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Synthetic Antimicrobial drugs are ineffectual against multidrug-resistant bacteria, resulting in a loss of funding for the treatment of infectious diseases around the world. As a result, alternative antimicrobial medicines for the treatment of infectious disorders are urgently needed. One method is to screen medicinal plants for antibacterial characteristics, which is innovative, low-cost, and effective against pathogenic microorganisms. Antimicrobial defenses have evolved in bacteria, and disease drug resistance is on the rise. This is due to the rapid evolution of multidrug resistance, the limited antibacterial spectrum, and the side effects of currently available antimicrobial medications. This entails the creation of novel antimicrobials with a wide range of structures and modes of action. Marigold (Tagetes erecta) is a common ornamental plant. Eastern countries use the flowers of this plant in garlands or loose for social and religious purposes. After their religious uses, the flowers are normally discarded. The Asteraceae family includes this plant (Composited). Marigold is its English name. Folk medicine makes use of several components of this plant, especially the flower. Skin complaints, wounds and burns, conjunctivitis and poor vision, monthly irregularities, varicose veins, hemorrhoids, duodenal ulcers, and other conditions have all been treated with it in traditional and homeopathic medicine. Dental caries is not an unusual place for continual oral contamination that affects children in particular. The most regular causal agent of dental caries is Streptococcus mutants. The antibacterial hobby of methanol and chloroform extracts of Tagetes erecta L. flowers have become tested using the agar diffusion method in competition to Streptococcus mutants in this study. Preliminary phytochemical screening of T. erecta L. flowers extracts in methanol and chloroform located the presence of alkaloids, carbohydrates, proteins, Anthraquinons, tannin, cardiac glycosides, fatty acids, and oils with inside the methanol and chloroform extracts. Saponin and amino acids, on the opportunity hand, had been now not observed in each extract. Flavonoids had been now not located in chloroform extract. The GCMS assessment of methanol extract identified seven chemicals.
"A Review: Antimicrobial Activity and Phytochemical Analysis of Marigold Flower (Tagetes erecta)", International Journal of Science & Engineering Development Research (www.ijrti.org), ISSN:2455-2631, Vol.7, Issue 7, page no.1556 - 1564, July-2022, Available :http://www.ijrti.org/papers/IJRTI2207272.pdf
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2456-3315 | IMPACT FACTOR: 8.14 Calculated By Google Scholar| ESTD YEAR: 2016
An International Scholarly Open Access Journal, Peer-Reviewed, Refereed Journal Impact Factor 8.14 Calculate by Google Scholar and Semantic Scholar | AI-Powered Research Tool, Multidisciplinary, Monthly, Multilanguage Journal Indexing in All Major Database & Metadata, Citation Generator