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.com
Volume 3, Issue 1 (Suppl)
Toxicol Open Access
ISSN: 2476-2067 TYOA, an open access journal
Toxicology Congress 2017
April 13-15, 2017
April 13-15, 2017 Dubai, UAE
8
th
World Congress on
Toxicology and Pharmacology
Assessment of
in vivo
antimalarial activity of arteether and garlic oil combination therapy
Vathsala P G
Indian Institute of Science, India
G
arlic (
Allium sativum
) is one of the popular herbal medicines used worldwide to reduce various risk factors associated
with several diseases. Garlic contains a variety of effective compounds that exhibit anticoagulant, antioxidant, antibiotic,
hypocholesterolaemic and hypoglycaemic as well as hypotensive activities. To evaluate antimalarial activity of garlic pearl oil
and artemisinin in combination therapy, commercially available α-β arteether (E MAL
TM
) and garlic pearl oil were tested for
its antimalarial activity in
Plasmodium berghei
-infected mouse model. This study demonstrates, for the first time, the
in vivo
antimalarial activity of arteether and garlic pearl either as individual molecules or in combination at various dosage levels in
Plasmodium berghei
-infected mouse model of malaria. After 72 h (day 3) when the parasitemia was about 2-4%, infected mice
were treated with single dose intramuscular injection of 750 μg of arteether in combination with three 100 μL oral doses of
garlic pearl on day 3, day 4 and day 5 and showed 100% protection against malaria. Giemsa stained blood pictures showed
inhibition of parasitemia in combination drug treated animals and the protection during recrudescence interval at arteether
monotherapy. This approach shows that arteether and garlic pearl oil combination therapy gives complete protection in P.
berghei-infected mice. There is a potential to decrease the dose of artemisinin and in developing low-cost antimalarial drug
therapies and for the first time garlic appears to be an ideal antimalarial molecule especially for use in artemisinin combination
therapy.
Biography
Vathsala P G has been working on combination therapy for malaria for more than two decades and completed her PhD from Indian Institute of Science. She is
currently serving in Biology Division of Undergraduate Programme along with research activity. She has published 10 papers in reputed journals on antimalarial
drugs.
vats@biochem.iisc.ernet.inVathsala P G, Toxicol Open Access 2017, 3:1 (Suppl)
http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2476-2067.C1.002