Eugenol has been employed for decades as a condiment, an antimycotic, an antibacterial, an antiviral, and an antioxidant, and it is one of the natural analgesics most frequently utilized for pain and inflammation. Our objective was to determine the analgesic/anti-inflammatory effect of eugenol compared with diclofenac, naproxen, and tramadol using the formalin test. The formalin method was used in 6- to 10-week-old Wistar rats (weighing 250 g each) divided into six groups: Saline (0.9%); formalin (5%); diclofenac (250 μg/kg); naproxen (400 μg/kg); tramadol (500 μg/kg), and eugenol (1,400 μg/kg), in the intraplantar part of the hind-end trunk of the rats, with n = 5 per group. Eugenol diminished 44.4% of nociceptive behavior in phase 1 and 48% in phase 2 (p ≤0.05 vs formalin). Eugenol was shown to be 1.14 times more effective than diclofenac, but 1.62 and 1.75 times less effective than naproxen and tramadol, respectively, in phase 1 and 1.45 times less effective than diclofenac and naproxen and 1.66 less effective than tramadol in phase 2 (p ≤0.05). These data suggest that eugenol possesses moderate activity in the acute pain phase and greater activity in inflammatory-type pain, and both effects are comparable to those produced by diclofenac and are less than the effects produced by naproxen and tramadol in the formalin test.
CITATION STYLE
Elizabeth Lugo-Lugo, D., De Jesús Pozos-Guillén, A., Zapata-Morales, J. R., Rodríguez-Chong, A., De Jesús Rangel-López, A., Saavedra-Leos, M. Z., & Vértiz-Hernández, A. A. (2019). Antinociceptive local activity of 4-allyl-1-hydroxy-2-methoxybenzene (Eugenol) by the formalin test: An anti-inflammatory effect. Brazilian Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 55. https://doi.org/10.1590/s2175-97902019000118022
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