THE
ANTIMICROBIAL ACTIVITIES OF CAMADOL-METHANOL EXTRACT OF CASHEW NUT ON SOME
SELECTED BACTERIA
ABSTRACT
The antimicrobial activity of
alcoholic extract of cashew nut (Anacardium occidentale) was tested on some
pathogenic microorganisms collected from the laboratory. Fresh cashew nuts were
macerated and extracted using absolute methanol at a dilution ratio of 1:2 for
24 hours at room temperature. This extract was filtered using a Whatman filter
paper No. 40 into a conical flask and the filtrate heated at 60°C for 45
minutes to remove the methanol. The filtrate was used to fill 5mm diameter
wells on nutrient agar plates (a total of 120 organisms comprising 20
Salmonella typhi, 20 Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and 10 Enterococcus faecalis were
used for this assay). The following organisms were sensitive to crude extract
of cashew nut with mean zone of inhibition of 15mm for Escherichia coli, 20mm
for Pseudomonas aeruginosa, 17mm for both Staphylococcus aureus and Klebsiella
species, 12mm for Enterococcus faecalis, and 10mm Salmonella typhi. This study
shows that cashew nut extract has antimicrobial activity against a reasonable
range of pathogenic microorganisms and it is advised that further research
should be carried out to make it formulate available for use.
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
Cashew is perennial tree crop which
belongs to the family Anacardiaceae.
It is believed to have originated
from the northernpart of South America from where it spread to many tropical
countries including Nigeria (Rosen and Fordice, 2003).
Cashew is an evergreen shrub or tree
and grows best on well drained sandy soils with an annual rainfall of at least
900mm. Cashew trees thrive on soils which are too poor and too dry for most
other crops. Cashew was originally grown for reforestation scheme and
preventing further erosion in some parts of Nigeria (Cruickshank et al.,
2011). The use of the tree was further extended when Nigerians embraced the
fact that cashew nuts can be processed for commercial purposes. This led to the
large scale production of cashew crops. Cashew farming now attracts much
commercial interest and a lot of money is spent in processing them into useful
product such as cashew nut, shell oil and cashew kernels. Cashew is also grown
for its fleshy apple which is very rich in its food values (Aderiye and Mbadiwe,2003).
The low commercial value hitherto attached to the cashew crop was associated
with underutilization of the apple, marked by considerable
fruit wastage annually. Various
products can now be made from cashew apples; these include fruit juice, jam,
pickles, date-like caramel syrups
and wines (Rune et al.,
2006). The leaves, bark and roots of the tree have been used for medicinal purposes
by native healers. The growing resistance of microorganisms to conventional
antimicrobial agents is becoming a source of concern to clinical
microbiologists all over the world. As a result, efforts are being made to
develop antimicrobial agents from local sources for use in chemotherapeutic
regimes.
In contribution to this search, this
study evaluates the effect of cashew nut extract on the growth of pathogenic
microorganisms frequently associated with human infections (Ohler, 2010)
1.1
Background of the Study
Plants are important in our everyday
existence. They provide our foods, produce the oxygen we breathe, and serve as
raw materials for many industrial products such as clothes, foot wears and so
many others. Plants also provide raw materials for our buildings and in the
manufacture of bio-fuels, dyes, perfumes, pesticides, adsorbents and drugs. The
plant kingdom has proven to be the most useful in the treatment of diseases and
they provide an important source of all the world’s pharmaceuticals. The most
important of these bioactive constituents of plants are steroids, terpenoids,
carotenoids, flavanoids, alkaloids, tannins and glycosides. Plants have served
a valuable starting material for drug development (Cruickshank et al.,
2011). Antibiotics or antimicrobial substances like saponins, glycosides,
flavonoids and alkaloids are found to be distributed in plants, yet these
compounds were not well established due to the lack of knowledge and techniques
(Varghese and Pundir, 2010). The phytoconstituents which are phenols,
anthraquinones, alkaloids, glycosides, flavonoids and saponins are
antimicrobial principles of plants. Plants are now occupying important position
in allopathic medicine, herbal medicine, homoeopathy and aromatherapy. Medicinal
plants are the sources of many important drugs of the modern world. Many of
these indigenous medicinal plants are used as spices and food plants; they are
also sometimes added to foods meant for pregnant mothers for medicinal purpose
(Varghese and Pundir, 2010). Many plants are cheaper and more accessible to
most people especially in the developing countries than orthodox medicine, and
there is lower incidence of adverse effects after use.
1.2
Statement of the Problem
It is now known that agricultural
materials such as cashew nut are used as animal feeds and that they contain
phytochemicals. These phytochemicals serve as antimiocrobial/ antibiotic
properties of plants.
The need for a cheap, renewable,
easily available, nutritive source of material and the medicinal value has
therefore attracted me to investigate the antimicrobial activities of cashew
nut.
1.3
Aim and Objective of the Study
The purpose of this work is to
investigate/assess medicinal values as well as the antimicrobial activities of
cashews nut.
Objectives
1. To determine the antimicrobial
activities of cashews nut extract
2. To extract maximum medicinal benefit
of the camadol-ethanol extract from cashew nut
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