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Anticoccidial activity of the methanolic extract of Musa paradisiaca root in chickens.

Abstract
The study was designed to evaluate the anticoccidial activity of the methanolic extract of Musa paradisiaca root in chickens. The chickens were divided into six groups of 12 chickens each. Each chicken in five groups was infected with 8,000 infective coccidia (Eimeria tenella) oocysts at day 28 of age while one group served as uninfected control. At day 7 post-infection, two chickens remaining in each group were sacrificed for postmortem examination to confirm coccidiosis. Also at day 7 post-infection, each chicken in four infected groups was given graded doses (250, 500 and 1,000 mg/kg b.w.) of the extract or amprolium (conventional drug). Two groups (an infected and uninfected group) did not receive treatment. Parameters used to assess progress of infection and response to treatment included clinical signs typical of coccidiosis, oocyst count per gramme of faeces (OPG) and packed cell volume (PCV). Treatment of previously infected chickens with M. paradisiaca root extract resulted in a progressive decrease in severity of observed clinical signs, marked reductions in OPG and a gradual increase in PCV. In each case, the changes were dose dependent. There was no significant difference in mean OPG and mean PCV of the extract (at 1,000 mg/kg b.w.) and amprolium-treated groups at termination of the study (at day 50 of age). In the acute toxicity study, the extract was found to be non-toxic to the chickens even at the highest dose of 4,000 mg/kg b.w. The results of this study demonstrated that the extract has anticoccidial activity in a dose-dependent manner and at a dosage of 1,000 mg/kg b.w. had similar efficacy with amprolium in the treatment of chicken coccidiosis.
AuthorsGeorge Nnamdi Anosa, O Josephine Okoro
JournalTropical animal health and production (Trop Anim Health Prod) Vol. 43 Issue 1 Pg. 245-8 (Jan 2011) ISSN: 1573-7438 [Electronic] United States
PMID20717723 (Publication Type: Clinical Trial, Journal Article, Randomized Controlled Trial)
Chemical References
  • Plant Extracts
  • Methanol
Topics
  • Animals
  • Chickens
  • Coccidiosis (drug therapy, veterinary)
  • Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
  • Eimeria tenella (drug effects)
  • Feces (parasitology)
  • Hematocrit
  • Methanol
  • Musa (chemistry)
  • Phytotherapy (methods)
  • Plant Extracts (pharmacology, therapeutic use)
  • Plant Roots (chemistry)
  • Poultry Diseases (drug therapy, parasitology)
  • Treatment Outcome

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