Wednesday, 26 July 2023

Study about Phytochemical Evaluation of Eupatorium glandulosum | Chapter 9 | Novel Aspects on Pharmaceutical Research Vol. 6

 This affiliate highlights about hide of the plant to confirm the vicinity of a large number of subordinate metabolites. Eupatorium glandulosum (E. glandulosum) is a useful curative plant belongs to the family Asteraceae. The phytochemical study of Eupatorium glandulosum extract shows the presence of various elements like flavanoids, alkaloids, phenolic, glycosides, tannins, saponins and glycosides.Alcohol, ethyl acetate, and chloroform were secondhand as solvents in the Soxhlet form to extract the chemical elements of E. glandulosum. The extracts underwent preliminary phytochemical reasoning for carbohydrates, glycosides, alkaloids, flavonoids, phenols, tannins, and saponins as well as physiochemical limit testing. The all-inclusive phytochemical study of E. glandulosum's total phenol and total flavonoid content was carried out utilizing standard procedures.The phytochemical study of three different firm extracts of E. glandulosum showed differing compounds. All extracts revealed the presence of subordinate metabolites. The physiochemical constituents to a degree total ash, acid-mysterious ash, and water-dissolved ash were establish to be 14.25% (w/w), 5% (w/w), and 7.30% (w/w), individually. The initial phytochemical study verified the ghost of sugars, glycosides, alkaloids, flavonoids, phenols, tannins, and saponins. The flavonoid content of the plant extracts was found expected in the descending order ethyl acetate >intoxicating >chloroform and the phenolic content was raise to be intoxicating >ethyl acetate >chloroform.The estimation of phenolic and flavonoid content of the three extracts presented greater aggregation of phenols and flavonoids in the plant extract. The obtained results interpreted the presence of likely phytoconstituents, potential usefulness and substantiated the traditional uses.

Author(s) Details:

M. Silpa,
Department of Pharmacognosy, JSS College of Pharmacy, JSS Academy of Higher Education & Research, Mysuru, Karnataka, India.

Suresh Joghee,
Department of Pharmacognosy, JSS College of Pharmacy, JSS Academy of Higher Education & Research, Mysuru, Karnataka, India.

G. Haripriya,
Department of Pharmacognosy, JSS College of Pharmacy, JSS Academy of Higher Education & Research, Mysuru, Karnataka, India.


Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/NAPR-V6/article/view/11363

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