R
Ramesa Shafi Bhat
Researcher at King Saud University
Publications - 82
Citations - 945
Ramesa Shafi Bhat is an academic researcher from King Saud University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Autism & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 59 publications receiving 552 citations.
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Antibacterial activity and phytochemical screening of some medicinal plants commonly used in Saudi Arabia against selected pathogenic microorganisms
Sooad Al-Daihan,Manar Al-Faham,Nora Al-shawi,Rawan Almayman,Amal Brnawi,Seema Zargar,Ramesa Shafi Bhat +6 more
TL;DR: Methanolic extracts of almost all samples dominated aqueous extracts in inhibiting the growth of the pathogenic bacteria under study, but were less potent when compared to those of kanamycin used as positive controls.
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Antibacterial activities of extracts of leaf, fruit, seed and bark of Phoenix dactylifera
TL;DR: Overall analysis of the antibacterial activities of various extracts revealed that the highest inhibitory activity was produced by the fruit extract as compared to the leaf, bark and seed extracts, and on the whole, aqueous extracts have the least antibacterial activity asCompared to methanol and acetone extracts.
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Antimicrobial activity of Litchi chinensis and Nephelium lappaceum aqueous seed extracts against some pathogenic bacterial strains
TL;DR: Overall analysis of the antibacterial activity of tested samples revealed that the highest inhibitory activity was produced by Litchi chinensis (15 ± 0.55 mm) against S. pyogenes.
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Probiotic treatment reduces the autistic-like excitation/inhibition imbalance in juvenile hamsters induced by orally administered propionic acid and clindamycin.
Afaf El-Ansary,Abir Ben Bacha,Geir Bjørklund,Nora Al-Orf,Ramesa Shafi Bhat,Nadine M. S. Moubayed,Kawther Abed +6 more
TL;DR: The study indicates that probiotics can be used safely to ameliorate glutamate excitotoxicity mostly through increasing depleted GABA and Mg2+ and decreasing the excitatory neurotransmitter, glutamate.
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Agaricus blazei Murill as an efficient hepatoprotective and antioxidant agent against CCl4-induced liver injury in rats.
TL;DR: The findings indicate that the extract of Agaricus blazei Murill can protect the liver against carbon tetrachloride induced oxidative damage in rats and is an efficient hepatoprotective and antioxidant agent against carbon gaelic acid induced liver injury.