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Plants take bite out of deadly snake venoms.


In many warm parts of the world where agriculture remains largely nonmechanized, farmers face the deadly risk of snakebites as they tend their fields. Therapeutic antivenins can be costly--and they require refrigeration refrigeration, process for drawing heat from substances to lower their temperature, often for purposes of preservation. Refrigeration in its modern, portable form also depends on insulating materials that are thin yet effective. , which isn't reliably available in the developing world. A Nigerian pharmacologist has found in local plants a potentially cheap and easy-to-store antidote to all these problems.

Isaac U. Asuzu of the University of Nigeria The University of Nigeria is in the Enugu State town of Nsukka. It was founded by Dr Benjamin Nnamdi Azikiwe, the first president of Nigeria. It is the first indigenous university in Nigeria.  Nsukka in Enugu and his colleagues consulted native healers about plant concoctions they prescribed for snakebites. The scientists then ran extracts from the plants through test-tube assays for activity against venoms of the Nigerian spitting cobra (Naja naja nigricollis), puff adder puff adder: see viper.  (Bitis arietans Bitis arietans

see puff adder.
), and saw-scaled viper (Echis ocellatus).

Products from five plants showed promise. They included bark of the Parkia biglobosa tree and parts of four shrubs whose names Asuzu is withholding as part of an agreement with the suppliers of those plants. When combined, the seven active chemicals identified in the plants performed well in standard antivenin antivenin /an·ti·ven·in/ (-ven´in) a material used in treatment of poisoning by animal venom.

black widow spider antivenin  a. .
 tests, Asuzu reported.

For instance, a tiny quantity of the concoction prevented the viper's hemorrhage-inducing venom from killing chick embryos. Similarly, all three venoms killed mouse skeletal-muscle cells unless the plant antidote was present. In other tests, cobra venom that normally causes paralyzing, sustained contractions of chick-muscle tissue triggered only negligible contractions in the presence of the plant extracts.

Because the plant combo proved active against so broad a range of poison types, Asuzu says, "I presume it would be effective for other venoms," such as those from kraits and rattlesnakes. His team is now looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 international collaborators to begin testing the multicomponent antivenin in lab animals.--J.R.
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Title Annotation:Pharmacology
Publication:Science News
Date:Mar 26, 2005
Words:274
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