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Epilepsy and Behavior 2012-Feb

Anticonvulsant action of Calotropis procera latex proteins.

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Raquel Cristina de Sousa Lima
Márcia Calheiros Chaves Silva
Carlos Clayton Torres Aguiar
Edna Maria Camelo Chaves
Kátia Cilene Ferreira Dias
Danielle Silveira Macêdo
Francisca Cléa Florenço de Sousa
Krishnamurti de Morais Carvalho
Márcio Viana Ramos
Silvânia Maria Mendes Vasconcelos

Keywords

Abstract

Calotropis procera (Ait.) R.Br. is a laticiferous plant belonging to the Apocynaceae family. C. procera latex proteins were evaluated with respect to anticonvulsant and sedative activity in mouse models of pentylenetetrazol (PTZ)-, pilocarpine-, and strychnine-induced convulsions or turning behavior and pentobarbital-induced sleep. In the strychnine- and pilocarpine-induced seizure models, C. procera latex proteins caused no significant alterations in latencies to convulsions and death, as compared with controls. In the PTZ-induced seizure model, administration of C. procera latex proteins in high doses (50 or 100mg/kg) and diazepam caused significant increases in latencies to convulsions and death. C. procera latex proteins (50 or 100mg/kg) and 2mg/kg diazepam caused a decrease in sleep latency and an increase in sleep time compared with the control group and groups treated with 5 or 10mg/kg. Our results suggest that C. procera latex proteins have a central nervous system-depressant activity as reflected in their potentiation of pentobarbital-induced sleeping time and their anticonvulsant action in the PTZ-induced seizure model.

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