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Year 2014 - Volume 34, Number 11
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Study of the anthelminthic activity of the ethanol extract of Jatropha mollissima (Pohl) Baill. (Euphorbiaceae) on Haemonchus contortus in sheep of the Paraiba semiarid, Brazil, 34(11):1051-1055
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ABSTRACT.- Ribeiro A.R.C., Andrade F.D., Medeiros M.C., Camboim A.S., Pereira Jr F.A., Athayde A.C.R., Rodrigues O.G. & Silva W.W. 2014. [Study of the anthelminthic activity of the ethanol extract of Jatropha mollissima (Pohl) Baill. (Euphorbiaceae) on Haemonchus contortus in sheep of the Paraiba semiarid, Brazil.] Estudo da atividade anti-helmíntica do extrato etanólico de Jatropha mollissima (Pohl) Baill. (Euphorbiaceae) sob Haemonchus contortus em ovinos no semiárido paraibano. Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira 34(11):1051-1055. Programa de Pós-Graduação em Zootecnia, Universidade Federal de Campina Grande, Rodovia Patos-Teixeira, Km Zero, Jatobá, Patos PB 58700-970, Brazil. E-mail: a.raquel.ribeiro@hotmail.com
This study aimed to evaluate the anthelmintic effect of Jatropha mollissima through in vitro and in vivo experiments. Initially we investigated the concentration of extract with bioactive effect, through the toxicity evolution test of the ethanol extract of J. mollissima on the microcrustacean Artemia salina, obtaining CL50 concentration of 660.80µg/ml, which was tested in fecal cultures containing infective larvae of Haemonchus contortus and in animals for the verification of OPG reduction. For in vivo test, the extract was dissolved in water to obtain concentrations of 660.80µg/ml and 1321.6µg/ml. Feces were collected weekly and blood was collected every fifteen days. As a result of in vitro test, the ethanol extract of the stem of J. mollissima proved toxic on A. salina, with CL50 less than 1000µg/ml and inhibited the eggs hatching and the development of larvae of H. contortus, presenting an efficiency of 70.77%. In vivo test revealed that the extract is also effective in sheep, with a significant reduction in the count of OPG after 28 days of experiment, 47 and 44% of reduction in the groups treated with the extract, 7.5% in the untreated group of animals and 40.6% with ivermectin. Even parasitized, the animals remained clinically healthy and without anemia. The ethanol extract of the stem of Jatropha mollissima may represent an alternative to the control of sheep worms, because it slows the parasitic resistance. |
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