Evaluation of hypoglycemic activity and toxicity profiles of the leaves of ficus deltoidea in rodents

Ficus deltoidea Jack (Moraceae) leaf extract is used as an antidiabetic in traditional medicine. Its widespread usage is reflected by the available preparations in the present commercial market. The efficacy of other Ficus species has not been entirely satisfactory and many antidiabetic herbs have d...

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Published in:Journal of Complementary and Integrative Medicine
Main Author: Ilyanie Y.; Wong T.W.; Choo C.Y.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2011
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79952335861&doi=10.2202%2f1553-3840.1469&partnerID=40&md5=033384411e687cb6e8ced3ef472a08b9
id 2-s2.0-79952335861
spelling 2-s2.0-79952335861
Ilyanie Y.; Wong T.W.; Choo C.Y.
Evaluation of hypoglycemic activity and toxicity profiles of the leaves of ficus deltoidea in rodents
2011
Journal of Complementary and Integrative Medicine
8
1
10.2202/1553-3840.1469
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79952335861&doi=10.2202%2f1553-3840.1469&partnerID=40&md5=033384411e687cb6e8ced3ef472a08b9
Ficus deltoidea Jack (Moraceae) leaf extract is used as an antidiabetic in traditional medicine. Its widespread usage is reflected by the available preparations in the present commercial market. The efficacy of other Ficus species has not been entirely satisfactory and many antidiabetic herbs have demonstrated poor safety profiles. This study examined hypoglycemic and toxicity profiles of F. deltoidea leaf extract in rodent models. Extracts of dried powdered leaves were obtained using methanol solution, n-hexane, chloroform, and n-butanol. These extracts were orally administered to rodents. Their blood glucose and insulin levels, acute and subchronic toxicity, biochemical and histological profiles of liver and kidney were determined. Methanol extract exhibited blood glucose lowering activity in mildly insulin resistant diabetic rats as well as in normoglycemic mice unlike hydrophilic butanol subextract which only expressed its activity in normoglycemic mice. Methanol extract could contain both insulin receptor sensitization and secretagogue constituents. Different from toxic chloroform and hexane subextracts, hydrophilic methanol extract gave zero percent mortality up to 6400 mg/kg in 14 days. It did not induce liver and kidney toxicity upon four-week consumption at 200 mg/kg. The methanol extract possessed mixed antidiabetic actions and exhibited a low level of oral toxicity. © 2011 Berkeley Electronic Press. All rights reserved.

15533840
English
Article

author Ilyanie Y.; Wong T.W.; Choo C.Y.
spellingShingle Ilyanie Y.; Wong T.W.; Choo C.Y.
Evaluation of hypoglycemic activity and toxicity profiles of the leaves of ficus deltoidea in rodents
author_facet Ilyanie Y.; Wong T.W.; Choo C.Y.
author_sort Ilyanie Y.; Wong T.W.; Choo C.Y.
title Evaluation of hypoglycemic activity and toxicity profiles of the leaves of ficus deltoidea in rodents
title_short Evaluation of hypoglycemic activity and toxicity profiles of the leaves of ficus deltoidea in rodents
title_full Evaluation of hypoglycemic activity and toxicity profiles of the leaves of ficus deltoidea in rodents
title_fullStr Evaluation of hypoglycemic activity and toxicity profiles of the leaves of ficus deltoidea in rodents
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of hypoglycemic activity and toxicity profiles of the leaves of ficus deltoidea in rodents
title_sort Evaluation of hypoglycemic activity and toxicity profiles of the leaves of ficus deltoidea in rodents
publishDate 2011
container_title Journal of Complementary and Integrative Medicine
container_volume 8
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.2202/1553-3840.1469
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-79952335861&doi=10.2202%2f1553-3840.1469&partnerID=40&md5=033384411e687cb6e8ced3ef472a08b9
description Ficus deltoidea Jack (Moraceae) leaf extract is used as an antidiabetic in traditional medicine. Its widespread usage is reflected by the available preparations in the present commercial market. The efficacy of other Ficus species has not been entirely satisfactory and many antidiabetic herbs have demonstrated poor safety profiles. This study examined hypoglycemic and toxicity profiles of F. deltoidea leaf extract in rodent models. Extracts of dried powdered leaves were obtained using methanol solution, n-hexane, chloroform, and n-butanol. These extracts were orally administered to rodents. Their blood glucose and insulin levels, acute and subchronic toxicity, biochemical and histological profiles of liver and kidney were determined. Methanol extract exhibited blood glucose lowering activity in mildly insulin resistant diabetic rats as well as in normoglycemic mice unlike hydrophilic butanol subextract which only expressed its activity in normoglycemic mice. Methanol extract could contain both insulin receptor sensitization and secretagogue constituents. Different from toxic chloroform and hexane subextracts, hydrophilic methanol extract gave zero percent mortality up to 6400 mg/kg in 14 days. It did not induce liver and kidney toxicity upon four-week consumption at 200 mg/kg. The methanol extract possessed mixed antidiabetic actions and exhibited a low level of oral toxicity. © 2011 Berkeley Electronic Press. All rights reserved.
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