Mathieu Kra Adou Koffi, Marcel Ahon Gnamien, Djè Djo-Bi, Sitapha Ouattara, Adama Coulibaly, Joseph Djaman Allico
Department of Biochemistry, Laboratory of Pharmacodynamy Biochemistry, UFR of Biosciences, Université Felix Houphouët-Boigny, Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire.
International Language Office, Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire.
J Intercult Ethnopharmacol. 2014 Oct-Dec;3(4):159-66. doi: 10.5455/jice.20140627125512. Epub 2014 Jul 10.
This study was to evaluate in vitro anti-fungal activity of aqueous and hydroethanolic from medicinal plants extracts collected in Côte d'Ivoire.
Plants extracts were prepared by homogenization and separately incorporated to Sabouraud agar using the agar slanted double dilution method. Ketoconazole was used as standards for anti-fungal assay. The anti-fungal tests were performed by sowing 1000 cells of Candida albicans on the previously prepared medium culture. Anti-fungal activity was determined by evaluating anti-fungal parameters values (minimal fungicidal concentrations [MFC] and IC50).
The results showed that all extracts possessed anti-fungal activities whose levels vary from plant species to another. Eight of them had a satisfactory anti-candidosic activity and extracts from Terminalia species were the most active. Among them the Terminalia superba extracts generated the strongest activities (MFC = 0.0975 mg/mL). Compared with ketoconazole (MFC = 0.390 mg/mL), the T. superba extracts, aqueous (MFC = 0.195 mg/mL) and hydroethanolic (0.0975 mg/mL) were successively twice and four times more active. The worst anti-fungal activity (MFC = 1600 mg/mL) was obtained with the Guarea cedrata aqueous extract.
All medicinal plants extracts produced anti-fungal activities, and T. superba was the most active.