Assessment of mexican arnica (Heterotheca inuloides Cass) and rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) extracts on dopamine and selected biomarkers of oxidative stress in stomach and brain of Salmonella typhimurium infected rats

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Pharmacognosy Magazine ,2017,13,50,203-208.
Published:April 2017
Type:Original Article
Authors:
Author(s) affiliations:

David Calderón Guzmàn, Maribel Ortiz Herrera1 , Norma Osnaya Brizuela, Gerardo Barragàn Mejía, Ernestina Hernàndez García2 , Hugo Juàrez Olguín2 , Armando Valenzuela Peraza, Norma Labra Ruíz, Daniel Santamaría Del Angel
Laboratorio de Neurociencias, Instituto Nacional de Pediatría (INP), Mexico City
1Laboratorio de Bacteriología Experimental, INP, SSA, Mexico City
2Laboratorio de Farmacología, INP, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico City, Mexico
 

Abstract:

Background: The effects of some natural products on dopamine (DA) and 5-hydroxyindole acetic acid (5-HIAA) in brain of infected models are still unclear. Objective: The purpose of this study was to measure the effect of Mexican arnica/rosemary (MAR) water extract and oseltamivir on both biogenic amines and some oxidative biomarkers in the brain and stomach of young rats under infection condition. Methods: Female Wistar rats (weight 80 g) in the presence of MAR or absence (no-MAR) were treated as follows: group 1, buffer solution (controls); oseltamivir (100 mg/kg), group 2; culture of Salmonella typhimurium (S. Typh) (1 × 106 colony-forming units/ rat) group 3; oseltamivir (100 mg/kg) + S. Typh (same dose) group 4. Drug and extracts were administered intraperitoneally every 24 h for 5 days, and S.Typh was given orally on days 1 and 3. On the fifth day, blood was collected to measure glucose and hemoglobin. The brains and stomachs were obtained to measure levels of DA, 5-HIAA, glutathione (GSH), TBARS, H2 O2 , and total ATPase activity using validated methods. Results: DA levels increased in MAR group treated with oseltamivir alone but decreased in no-MAR group treated with oseltamivir plus S. Typh. 5-HIAA, GSH, and H2 O2 decreased in this last group, and ATPase activity increased in MAR group treated with oseltamivir plus S. Typh. TBARS (lipid peroxidation) increased in MAR group that received oseltamivir alone. Most of the biomarkers were not altered significantly in the stomach. Conclusion: MAR extract alters DA and metabolism of 5-HIAA in the brain of young animals infected. Antioxidant capacity may be involved in these effects.

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