• Title/Summary/Keyword: lethal dose $(ED_{50})$

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Evidence-based approach for herbal medicine-safety classification : Human equivalent dose-based the margin of safety (한약의 안전성 등급화를 위한 evidence-based approach : Human equivalent dose-based the margin of safety)

  • Park, Yeong-Chul;Lee, Sundong
    • Journal of Society of Preventive Korean Medicine
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    • v.17 no.3
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    • pp.19-30
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    • 2013
  • This study was aimed to develop a new formula for herbal medicine-safety classification in terms of evidence-based medicine. Recently, human equivalent dose(HED)-based therapeutic index was developed for herbal medicine-safety classification by transforming $LD_{50}$ to HED. However, the use of the $ED_{50}$ and $LD_{50}$ to derive the therapeutic index may be misleading as to safety, depending on the slope of the dose-response curves for therapeutic and lethal effects. To overcome this deficiency, HED-based MOS(Margin of Safety)was developed and suggested in this study. The HED-based MOS developed by using $LD_1$, changing to ALD(approximate lethal dose), and $ED_{99}$. The HED-based MOS seems to be more useful and safer than HED-based therapeutic index since its values for several herbal medicines are basically two times less than the values from HED-based therapeutic index. Thus, HED-based MOS can be a good example of Evidence-based approach for herbal medicine-safety classification.

Using Ivermectin for treating channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) infected with Dollfustrema bagarii

  • Manh Duc Vu;Kim Minh Anh;Lua Thi Dang;Hung Manh Nguyen;Trinh Tran Thi;Nhinh Doan Thi;Manh Van Ngo;Kim Van Van
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.27 no.9
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    • pp.614-621
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    • 2024
  • Channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus), an introduced species in Vietnam, is widely cultured in the Northern provinces. The off-white grub disease in Channel catfish, caused by metacercariae of Dollfustrema bagarii (Digenea: Bucephalidae) lodged in internal organs, often results in heavy economic losses. Up to the present, there have been no specific guidelines for preventing and treating this disease. Here, we explore the potential treatment of infected channel catfish through the injection of Ivermectin. We evaluated the tolerance of channel catfish to the drug and determined the optimal dosage for treating off-white grubs disease. Healthy fish weighing 180-200 g received dosages of up to 3.250 mg/kg of body weight. The median lethal dose (LD50) throughout a 24-hour period was 0.808 mg/kg body weight, with a confidence interval ranging from 0.583 to 1.118 mg/kg body weight. The infected fish used for treatment testing ranged in weight from 400 to 500 g. The value for the 24-hour median effective dose (ED50) was 0.253 mg, and the appropriate therapeutic injection ranged from 0.300 to 0.700 mg per kg of body weight. Flowing the histopathological alterations, after the metacercariae were shriveled and died, the immune cells cleaned and eliminated them from fish.