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Pretreatment With Hyssopus officinalis Ethyl Acetate Leaf Extract Mitigates Gastric Mucosal Injury: A Potential Gastroprotective Strategy
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Peptic ulcer disease continues to pose a significant health burden in the area of gastrointestinal diseases, while ethanol-induced gastric damage is a well-established experimental model for developing and testing mucosal protective agents. In this investigation, we evaluated the gastroprotective efficacy of the ethyl acetate leaf extract of Hyssopus officinalis (EALE) in ethanol-induced gastric mucosal injury in rats, and tried to assess the phytochemical constituents of EALE using ultra-performance liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-ESI-MS/MS). Our findings indicate that pretreatment with EALE at doses of 250 and 500 mg/kg protected against gastric lesions induced by ethanol, with the 500 mg/kg dose completely preventing gastric ulceration (100% inhibition) and more efficaciously than the clinically-utilized omeprazole treatment (86% inhibition, 80 mg/kg). Histopathological analysis showed only intact mucosa indicating no evidence of damage to the tissue in the 500 mg/kg group. Using UPLC-ESI-MS/MS, we characterized a rich phytochemical profile that included 20 metabolites from the EALE, such as phenolic acids, flavonoids, quinones, and vitamins. The major compounds (quercetin 24.09%, esculin acid 24.37%, hesperetin acid 20.46%, and naringenin 8.63%) likely contributed to the cytoprotective implications of EALE. The results of this study support H. officinalis as a natural therapeutic agent with gastroprotective activity and further its development as a new dietary adjunct for gastric ulcers
Polish Pharmaceutical Society
Title: Pretreatment With Hyssopus officinalis Ethyl Acetate Leaf Extract Mitigates Gastric Mucosal Injury: A Potential Gastroprotective Strategy
Description:
Peptic ulcer disease continues to pose a significant health burden in the area of gastrointestinal diseases, while ethanol-induced gastric damage is a well-established experimental model for developing and testing mucosal protective agents.
In this investigation, we evaluated the gastroprotective efficacy of the ethyl acetate leaf extract of Hyssopus officinalis (EALE) in ethanol-induced gastric mucosal injury in rats, and tried to assess the phytochemical constituents of EALE using ultra-performance liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-ESI-MS/MS).
Our findings indicate that pretreatment with EALE at doses of 250 and 500 mg/kg protected against gastric lesions induced by ethanol, with the 500 mg/kg dose completely preventing gastric ulceration (100% inhibition) and more efficaciously than the clinically-utilized omeprazole treatment (86% inhibition, 80 mg/kg).
Histopathological analysis showed only intact mucosa indicating no evidence of damage to the tissue in the 500 mg/kg group.
Using UPLC-ESI-MS/MS, we characterized a rich phytochemical profile that included 20 metabolites from the EALE, such as phenolic acids, flavonoids, quinones, and vitamins.
The major compounds (quercetin 24.
09%, esculin acid 24.
37%, hesperetin acid 20.
46%, and naringenin 8.
63%) likely contributed to the cytoprotective implications of EALE.
The results of this study support H.
officinalis as a natural therapeutic agent with gastroprotective activity and further its development as a new dietary adjunct for gastric ulcers.
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