
Comparative estimation of anticonvulsant activity of cumarines umbelliferone, obtusifole and Haplofillum obtusifolium grass decoction
Author(s) -
О. Д. Барнаулов,
Барнаулов Олег Дмитриевич
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
obzory po kliničeskoj farmakologii i lekarstvennoj terapii
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2542-1875
pISSN - 1683-4100
DOI - 10.17816/rcf13249-53
Subject(s) - umbelliferone , decoction , strychnine , anticonvulsant , pharmacology , chemistry , traditional medicine , medicine , coumarin , epilepsy , organic chemistry , psychiatry
Obtusifole and umbelliferone had low toxicity after enteral administration. Even high obtusifole doses demonstrated weak anticonvulsant activity in the models of maximal electroshock (MES) and pentamethylentetrasole seizures (LD100). These coumarines were not effective in the models of strychnine- and thiosemycarboside-induced convulsions. They revealed neurotoxical influence, reducing unconditioned reflex, normal adoptive mice behavior and did not prevent the loss of conditioned passive avoiding reflex (CPAR) after MES. These coumarines did not antagonize with synthetic anticonvulsants. The Haplophyllum obtusifolium grass decoction administered enterally was not toxic, because LD minimal might not be fixed. It had no neurotoxical properties, prevented the loss of CPAR and mortality after MES, elevated tolerance to convulsive-mortal pentamethylentetrasole and strychnine action. So this decoction demonstrated cerebroprotective properties. The use of Haplophyllum obtusifolium in traditional medicines of Asiatic states may not be explained by only coumarines. It is based on cerebroprotective properties of this medicine.