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Preclinical Trial of Ocotea puberula (Rich.) Nees (“Canela-Guaicá”) in Wound Healing: Validation of a Traditional Medicine Practice Used by Indigenous Groups in Southern Brazil

BACKGROUND: “Canela-guaicá,” “guaicá,” or “canela-sebo” [Ocotea puberula (Rich.) Nees] is a native species that is traditionally used by Kaingang indigenous groups for wound healing in southern Brazil. The aim of this study was to extract the mucilage from O. puberula barks, perform its phytochemica...

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Autores principales: Arcaro, Guilherme, Koga, Adriana Yuriko, Carletto, Bruna, Budel, Giovana Manfron, da Rocha Gaspar, Maria Dagmar, Nadal, Jessica Mendes, Novatski, Andressa, Lipinski, Leandro Cavalcante, Farago, Paulo Vitor, Pinheiro, Luís Antonio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9935797/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36818225
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/3641383
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author Arcaro, Guilherme
Koga, Adriana Yuriko
Carletto, Bruna
Budel, Giovana Manfron
da Rocha Gaspar, Maria Dagmar
Nadal, Jessica Mendes
Novatski, Andressa
Lipinski, Leandro Cavalcante
Farago, Paulo Vitor
Pinheiro, Luís Antonio
author_facet Arcaro, Guilherme
Koga, Adriana Yuriko
Carletto, Bruna
Budel, Giovana Manfron
da Rocha Gaspar, Maria Dagmar
Nadal, Jessica Mendes
Novatski, Andressa
Lipinski, Leandro Cavalcante
Farago, Paulo Vitor
Pinheiro, Luís Antonio
author_sort Arcaro, Guilherme
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: “Canela-guaicá,” “guaicá,” or “canela-sebo” [Ocotea puberula (Rich.) Nees] is a native species that is traditionally used by Kaingang indigenous groups for wound healing in southern Brazil. The aim of this study was to extract the mucilage from O. puberula barks, perform its phytochemical and physicochemical characterization, and investigate its healing potential. METHODS: A murine wound model was used as a preclinical trial for authentication of the traditional knowledge from Kaingang indigenous communities. RESULTS: Alkaloids and polysaccharides were identified by usual qualitative reactions and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. This natural product showed thermal stability and pseudoplastic properties that were considered suitable for the intended use. A higher initial exacerbation of inflammatory response after 7 days, an improved angiogenesis after 14 days, and an increased wound shrinkage after 21 days were statistically significant for the “canela-guaicá” bark extract in the preclinical trial when compared to the silver calcium alginate dressing (positive control). CONCLUSION: The healing potential of the “canela-guaicá” bark extract, traditionally used by the Kaingang indigenous community from southern Brazil, was preclinically validated. This study paves the way for designing novel wound dressings containing this natural product in order to treat acute and chronic wounds.
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spelling pubmed-99357972023-02-18 Preclinical Trial of Ocotea puberula (Rich.) Nees (“Canela-Guaicá”) in Wound Healing: Validation of a Traditional Medicine Practice Used by Indigenous Groups in Southern Brazil Arcaro, Guilherme Koga, Adriana Yuriko Carletto, Bruna Budel, Giovana Manfron da Rocha Gaspar, Maria Dagmar Nadal, Jessica Mendes Novatski, Andressa Lipinski, Leandro Cavalcante Farago, Paulo Vitor Pinheiro, Luís Antonio Evid Based Complement Alternat Med Research Article BACKGROUND: “Canela-guaicá,” “guaicá,” or “canela-sebo” [Ocotea puberula (Rich.) Nees] is a native species that is traditionally used by Kaingang indigenous groups for wound healing in southern Brazil. The aim of this study was to extract the mucilage from O. puberula barks, perform its phytochemical and physicochemical characterization, and investigate its healing potential. METHODS: A murine wound model was used as a preclinical trial for authentication of the traditional knowledge from Kaingang indigenous communities. RESULTS: Alkaloids and polysaccharides were identified by usual qualitative reactions and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. This natural product showed thermal stability and pseudoplastic properties that were considered suitable for the intended use. A higher initial exacerbation of inflammatory response after 7 days, an improved angiogenesis after 14 days, and an increased wound shrinkage after 21 days were statistically significant for the “canela-guaicá” bark extract in the preclinical trial when compared to the silver calcium alginate dressing (positive control). CONCLUSION: The healing potential of the “canela-guaicá” bark extract, traditionally used by the Kaingang indigenous community from southern Brazil, was preclinically validated. This study paves the way for designing novel wound dressings containing this natural product in order to treat acute and chronic wounds. Hindawi 2023-02-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9935797/ /pubmed/36818225 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/3641383 Text en Copyright © 2023 Guilherme Arcaro et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Arcaro, Guilherme
Koga, Adriana Yuriko
Carletto, Bruna
Budel, Giovana Manfron
da Rocha Gaspar, Maria Dagmar
Nadal, Jessica Mendes
Novatski, Andressa
Lipinski, Leandro Cavalcante
Farago, Paulo Vitor
Pinheiro, Luís Antonio
Preclinical Trial of Ocotea puberula (Rich.) Nees (“Canela-Guaicá”) in Wound Healing: Validation of a Traditional Medicine Practice Used by Indigenous Groups in Southern Brazil
title Preclinical Trial of Ocotea puberula (Rich.) Nees (“Canela-Guaicá”) in Wound Healing: Validation of a Traditional Medicine Practice Used by Indigenous Groups in Southern Brazil
title_full Preclinical Trial of Ocotea puberula (Rich.) Nees (“Canela-Guaicá”) in Wound Healing: Validation of a Traditional Medicine Practice Used by Indigenous Groups in Southern Brazil
title_fullStr Preclinical Trial of Ocotea puberula (Rich.) Nees (“Canela-Guaicá”) in Wound Healing: Validation of a Traditional Medicine Practice Used by Indigenous Groups in Southern Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Preclinical Trial of Ocotea puberula (Rich.) Nees (“Canela-Guaicá”) in Wound Healing: Validation of a Traditional Medicine Practice Used by Indigenous Groups in Southern Brazil
title_short Preclinical Trial of Ocotea puberula (Rich.) Nees (“Canela-Guaicá”) in Wound Healing: Validation of a Traditional Medicine Practice Used by Indigenous Groups in Southern Brazil
title_sort preclinical trial of ocotea puberula (rich.) nees (“canela-guaicá”) in wound healing: validation of a traditional medicine practice used by indigenous groups in southern brazil
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9935797/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36818225
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2023/3641383
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