| First Author | Fournet A | Year | 1992 |
| Journal | Trop Med Parasitol | Volume | 43 |
| Issue | 4 | Pages | 219-22 |
| PubMed ID | 1293723 | Mgi Jnum | J:11899 |
| Mgi Id | MGI:60169 | Citation | Fournet A, et al. (1992) Effect of natural naphthoquinones in BALB/c mice infected with Leishmania amazonensis and L. venezuelensis. Trop Med Parasitol 43(4):219-22 |
| abstractText | Plumbagin, 3,3'-biplumbagin and 8,8'-biplumbagin are naphthoquinones isolated by activity-directed fractionation from a Bolivian plant, Pera benensis, used in folk medicine as treatment of cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania braziliensis. BALB/c mice were infected with L. mexicana or L. venezuelensis and treated 24 h after the parasitic infection with plumbagin (5 or 2.5 mg/kg/day), 3,3'-biplumbagin, 8,8'-biplumbagin (25 mg/kg/d) or Glucantime (200 mg/kg/d). Lesion development was the criteria employed to evaluate the inhibitory effect. The bis-naphthoquinones were less potent than Glucantime against L. amazonensis and L. venezuelensis. Plubagin and Glucantime delayed the development of L. amazonensis and L. venezuelensis. Assays of a single local treatment on foot-pad infection two weeks after the parasitic inoculation with L. amazonensis showed that 8,8'-biplumbagin (50 mg/kg/d) was as potent as Glucantime (400 mg/kg/d). |