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Daniel Motlhanka

Daniel Motlhanka

Botswana University of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Botswana

Title: Comparative Antioxidant And Total Phenolic Analysis Of Four Indigenous Herbal Tea Plants Of Botswana

Biography

Biography: Daniel Motlhanka

Abstract

As they say “several cups of tea a day keeps the doctor away!”but is this true or merely shear fiction? And is one type of tea any better than the other? There is strong evidence from the literature that herbal tea plants have health improving properties. One of the reasons for reputed properties of teas is related to the levels of antioxidants they contain. In this work, the antioxidant profiles of four herbal tea plants indigenous in Botswana (Artemisia afra, Lippia javanica, Lippia scabberima and Combretum hereroense were compared with commercial teas (Chinese Green tea, Rooibos and Five Roses). Free radical scavenging activity (FRSA) of the teas was evaluated spectrophotometrically as maximum fading power of 1,1-Diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) at 525nm. The total phenolic content of methanolic extracts was determined using the Folin-Ciocalteau method. At all tested concentrations, the scavenging power of C.hereroense(90%) fruit extract was higher than of all the other indigenous herbal teas and comparable to both Chinese Green Tea(90%) and control quercetin (91%). Between 100 and 200µg/ml, all tested extracts had scavenging potencies (≥90%) comparable to qurcetin and Chinese Green tea. The total phenolic content of C.hereroense (10680mg/L GAE) was tenfold greater than that of commercial teas. The other three tested indigenous herbal teas showed total phenolic contents (1000 to 2000mg/L GAE) comparable to the commercial teas including Chinese Green tea. These results support the long history of use of these traditional teas as health improving remedies and support their use in combating diseases associated with oxidative damage.