Publications by authors named "C Katsvanga"

Background: The objective of this study was to determine the causes and distribution of vision impairment and refractive error among children in Zimbabwe.

Methods: A hospital-based retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted among children (3-16) who attended the Eye Institute, Harare, Zimbabwe, from January 2010 to December 2020. Patients' records were collated, and variables such as visual acuity, ocular morbidities, and vision impairment were analysed.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cryptostephanus vansonii, a plant species from Zimbabwe, was studied for its ability to inhibit the enzyme acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and its cytotoxic effects on Vero monkey kidney cells.
  • The research found that the plant extracts displayed significant antibacterial properties, particularly against Gram-negative bacteria, and showed no harmful effects on the monkey kidney cells.
  • Various phytochemicals, including hydroxybenzoates and flavonoids, were identified in the extracts, suggesting the need for further studies to isolate these bioactive compounds for additional pharmacological investigations.
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Background And Aims: Afromontane forest ecosystems share a high similarity of plant and animal biodiversity, although they occur mainly on isolated mountain massifs throughout the continent. This resemblance has long provoked questions on former wider distribution of Afromontane forests. In this study Prunus africana (one of the character trees of Afromontane forests) is used as a model for understanding the biogeography of this vegetation zone.

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Prunus africana--an evergreen tree found in Afromontane forests--is used in traditional medicine to cure benign prostate hyperplasia. Different bioactive constituents derived from bark extracts from 20 tree populations sampled throughout the species' natural range in Africa were studied by means of GC-MSD. The average concentration [mg/kgw/w] in increasing order was: lauric acid (18), myristic acid (22), n-docosanol (25), ferulic acid (49), β-sitostenone (198), β-sitosterol (490), and ursolic acid (743).

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Scattered populations of the same tree species in montane forests through Africa have led to speculations on the origins of distributions. Here, we inferred the colonization history of the Afromontane tree Prunus africana using seven chloroplast DNA loci to study 582 individuals from 32 populations sampled in a range-wide survey from across Africa, revealing 22 haplotypes. The predominant haplotype, HT1a, occurred in 13 populations of eastern and southern Africa, while a second common haplotype, HT1m, occurred in populations of western Uganda and western Africa.

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