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1.
Homeopathy ; 108(3): 177-182, 2019 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30836408

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Cochliomyia hominivorax is the major fly causing primary myiasis in livestock animals in Brazil; its larvae develop in the host's living tissues, causing mutilations, which can even lead to death. In conventional treatments of myiasis, chemo-synthetic insecticides have been employed directly on larvae present in the wounds. Homeopathy may represent a healthy and sustainable alternative both to prevent and to treat myiasis in animals and humans. The current study evaluated how the emergence of adult insects is affected by the use of the homeopathic medicines Sulfur 12cH and Pyrogenium 12cH, and the nosode produced from C. hominivorax larvae at potencies 8cH and 12cH, on third-stage larvae of a C. hominivorax colony. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The homeopathic medicines and the nosodes were produced according to the Brazilian Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia. Control groups were distilled water, alcohol, no substance, and the organophosphate insecticide trichlorfon. For each group, 10 replicates were performed. Emergence rate of adult insects was evaluated by descriptive statistics followed by analysis of variance. Homogeneity of variances was verified by F-test and group means were compared with Tukey's test. RESULTS: Mortality rates in control groups were 2.7% for 30% (v/v) alcohol, 4.3% for distilled water, 3.2% for no substance (p > 0.05). In the trichlorfon group, the mortality rate of larvae was 90.8%. For Sulfur 12cH, the mortality of larvae was 94.6%, and for Pyrogenium 12cH it was 98.6%. The latter three means were not statistically different from each other or from the mean found for the trichlorfon group. The mortality rates of larvae were 61.3% and 66.6% for nosode C. hominivorax 8cH and 12cH, respectively (p > 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest that homeopathy could be used therapeutically to prevent and treat animals and humans with myiasis caused by C. hominivorax.


Subject(s)
Diptera/drug effects , Materia Medica/pharmacology , Animals , Brazil , Larva/drug effects , Materia Medica/therapeutic use , Pyrogens/pharmacology , Pyrogens/therapeutic use , Sheep/parasitology , Sulfur/pharmacology , Sulfur/therapeutic use
2.
Parasitol Res ; 116(3): 929-938, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28058537

ABSTRACT

The control of Rhipicephalus microplus is essential to prevent cattle discomfort and economic losses. However, increased resistance and acaricides inefficiency lead producers to adopt strategies that could result in the accumulation of chemical residues in meat and milk with possibilities of poisoning in animals and people. This scenario demonstrates the necessity of research into the identification of novel, effective and environmentally safe therapeutic options for cattle tick control. The objectives of this study were to develop and assess the efficacy of R. microplus biotherapic and of 5% eugenol for the control of R. microplus in artificially infested calves. Eighteen male 6-month-old Holstein calves were divided into three groups of six animals. In Group 1, the animals did not receive medication (control group); in Group 2, the animals received 1 mL of R. microplus biotherapic at dilution 6CH (centesimal Hahnemannian), orally administered twice daily. And in Group 3, they received a single application of eugenol 5% in the pour-on formulation. The median efficacy for biotherapy and eugenol 5% was respectively 10.13 and 13.97%; however, upon analyzing reproductive efficiency, it is noteworthy that the biotherapic had 45.86% efficiency and was superior to the action of eugenol (12.03%) after 37 days of treatment. The ultrastructural study provided information about the effects of R. microplus biotherapic on the ovaries of engorged females and showed disorganization in the deposition of the oocyte exochorion. The results suggest hatchability inhibition of larvae, interference in R. microplus reproduction and future possibilities for eco-friendly control of R. microplus with biotherapic 6CH.


Subject(s)
Acaricides/administration & dosage , Cattle Diseases/drug therapy , Eugenol/administration & dosage , Rhipicephalus/drug effects , Tick Infestations/veterinary , Acaricides/chemistry , Animals , Cattle , Cattle Diseases/parasitology , Drug Compounding , Eugenol/chemistry , Female , Larva/drug effects , Larva/physiology , Male , Reproduction/drug effects , Rhipicephalus/physiology , Tick Control , Tick Infestations/drug therapy , Tick Infestations/parasitology , Treatment Outcome
3.
Homeopathy ; 105(3): 250-256, 2016 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27473546

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: As a therapeutic system, homeopathy is supported by: i) similitude and experimentation in healthy individuals, ii) potentization. A challenge for researchers consists in looking for signals in water (or vehicle) to explain the storage of information in extremely high dilutions and the transfer of such information to the living systems. Anuran amphibian metamorphosis is controlled by thyroid hormones (TH), including the resorption of the tadpole tail. Apoptosis is a genetically regulated form of cell death that can be triggered by various extracellular and intracellular stimuli resulting in coordinated activation of a family of cysteine proteases called caspases. METHODS: This study was blind and randomized. It performed in three stages: I) the identification of the most effective T3 homeopathic dilution to induce apoptotic reactions in Rana (Lithobates) catesbeianus tadpole tail explants stimulated by T3 in substantial, II) study of different controls and III) detection in explants under the action of the most effective dilution of T3, as established in Stage I. RESULTS: There was no statistically significant difference between tail macroscopic dimensions between the groups. T3 10cH decreased the expression of caspase 3/7 mRNA, in explants treated with T3 20 nM. CONCLUSION: The present experiment is in agreement with the hypothesis that T3, at a 10cH homeopathic dilution, changes the metamorphosis molecular network.


Subject(s)
Apoptosis/drug effects , Larva/drug effects , Materia Medica/chemistry , Metamorphosis, Biological/drug effects , Triiodothyronine/pharmacology , Animals , Homeopathy , Organ Culture Techniques , Rana catesbeiana , Tail/drug effects
4.
Homeopathy ; 102(1): 25-30, 2013 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23290876

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The purpose of this study was to reproduce an experiment with diluted thyroxine and amphibians. A detailed account of the difficulties of this line of research has been published by the initial team (Endler and Scherer-Pongratz). One experiment which has been reported reproducible by the initial team and independent researchers is the effect of extremely diluted agitated thyroxine (T30x) versus analogously prepared water (W30x) in amphibians from biotopes above the tree line (highland amphibians). METHODS: (A) The author replicated the experiment. Rana temporaria were taken from an alpine biotope and the methods given in the original protocols were followed. Animals were treated from the 2-legged stage on. (B), the author reanalyzed the results reported by the initial team and by independent researchers (van Wijk, Lassnig, Zausner-Lukitsch, Bach, Harrer). RESULTS: (A) In the author's own experiment, there was a clear trend of T30x animals developing more slowly (i.e. up to 6 h within 3 days) than W30x animals. This is in line with the previous experiments. Due to small numbers of animals, the differences in the frequency of larvae reaching the 4-legged stage and the stage with reduced tail were not statistically significant (p > 0.05). The effect size was large (d > 0.08). (B) In the analysis of all available data with regard to the 4-legged stage, pooled T30x values from the initial team were 10.1% smaller than W30x values (100%) and pooled T30x values from the 5 independent researchers were 12.4% smaller (p < 0.01 and d > 0.08). Analogously, the number of animals entering the juvenile stage with reduced tail was smaller for T30x than for W30x.


Subject(s)
Metamorphosis, Biological/drug effects , Rana temporaria/growth & development , Thyroxine/administration & dosage , Animals , Larva/drug effects , Larva/growth & development , Reproducibility of Results , Water
5.
Homeopathy ; 97(1): 3-9, 2008 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18194759

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Previous experiments show that amphibian larvae are responsive to homeopathically prepared thyroxine. METHODS: We studied the effect of a highly diluted and agitated thyroxine solution exposed to various electromagnetic fields on metamorphosis in highland Rana temporaria. The devices tested were: microwave oven, mobile phone, airport X-ray, and a red light barcode scanner. Animals were treated either with homeopathically prepared thyroxine (10(-30) parts by weight, 10(-35) in the water in which the animals were kept), or analogously prepared blank solution, or analogously prepared thyroxine exposed to the electromagnetic field of one of the devices tested. Solutions were administered at 48h intervals according to a standardized protocol. RESULTS: Animals treated with the standard test solution thyroxine 10(-30) metamorphosed more slowly than the control animals, ie the effect of the homeopathically prepared thyroxine was opposed to the usual physiological effect of molecular thyroxine. The cumulative number of test animals that had reached the four-legged stage at defined points in time was smaller in the group treated with homeopathically prepared thyroxine at most of the points in time. This was found independently by all three research teams involved. In contrast, this effect did not occur when the thyroxine solution had been exposed to the field of the early model microwave oven, or mobile phone. There was no difference between aqueous or alcoholic solutions were used, and there was, if any, only a small protective effect from aluminum foil. Airport X-ray and red light barcode scanning did not diminish the effect of the homeopathic solution.


Subject(s)
Homeopathy/methods , Metamorphosis, Biological/drug effects , Metamorphosis, Biological/radiation effects , Rana temporaria , Thyroxine/pharmacology , Animals , Chi-Square Distribution , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Electromagnetic Fields , Larva/drug effects , Larva/radiation effects , Microwaves , Random Allocation , Telephone , Television , Thyroxine/administration & dosage
6.
J Photochem Photobiol B ; 140: 79-84, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25108203

ABSTRACT

The influence of beta-cypermethrin, a commercial insecticide, and Cicuta virosa L. var. latisecta Celak (Umbelliferae:Cicutal), an insecticidal plant, on the spontaneous ultraweak photon emissions from larvae of Spodoptera litura Fabricius and Zophobas morio Fabricius were studied. The increased percentages of spontaneous photon emission intensities from S. litura treated with 0.1 and 1 µg/ml beta-cypermethrin were both lower than those of the control in the 24 post-treatment hours, remarkable difference could also be observed during the same period from Z. morio treated with beta-cypermethrin at 0.156, 0.313 and 0.625 µg/ml. The increased percentages of spontaneous photon emission intensities from the two mentioned insects treated with 10,100 and 1000 µg/ml petroleum ether fraction of C. virosa L. var. latisecta, which displayed little activity against whole insects, could also be changed noticeably. The present study indicated that change in the intensity of spontaneous ultraweak photon emission from insect could be used as a novel method for screening insecticidal compounds with very low content in plant.


Subject(s)
Insecticides/chemistry , Pyrethrins/chemistry , Alkanes/chemistry , Animals , Cicuta/chemistry , Cicuta/metabolism , Coleoptera/growth & development , Insecticides/toxicity , Larva/drug effects , Larva/physiology , Luminescent Measurements , Photons , Plant Extracts/chemistry , Plant Extracts/toxicity , Pyrethrins/toxicity , Spodoptera/growth & development , Time Factors
7.
Forsch Komplementmed ; 14(6): 353-7, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18219210

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Studies performed in 5 laboratories have shown that homeopathically prepared highly diluted thyroxin (10(-30)=30x) slowed down metamorphosis of highland amphibians. Metamorphosis of lowland amphibians, however, could be slowed down by a low dilution of thyroxin (10(-8)=8x) if animals had been artificially pretreated with thyroxin. OBJECTIVE: To combine the advantages of using animals from highland biotopes and hyperstimulation prior to treatment. ANIMALS AND METHODS: Rana temporaria from an alpine biotope were pretreated in an aqueous molecular thyroxin dilution (10(-8) parts by weight, hyperstimulation). This is supposed to accelerate metamorphosis. In accordance with the homeopathic idea of detoxification or cure, one group of these hyperstimulated animals was then treated with thyroxin 30x, and another group with water 30x. Experiments were performed by 4 independent researchers. RESULTS: As a trend, the thyroxin-30x animals metamorphosed more slowly than the water-30x animals. The number of thyroxin-30x animals that reached the 4-legged stage at defined points in time was slightly smaller at some but not all points in time, compared to control. This is in line with previous findings and can be discussed as an interesting result. Contrary to our working hypothesis, however, differences were not bigger than in the previous experiments in which animals had not been pretreated with thyroxin 10(-8). CONCLUSION: This study supports previous findings but does not prove the assumption that pretreatment of highland animals with molecular thyroxine improves the original protocol.


Subject(s)
Materia Medica/pharmacology , Metamorphosis, Biological/drug effects , Rana temporaria/growth & development , Thyroxine/pharmacology , Animals , Larva/drug effects , Materia Medica/administration & dosage , Random Allocation , Thyroxine/administration & dosage , Time Factors , Water/administration & dosage , Water/pharmacology
8.
Homeopathy ; 95(3): 148-50, 2006 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16815518

ABSTRACT

Silk worm (Bombyx mori L.) larvae were fed on Mulberry leaves treated with Nux vomica mother tincture. The impact on larval, cocoon, shell and pupal weight, silk ratio, average filament length and denier, and number of breakages during reeling were investigated. The results were positive in all parameters under study except cocoon weight, pupal weight, and the average denier of the filament.


Subject(s)
Bombyx/drug effects , Larva/drug effects , Morus/drug effects , Plant Extracts/pharmacology , Strychnos nux-vomica , Animals , Bombyx/growth & development , Larva/growth & development , Plant Leaves/drug effects , Silk/drug effects
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