20 research outputs found
Freeze drying vs microwave drying–methods for synthesis of sinteractive thoria powders
Optimisation of high energy ball milling parameters to synthesize oxide dispersion strengthened Alloy 617 powder and its characterization
Thermal stability of CeO2/ZrO2 multilayer thin films prepared by pulsed laser deposition
Synthesis and structural characterisation of Y2Ti2O7 using microwave hydrothermal route
Experimental and theoretical study of microstructural characteristics and phase stability in equiatomic CrFeMoV alloy
Metal-ceramic diffusion barrier nanocomposite coatings on nickel based superalloys for corrosion and high temperature oxidation resistance
Anti-inflammatory activity of Adenanthera pavonina L., Fabaceae, in experimental animals
Adenanthera pavonina L, Fabaceae alt. Leguminosae, Bengali name 'rakta kombol', is an Indian medicinal plant. It is endemic to Southern China and India, and widely naturalized in Malaysia, Western and Eastern Africa as well as in most islands of both the Pacific and Caribbean regions. This plant has been used in traditional medicine for the treatment of asthma, boil, diarrhoea, gout, inflammations, rheumatism, tumour and ulcers, and as a tonic. The dried and ground bark of A. pavonina L. was extracted, successively, with petroleum ether (PE), dichloromethane (DCM), ethyl acetate (EtOAc) and methanol (MeOH), and the resulting extracts were assessed in vivo for anti-inflammatory activity on carrageenan-induced rat hind paw oedema as a model of inflammation. The extracts were administered orally at the doses of 200 and 400 mg/kg body weight, and statistically significant (p<0.001) anti-inflammatory effects were observed in a dose dependant manner. The MeOH extract (400 mg/kg) showed 37.10% (p<0.01) inhibition of inflammation at the first hour of the study and, the DCM extract (400 mg/kg) exhibited 33.11% (p<0.001) inhibition of inflammation at the third hour of the study which was comparable with that of reference standard drug dichlofenac sodium. The results of this study supported some of the traditional medicinal uses of this plant
