Arquivo Brasileiro de Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia (Sep 2023)

In vitro antiparasitic activity of ethanolic leaves extract of Anethum graveolens

  • S.N. Maodaa,
  • S. Al-Quraishy,
  • R. Abdel-Gaber,
  • A. Alatawi,
  • S.A. Alawwad,
  • E.M. Al-Shaebi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1678-4162-13024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 75, no. 5
pp. 893 – 901

Abstract

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ABSTRACT Natural products are safe environmentally friendly agents and have no negative impact on the environment, they can be used to combat parasitic diseases. Helminthiasis and coccidiosis are parasitic diseases that harm both health and the economy. This research aimed to see how Anethum graveolens leaves extract (AGLE) worked as an anti-parasitic modulator during oocyst sporulation of an Eimeria papillata infection. FT-IR phytochemical analysis revealed the presence of eight compounds. The time required to induce paralysis and death in worms at the highest concentration (200 mg/mL) was 4.57±0.26 and 5.22±0.10 min, respectively. In an in vitro study, AGLE (300 mg/ml) inhibited sporulation by approximately 100% after 72 and 96 hr. AGLE (200, 100, and 50 mg/ml), amprolium, DettolTM, and phenol induced variable inhibition levels at 96 hr of 5.54%, 1.01%, 37.33%, 81.33%, and 89.33%, respectively. Our findings suggest that AGLE has potent anthelmintic and anticoccidial properties that could be further developed into a novel therapeutic agent.

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