antioxidant activity of the extracts from salvia officinalis, brassica oleracea, juglans regia, melilotus officinalis, and crataegus oxyacantha at different temperatures

Authors

mohammad momen heravi

shahla daneshmehr

ali morsali

abstract

background & aim: medicinal plants can be a good replacement for common cancer treatment including chemotherapy, radiation therapy and surgery because they don’t have many side effects. the aim of this study was to investigate the effect of temperature on the free radical scavenging in the presence of medicinal plants. experimental: for determination of free radical scavenging activity was used the stable 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (dpph) assay at different temperatures. ethanolic extracts of sage (salvia officinalis), red cabbage (brassica oleracea), walnut (juglans regia l.), yellow sweet clover (melilotus officinalis) and hawthorn (crataegus oxyacantha) one by one and then the mixtures of each pair of plants were investigated. results: the most free radical scavenging percentages are related to plants in single forms not mixtures. the results demonstrated that with increasing temperature, free radical scavenging increased in the presence of sage, while it decreased in the presence of hawthorn. the highest free radical scavenging percentages at temperatures ranging from ambient to body and fever are related to sage at 25˚c, and then walnut leaves at 37˚c and finally, hawthorn at 40˚c.  recommended applications/industries: the results indicated that for preventing herb-herb interactions, medicinal plants as tea, food and fruit are used alone.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Antioxidant activity of the extracts from Salvia officinalis, Brassica oleracea, Juglans regia, Melilotus officinalis, and Crataegus oxyacantha at different temperatures

Background & Aim: Medicinal plants can be a good replacement for common cancer treatment including chemotherapy, radiation therapy and surgery because they don’t have many side effects. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of temperature on the free radical scavenging in the presence of medicinal plants. Experimental: For determination of free radical scavenging activity was use...

full text

Antioxidant activity of the extracts from Salvia officinalis, Brassica oleracea, Juglans regia, Melilotus officinalis, and Crataegus oxyacantha at different temperatures

Background & Aim: Medicinal plants can be a good replacement for common cancer treatment including chemotherapy, radiation therapy and surgery because they don’t have many side effects. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of temperature on the free radical scavenging in the presence of medicinal plants. Experimental: For determination of free radical scavenging activity was use...

full text

Antileishmanial activity of some plants growing in Algeria: Juglans regia, Lawsonia inermis and Salvia officinalis.

The current study was undertaken to evaluate in vitro the antileishmanial activity of three plants growing wild in Algeria : Juglans regia, Lawsonia inermis and Salvia officinalis. The hydroalcoholic extracts of these plants were tested on the growth of the promastigotes of Leishmania major. The plant extract effects were compared with three controls : CRL1 composed of 1 ml RPMI inoculated with...

full text

ANTIMICROBIAL, ANTIOXIDANT AND ANTIBIOFILM ACTIVITY OF EXTRACTS OF MELILOTUS OFFICINALIS (L.) Pall

In this paper, the antioxidant and antimicrobial activity, the concentrations of total phenols, flavonoids, tannins and proanthocyanidins in the water, acetone, diethyl ether and ethanol extracts of Melilotus officinalis L. were analysed and their effect on the bacterial biofilm formation. The highest concentration of total phenols (36.25 mgGA/g) and tannins (21.25 mgGA/g) were detected in the ...

full text

Evaluation of bioactive properties and phenolic compounds in different extracts prepared from Salvia officinalis L.

The therapeutic benefits of medicinal plants are well known. Nevertheless, essential oils have been the main focus of antioxidant and antimicrobial studies, remaining scarce the reports with hydrophilic extracts. Thus, the antioxidant and antifungal activities of aqueous (prepared by infusion and decoction) and methanol/water (80:20, v/v) extracts of sage (Salvia officinalis L.) were evaluated ...

full text

Effect of Medicinal Plants on Free Radical Scavenging: Herb-Herb Interactions

This study was done to investigate the interaction effect of the mixture of each pair of traditional medicinal plants including: Sage (Salvia officinalis), Hawthorn (Crataegusoxyacantha), Walnut Leaf (Juglansregia L.), Red Cabbage (Brassica oleracea), and Yellow Sweet Clover (Melilotus officinalis) on the antioxidant activities and free radical scavenging by using DPPH (2, 2-diphenyl-1-picrylhy...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later


Journal title:
journal of herbal drugs (an international journal on medicinal herbs)

Publisher: research center for medicinal plants & ethno-veterinary, i.a.u., shahrekord branch

ISSN 2008-8884

volume 5

issue 2 2014

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023