Antinociceptive Activity of an Ethanol Extract of Justicia spicigera
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(Table presented.). The aim of the present study was to evaluate the antinociceptive and sedative activity of an ethanol extract of Justicia spicigera an evergreen used in Mexican traditional medicine for the relief of pain, wounds, fever and inflammation. At 200 mg/kg po, the maximum dose examined, the ethanol extract of J. spicigera (JSE) had analgesic activity in mice in the acetic acid writhing test, the second phase of the formalin test and the tail flick test that was similar in efficacy to the NSAID, naproxen (150 mg/kg po). JSE was inactive in the hot plate test and and the ketamine-induced sleeping time test; it had no sedative effects. These results show that the ethanol extract from the leaves of J. spicigera has antinociceptive effects in mice without inducing sedation. Drug Dev Res 77 : 180–186, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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antinociception; herbal medicine; Justicia spicigera; kaempferitrin; pain acetic acid; alcohol; antinociceptive agent; buprenorphine; clonazepam; Justicia spicigera extract; kaempferitrin; ketamine; naproxen; plant extract; unclassified drug; analgesic activity; animal experiment; animal model; antinociception; Article; drug effect; herbal medicine; hot plate test; Justicia (plant); Justicia spicigera; male; mouse; nonhuman; sedation; tail flick test; writhing test
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