Analgesic and anti-inflammatory potential of Verbesina encelioides in rodents

Rodent studies reveal Verbesina encelioides significantly reduces pain and inflammation, validating traditional use, uncovering bioactive mechanisms, and positioning this medicinal plant as a promising candidate for analgesic and anti-inflammatory development.

Published in Chemistry and Research Data

Analgesic and anti-inflammatory potential of Verbesina encelioides in rodents
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Analgesic and anti-inflammatory potential of Verbesina encelioides in rodents | PHYTONutrients

Background: Verbesina encelioides, a plant with a rich history in traditional medicine, is the focus of our novel research. Commonly known as golden crownbeard or cowpen daisy, this plant has been used in various cultures for its medicinal properties. However, despite its widespread use, scientific validation of its therapeutic potential, particularly its analgesic and anti-inflammatory effects, remains limited. Objectives: Our study is designed to comprehensively evaluate the analgesic and anti-inflammatory effects of methanol extracts from various parts (leaves, stems, flowers, and roots) of Verbesina encelioides. We aim to achieve this by using established animal models. Our objectives include assessing pain-relieving properties through the Hot Plate and Tail Flick tests, investigating anti-inflammatory effects via the carrageenan-induced paw edema model, and determining safe dosage ranges through acute toxicity assays. Furthermore, our goals are to validate traditional medicinal uses, assess the effectiveness of various plant sections, and find probable bioactive chemicals that could be responsible for the observed pharmacological actions. This will provide Verbesina encelioides’s medicinal use with a strong scientific foundation. Techniques: The study was carried out with great care and attention to detail. Methanol was used to collect, identify, and extract Verbesina encelioides. Acute toxicity, analgesic effects (heat plate and tail flick tests), and anti-inflammatory activity (carrageenan-induced inflammation) were tested in Swiss albino mice and Wistar albino rats. Findings: The acute toxicity assay showed no adverse effects in mice up to 1000 mg/kg, a highly encouraging result. In analgesic studies, Verbesina encelioides extracts showed dose-dependent increases in reaction times similar to aspirin. Different extracts had different effects on paw edema in anti-inflammatory testing; some at first increased inflammation but eventually showed significant decreases, especially at higher dosages. These results offer a positive perspective on Verbesina encelioides’ possible medicinal use. Conclusion: These results provide a positive perspective on Verbesina encelioides’ possible therapeutic use. The results imply that extracts from Verbesina encelioides, which are abundant in bioactive substances such as flavonoids, phenolics, and alkaloids, may have applications in treating pain and inflammation. Prospects for the future: These results highlight the plant’s medicinal potential and suggest that more research and development could help address pain and inflammation naturally.

When a Roadside Weed Becomes a Research Question: My Journey with Verbesina encelioides

Some of the most interesting research ideas don’t come from expensive equipment or high-impact journals. Sometimes, they come from plants people walk past every day.

That was the case for Verbesina encelioides, commonly known as golden crownbeard or cowpen daisy. I had seen this plant growing abundantly—almost stubbornly—in open fields and roadsides. In traditional medicine, however, it carried a very different reputation. Local communities had long used it to relieve pain and inflammation, yet scientific evidence supporting these claims was surprisingly scarce.

As a pharmacognosy researcher, that gap immediately caught my attention.

 

Why I Chose to Study Verbesina encelioides

Pain and inflammation are among the most common reasons people seek medical care. While modern drugs such as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are effective, they are often associated with gastrointestinal, renal, and cardiovascular side effects—especially with long-term use.

This reality constantly pushes researchers like me to look for safer alternatives. Medicinal plants are an obvious starting point, but not all traditional remedies have been rigorously tested. Verbesina encelioides was one such plant—widely used, frequently ignored by science.

I wanted to know: does this plant truly justify its reputation?

 

Designing the Study: From Curiosity to Experiment

We decided to evaluate the analgesic (pain-relieving) and anti-inflammatory effects of methanolic extracts from different parts of the plant—leaves, stems, flowers, and roots. This was important because traditional medicine rarely uses a single plant part, yet scientific studies often do.

Before testing efficacy, we focused on safety. Acute toxicity studies are not glamorous, but they are essential. I still remember the sense of relief when no adverse effects were observed in mice, even at doses as high as 1000 mg/kg. That moment gave us confidence to move forward.

 

Watching Data Take Shape in the Lab

Pain research is challenging—not just scientifically, but emotionally. Tests like the hot plate and tail flick require precision, patience, and constant ethical awareness. Every step reminded me of the responsibility researchers carry when working with animal models.

As the experiments progressed, patterns began to emerge. Reaction times increased with higher doses of Verbesina encelioides extracts, closely resembling the effects of aspirin. Seeing a plant extract perform comparably to a standard drug was one of those moments that makes long hours in the lab worthwhile.

The anti-inflammatory studies were even more intriguing. Some extracts initially caused a slight increase in paw swelling before significantly reducing inflammation later. At first, this puzzled us. But science often rewards patience—especially when working with complex plant mixtures rather than single compounds.

 

Learning That Plants Don’t Behave Like Synthetic Drugs

One important lesson this project taught me is that plant-based therapies rarely follow linear patterns. Unlike synthetic drugs, plant extracts contain dozens of bioactive compounds interacting simultaneously.

The delayed anti-inflammatory response we observed may reflect this complexity. Compounds such as flavonoids, phenolics, and alkaloids do not always act immediately—but their cumulative effects can be powerful.

This reinforced my belief that studying medicinal plants requires a different mindset. Instead of expecting instant results, we must learn to interpret biological responses holistically.

 

Beyond the Results: What This Research Meant to Me

This study wasn’t just about validating a plant—it reshaped how I think about overlooked species. Verbesina encelioides is often considered a weed. But through a scientific lens, it revealed itself as a reservoir of pharmacological potential.

For me, this project was a reminder that valuable research does not always focus on rare or exotic plants. Sometimes, the most promising candidates are the ones growing quietly in plain sight.

It also strengthened my respect for traditional knowledge. While not every ethnomedicinal claim is correct, many are grounded in generations of observation. Our role as scientists is not to dismiss these practices, but to evaluate them carefully and responsibly.

 

Challenges along the Way

Like all research, this project had its challenges. Variability between plant parts, interpreting mixed responses, and ensuring reproducibility demanded careful planning and repeated experiments. There were days when results didn’t align, and moments when we had to step back and reassess our assumptions.

But those challenges were also the most educational. They taught me patience, humility, and the importance of rigorous methodology—qualities no textbook can fully convey.

 

What Comes Next?

Our findings suggest that Verbesina encelioides has genuine potential as a natural source of analgesic and anti-inflammatory agents. However, this is just the beginning.

Future work must focus on isolating the active compounds, understanding their mechanisms of action, and evaluating long-term safety. Clinical relevance remains the ultimate goal, but it must be pursued carefully and ethically.

Personally, I hope this research encourages others to explore underutilized plants and to look at “weeds” with fresh scientific curiosity.

 

A Message to Early-Career Researchers

If there is one takeaway I would like to share, it is this: impactful research does not always start with complex ideas. It often begins with careful observation, curiosity, and the willingness to ask simple questions.

Studying Verbesina encelioides reminded me why I chose research in the first place—to uncover hidden value, challenge assumptions, and contribute, even in small ways, to better healthcare solutions.

 

Final Reflection

This project transformed a common plant into a meaningful scientific inquiry. It reinforced the idea that nature still holds many answers—we just need to look closely, ask thoughtfully, and study responsibly.

For me, Verbesina encelioides will always represent that moment when curiosity turned into evidence.

 
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/386096676_Analgesic_and_anti-inflammatory_potential_of_Verbesina_encelioides_in_rodents

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