Anti-inflammatory potential of lemongrass leaves in wound healing

Authors

  • Patimah Fitriansyari Hasibuan Master's Programme in Biomedical Sciences, Universitas Prima Indonesia
  • Andika Zayani Tambunan Department of Ear, Nose, and Throat, Universitas Prima Indonesia
  • Maya Sari Mutia Department of Histology, Universitas Prima Indonesia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.34012/jpms.v5i2.4402

Keywords:

gel extract, lemongrass leaf, inflammation, wound incision

Abstract

The inflammatory stage is a normal phase of wound healing; however, inflammation can become chronic and lasts for months or years. This is a post-test with control group design study, divided with 20 male white rats into 4 groups: control group (K), treatment group 1 (P1), treatment group 2 (P2), and treatment group 3 (P3). Lemongrass leaf extract gel, simplicia leaves, stems, and roots of citronella were extracted by maceration using a 1:5 ratio of simplicia to solvent. Gel was applied twice a day (morning and evening) to each group, adhering the formulation. Macroscopic observations were made to assess the wound condition and incision length. The length of the incision wound was measured using a ruler every two days for a span of fourteen days. As the sample size was less than 50, a normality test was performed using the Shapiro-Wilk test, followed by a One-way ANOVA and a Post Hoc test. The study found that wound healing was slowest in the control group but faster in the groups treated with 10% and 15% lemongrass leaf extract. Secondary metabolites at a concentration of 15% had a positive impact on wound healing, whereas at lower concentrations, they only inhibited microorganisms, making them less effective for wound healing.

Published

2023-12-11

How to Cite

Hasibuan, P. F., Tambunan, A. Z., & Mutia, M. S. (2023). Anti-inflammatory potential of lemongrass leaves in wound healing. Jurnal Prima Medika Sains, 5(2), 126-129. https://doi.org/10.34012/jpms.v5i2.4402

Issue

Section

Original Article