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Methanol extract of Terminalia superba induces endothelium-independent relaxation of rat thoracic aorta.

Pharmazie 61(5):470-3 (2006) PMID 16724549

Terminalia superba is highly regarded in some parts of Cameroon in traditional medical practice. We have studied the vasorelaxant effects of the stem bark methanol extract of T. superba on rat vascular smooth muscle. The results demonstrated that T. superba extract provoked a time-dependent relaxation of aortic rings precontracted with norepinephrine (10(-6) M). The vasorelaxant effect of the plant extract was not affected by endothelium removal or by pretreatment with indomethacin or N(W)-nitro-Larginine methyl ester (L-NAME). T. superba extract did not significantly, affect the contraction induced by 30 mM or 60 mM KCl as compared to those induced by NE. Relaxations elicited by T. superba extract were markedly reduced by glibenclamide, a putative blocker for K(ATP) channels and by tetraethylammonium, the non-specific K+ channel inhibitor. T. superba caused a time- and concentration-dependent relaxation of the rat aortic rings that were inhibited by charybdotoxin and iberotoxin but not by apamin. These finding indicate that T. superba extract at least partially relaxes the rat aorta by activating K+ channels, mainly KATP channels and large-conductance Ca2+ -activated K+ channels in rat aorta.

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