Odongo Charles Okot, Musisi Nathan Lubowa, Waako Paul, Obua Celestino
Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, School of Biomedical Sciences, Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Makerere University Kampala, Uganda.
Front Pharmacol. 2011 Mar 16;2:13. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2011.00013. eCollection 2011.
The high dental disease burden in developing countries has created a need to explore and develop cheap and accessible methods of dental disease prevention. Traditional toothbrushes (chewing-sticks) prepared from specific plants have been used for dental hygiene for generations. When properly used, chewing-sticks may be as effective as synthetic toothbrushes. This study set out to describe traditional chewing-stick practices in a Ugandan rural community, and evaluate the antibacterial activity of two most commonly used plants.
Interviews were done to identify chewing-stick plants and obtain socio-cultural information relating to the practice in two villages in rural Uganda. Field walks were done to pick and voucher the plants, for taxonomical identification and storage. For the two most reported plants, aqueous extracts were prepared and tested for antibacterial activity against Streptococcus mutans using the agar-well diffusion method.
Of the 21 key informants interviewed, all were using or had used chewing-sticks in the past. A total of eight plants were identified as sources of chewing-sticks, with Rhus vulgaris and Lantana trifolia most commonly mentioned. Chewing-sticks were preferred over synthetic tooth brushes because they were less likely to traumatize the gums. Their use has been limited of recent due to scarcity of some plants. R. vulgaris and L. trifolia aqueous extracts showed antibacterial activity against S. mutans with mean diameters of inhibition of 24.33 ± 0.58 and 14.17 ± 0.29 mm on Blood agar respectively, compared to benzyl penicillin control 30.67 ± 0.29 mm.
R. vulgaris and L. trifolia are the most common sources of chewing-sticks for cleaning teeth in this community. The plants contain compounds that are active against S. mutans. These plants merit further studies as they are possible sources of cheap dental health care for the rural poor.
发展中国家的高牙病负担促使人们探索和开发廉价且易于获取的牙病预防方法。由特定植物制成的传统牙刷(咀嚼棒)已被世代用于口腔卫生。正确使用时,咀嚼棒可能与合成牙刷一样有效。本研究旨在描述乌干达一个农村社区的传统咀嚼棒使用情况,并评估两种最常用植物的抗菌活性。
进行访谈以确定咀嚼棒植物,并获取与乌干达农村两个村庄的这种做法相关的社会文化信息。进行实地考察以采摘植物并制作凭证,用于分类鉴定和保存。对于两种提及最多的植物,制备水提取物并使用琼脂孔扩散法测试其对变形链球菌的抗菌活性。
在接受访谈的21名关键信息提供者中,所有人过去都使用或曾使用过咀嚼棒。总共确定了8种植物为咀嚼棒的来源,其中最常提到的是普通漆树和马缨丹。与合成牙刷相比,咀嚼棒更受青睐,因为它们对牙龈造成创伤的可能性较小。由于一些植物的稀缺,其使用近来受到限制。普通漆树和马缨丹的水提取物对变形链球菌显示出抗菌活性,在血琼脂上的平均抑菌直径分别为24.33±0.58和14.17±0.29毫米,而苄青霉素对照为30.67±0.29毫米。
普通漆树和马缨丹是该社区清洁牙齿的咀嚼棒最常见来源。这些植物含有对变形链球菌有活性的化合物。由于它们可能是农村贫困人口廉价口腔保健的来源,因此值得进一步研究。