SILVA, E. V. A.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4725891799276949; SILVA, Emanoel Vitor Alves da
Resumo:
Candidiasis is a very common fungal infection of the oral cavity, whose etiological factor is the
proliferation and growth of microorganisms of the genus Candida, which already live in the oral
environment in a commensal way, without causing any harm to the host, thus forming part of the
healthy oral microbiota. In addition to the mouth, these fungi can also proliferate and colonize
mucous membranes and skin, thus generating a systemic fungal disease. Various drugs with
antifungal properties are used to treat these infections, such as ketoconazole, fluconazole,
nystatin and amphotericin B. However, some factors have shown these drugs to be ineffective.
One of them is the resistance of fungal strains to antimycotics, as well as patient compliance and
the adverse effects that synthetic drugs cause. It is therefore necessary to look for alternatives,
such as the use of medicinal plants, which has been a viable and promising way of discovering
new phytopharmaceutical agents with great biological potential. Based on studies in the
literature that show the physicochemical and ethnopharmacological characteristics of medicinal
plant species, this research aimed to evaluate the antifungal activity of the methanolic extract of
Psidium guineense (Myrtaceae). The study was carried out through an in vitro test in which the
methanolic extract of Psidium guineense was used as a test substance against the fungal species
Candida glabrata and Candida parapsilosis, which had been previously identified and maintained
in Sabouraud dextrose agar (SDA) and Sabouraud dextrose broth (SSB) culture media. In
addition, nystatin was used as the standard antifungal agent for the positive control. The broth
microdilution technique was then used to determine the minimum inhibitory concentration
(MIC) of the Psidium guineense methanolic extract. After carrying out the tests and evaluating
the results, it was noted that the MIC of the methanolic extract of Psidium guineense was higher
than 1024 µg/mL-1 for the two strains tested. It can therefore be concluded that the methanolic
extract of the Psidium guineense plant species did not inhibit fungal proliferation at the
concentrations used in the technique. Thus, further studies (with different methodologies) are
needed to compare the results obtained, and it may be possible to develop a new natural product,
depending on the results, with efficient antifungal activity, so that it can be used among health
technologies to combat fungal infections in order to mitigate the exponential increase in mycotic
resistance, which has become an objection to successful drug treatment applied to dentistry.