Bitter Kola |
A plant has been found to halt the
deadly Ebola virus in its tracks in laboratory tests, scientists have said.
They used a compound from Garcinia
kola (bitter kola), a plant commonly eaten in West Africa. Compounds from the
plant have also proved effective against some strains of flu.
If the anti-Ebola compound proves
successful in animal and human trials, it will be the first medicine to
successfully treat the virus that causes Ebola haemorrhagic fever - an
often-fatal condition.
The discovery was announced at the
16th International Botanical Congress in St Louis in the US.
Four deaths per five cases
The Ebola virus was first documented
in 1976 after an outbreak in Zaire - now the Democratic Republic of the Congo -
where 88% of the 318 human cases died.
More recently, a 1995 outbreak in
the same country had a death rate of 81% of the 315 infected.
There are four types of the virus -
Ebola-Zaire, Ebola-Sudan and Ebola-Ivory Coast all affect humans, while
Ebola-Reston has so far only affected monkeys and chimpanzees.
However, doctors have been unable to
stop the virus once infection has taken hold - hence the disease has gained a
terrifying reputation.
Traditional origins
Dr Maurice Iwu, who set up and heads
the Bioresources Development and Conservation Programme, led the research.
It started 10 years ago when
researchers were led to the plant by traditional native healers who have used
the plant for the treatment of infectious diseases for centuries.
"This is a very exciting
discovery," said Dr Iwu, who himself comes originally from a family of
traditional healers.
"The same forest that yields
the dreaded Ebola virus could be a source of the cure."
Fighting chance
The virus multiplies rapidly in the
human body and quickly overwhelms it, and in advanced cases the patient
develops high fever and severe bleeding.
The Garcinia kola compound has been
shown to halt multiplication of the virus in the laboratory. If repeated in
humans, this would give the body a chance to fight off the virus.
The active compound is what is known
as a dimeric flavonoid, which is two flavonoid molecules fused together.
Flavonoids are non-toxic and can be
found in orange and lemon rinds as well as the colourings of other plants.
Drug hopes
The tests are in the early stages
still, but the researchers hope that if they continue to prove successful the compound
the US Food and Drug Administration will put it on a fast track - making a drug
available to humans within a matter of years.
"The discovery of these
important properties in a simple compound - flavonoids - was very
surprising," said Dr Iwu.
"The structure of this compound
lends itself to modification, so it provides a template for future work.
"Even if this particular drug
does not succeed through the whole drug approval process, we can use it to
construct a new drug for this deadly disease."
BBC
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