Neurotoxicity and Behavioral Alterations Following Subchronic Administration of Aqueous Extract of Erythrophleum Ivorense Stem Bark in Mice.
Olamide Elizabeth AdebiyiOluwasina AjayiFunmilayo Eniola OlopadePublished in: Basic and clinical neuroscience (2021)
Erythrophleum ivorense administration altered motor coordination, learning and memory, and grip strength in mice dose-dependently. It also caused disruption of granule cells layer, loss of Purkinje cells, and altered cerebellar anatomy leading to motor deficits in mice.