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Research Article

Antioxidative and Free Radical Scavenging Activities of Some Plants Used in Thai Folk Medicine

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Pages 221-228 | Accepted 31 Jan 2006, Published online: 07 Oct 2008
 

Abstract

Ten methanol extracts from various parts of seven medicinal plants, Angiopteris evecta Hoffm.., (Marattiaceae) Citrus hystrix DC.., (Rutaceae) Laurentia longiflora (L.). Peterm.., (Campanulaceae) Nelumbo nucifera Gaertn.., (Nelumbonaceae), Piper sarmentosum Roxb.., (Piperaceae), Portulaca oleracea Linn.., (Portulacaceae) and Stachytarphera indica (L.). Vahl. (Verbenaceae), commonly used in Thai traditional medicine, were evaluated for their antioxidative and free radical scavenging activities. Among them, only that prepared from sacred lotus (N. nucifera) leaves exhibited a pronounced activity in the 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) scavenging assay with an IC50 of 90 µg/ml, compared with an IC50 of 30 µg/ml for the butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) control. The same extract was also found to be the most potent in removing the superoxide anion () radical and in inhibiting the 2,2′-azo-bis.-(2-amidinopropane) dihydrochloride (AAPH)-induced erythrocyte hemolysis and lipid peroxidation in a rat brain homogenate. The extract from leaves and peels of the Kaffir lime (C. hystrix.) exerted the strongest effect on production of the hydroxyl radical (OH·). They conferred a twice greater protection of deoxyribose from OH· than did tannin. However, none of the extracts examined in this study showed a significant pro-oxidant action in the bleomycin-dependent DNA oxidation system.

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