Pharmacological basis for medicinal use of Lens culinaris in gastrointestinal and respiratory disorders

Munasib Khan, Arif Ullah Khan, Najeeb Ur Rehman, Anwarul Hassan Gilani

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Crude extract of Lens culinaris (Lc.Cr), which tested positive for presence of anthraquinones, flavonoids, saponins, sterol, tannins, and terpenes exhibited protective effect against castor oil-induced diarrhea in mice at 100-1000 mg/kg. In rabbit jejunum preparations, Lc.Cr caused relaxation of spontaneous contractions at 0.03-5.0 mg/mL. Lc.Cr inhibited carbachol (CCh, 1 μM) and K+(80 mM)-induced contractions in a pattern similar to dicyclomine, but different from verapamil and atropine. Lc.Cr shifted the Ca++concentration-response curves to the right, like dicyclomine and verapamil. Pretreatment of tissues with Lc.Cr (0.03-0.1 mg/mL) caused leftward shift of isoprenaline-induced inhibitory CRCs, similar to papaverine. In guinea-pig ileum, Lc.Cr produced rightward parallel shift of CCh curves, followed by non-parallel shift at higher concentration with suppression of maximum response, similar to dicyclomine, but different from verapamil and atropine. Lc.Cr (3.0-30 mg/kg) caused suppression of carbachol (CCh, 100 μg/kg)-induced increase in inspiratory pressure of anesthetized rats. In guinea-pig trachea, Lc.Cr relaxed CCh and high K+-induced contractions, shifted CCh curves to right and potentiated isoprenaline response. These results suggest that L. culinaris possesses antidiarrheal, antispasmodic, and bronchodilator activities mediated possibly through a combination of Ca++antagonist, anticholinergic, and phosphodiesterase inhibitory effects, and this study provides sound mechanistic background to its medicinal use in disorders of gut and airways hyperactivity, like diarrhea and asthma.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1349-1358
Number of pages10
JournalPhytotherapy Research
Volume28
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2014
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Antimuscarinic
  • Cachannel blocker
  • Gut and airways diseases
  • Lens culinaris
  • Phosphodiesterase inhibitor

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