Previous Page  8 / 14 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 8 / 14 Next Page
Page Background

Page 25

Notes:

Volume 13

Journal of Orthopaedics Trauma Surgery and Related Research

ISSN: 1897-2276

Orthopedics 2018

March 08-09, 2018

March 08-09, 2018 London, UK

10

th

International Conference on

Orthopedics, Trauma and Rheumatology

The struggle with rheumatism through

Dracunculus vulgaris

Schott: In the light of ethnobotanical

information

Fatma Tugce Guragac, Mert Ilhan

and

Esra Küpeli Akkol

Gazi University, Turkey

R

heumatism is a systemic inflammatory disease which related with a number of painful conditions of joints, tendons, ligaments,

bones and muscles. People all over the world suffer from the pain and disability caused by this disease. There is no panacea for

rheumatism, that’s why it is included in the group of chronic incurable diseases. The purpose of the current treatment is controlling

the pain and reducing the inflammation. Several potential drugs such as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, corticosteroids,

disease modifying anti-rheumatic drugs, methotrexate and cyclosporine are being tested but none of them has been found safe; all

are known to cause certain side-effects. Traditional medicines are large scale sources for the discovery of original drugs.

Dracunculus

vulgaris

Schott (Araceae) is used in traditional Turkish medicine against rheumatic pain. This study was designed to evaluate this

folkloric usage of

D. vulgaris

. Petroleum ether, ethyl acetate and methanol extracts were prepared from the roots of this plant,

successively. Carrageenan, prostaglandin E2 and serotonin-induced hind-paw edema, acetic acid-induced capillary permeability and

12-O-tetradecanoyl-phorbol-13-acetate (TPA)-induced mouse ear edema models were used to appraise anti-inflammatory activity

of the extracts. Anti-nociceptive activity was tested using a p-benzoquinone induced abdominal constriction test. According to our

results, petroleum ether extract showed the highest activity when compared to ethyl acetate and methanol extracts in test models.

In further studies, it has been planned to perform phytochemical studies on petroleum ether extract of this plant to reveal active

constituents.

Biography

Fatma Tugce Guragac has received her BS degree from Faculty of Pharmacy, Gazi University, Turkey and pursuing her PhD studies with Professor Esra Akkol in

the Department of Pharmacognosy, Faculty of Pharmacy, Gazi University. Her research combines pharmacognosy and pharmacological approaches to focus on

antidepressant, anti-inflammatory, antinociceptive and wound healing activities of different compounds isolated from plants used in folk medicine.

tugceguragac@gazi.edu.tr

Fatma Tugce Guragac et al., J Orthop Trauma Surg Rel Res 2018, Volume 13