfhydryl (µmol/g of tissue) |
|---|---|
| Control | 2.497 ± 0.13 |
| Ulcer control | 1.511 ± 0.09# |
| GCE 200 | 1.743 ± 0.06 |
| GCE 400 | 2.015 ± 0.05b |
| RAN | 2.053 ± 0.10b |
Values are expressed as means ± S.E.M. (n = 6 in each group).
#p < .001 compared to the respective control group.
bp < .01 compared to the respective EtOH-induced ulcer group.
Figure 5.Effect of GCE on microvascular permeability (extravasation of Evans blue) in gastric mucosa induced by absolute ethanol. Values are expressed as means ± S.E.M. (n = 6 in each group); +p < .001 compared to the respective control group. bp < .01 and cp < .001 compared to the respective ethanol-induced ulcer control group.
Figure 6.Effect of GCE on MDA and SOD activity in rat gastric mucosa in ethanol-induced gastric ulcers in rats. Values are expressed as means ± S.E.M. (n = 6 in each group); +p < .001, #p < .01 compared to the respective control group. bp < .01 and cp < .001 compared to the respective ethanol-induced ulcer control group.
Figure 7.Effect of GCE on the histology of ethanol-induced stomach mucosal injury. (A) Normal control group showing intact mucosal lining with flattened epithelial cells and no lesions. (B) Ulcer control group showing severe disruption of surface epithelium (red arrow) and haemorrhagic necrotic longitudinal lesion (yellow circle) and edoema of submucosal layer. The animal pre-treated with GCE in (C) 200 mg/kg and (D) 400 mg/kg groups shows moderate to mild disruption of surface epithelium; reduction in submucosal edoema (green arrow) and surface epithelium is partially restored in a dose-dependent manner. (E) Ranitidine showing mild disruption of the surface epithelium (red arrow), deep mucosal necrosis is absent but mucosal edoema persists.