Conclusions
SBE exerts antidiarrheal and spasmolytic effects, which provides a pharmacological basis for its use in functional gastrointestinal disorders.
Methods
The antidiarrheal effect of SBE (doses: 125, 250 and 500 mg/kg) on castor oil-induced diarrhea was investigated in vivo. The effect of SBE (0.01-10 mg/mL) on spontaneous or acetylcholine chloride (ACh, 10μM)/KCl (60mM)-induced contraction of isolated rabbit jejunum smooth muscle was examined in vitro. The possible spasmolytic mechanism of SBE (1 and 3mg/mL) was analyzed by accumulating CaCl2 in a Ca2+-free high-K+ (60mM) solution.
Results
SBE (125, 250 and 500mg/kg) could delay the initial semi-solid onset time of mice and also reduce the diarrhea index in vivo. Furthermore, SBE (0.01-10mg/mL) could alleviate the spontaneous or ACh/KCl-induced contraction in vitro. SBE (1 and 3mg/mL) also inhibited the contraction induced by CaCl2, and the concentration-response curves of CaCl2 moved downward and to the right, similar to those of verapamil (0.01 and 0.1μM). Conclusions: SBE exerts antidiarrheal and spasmolytic effects, which provides a pharmacological basis for its use in functional gastrointestinal disorders.
