Posts tonen met het label onderzoek. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label onderzoek. Alle posts tonen

woensdag, augustus 14, 2024

Bijvoet wetenschappelijk bekeken

Artemisia vulgaris, een plant die een belangrijke rol speelde in de geschiedenis van de Europese geneeskunde, werd in de Middeleeuwen de ‘moeder van de kruiden’ genoemd en onder meer gebruikt bij de behandeling van gynaecologische en urologische aandoeningen en ziekten van het maag-darmkanaal. De plant neemt een belangrijke plaats in, zowel in Europa als in Aziatische landen, voornamelijk China en India.

Momenteel is A. vulgaris het onderwerp van talrijke fytochemische en farmacologische onderzoeken. Fytochemische studies hebben de rijke samenstelling van de bovengrondse delen van deze plant bewezen, die bestaat uit sesquiterpenoïde lactonen, flavonoïden en coumarines, en een essentiële olie gemaakt van kwalitatief variabele componenten. Op hun beurt hebben farmacologische onderzoeken het bewijs geleverd van zeer waardevolle, voorheen onbekende biologische activiteiten van A. vulgaris, waaronder antioxiderende, hypolipemische, hepatoprotectieve, krampstillende, pijnstillende, bloeddrukverlagende, oestrogene, cytotoxische, antibacteriële en antischimmeleffecten. Vanwege de grote variabiliteit in de chemische samenstelling is deze soort ook onderworpen aan biotechnologisch onderzoek.

Een groot deel van dit onderzoek wordt uitgevoerd door niet-Europese onderzoekscentra. Dit komt omdat de soort wijd verspreid is over maar liefst vier continenten – Europa, Azië, Noord-Amerika en Zuid-Amerika – en er buiten Europa een grotere belangstelling voor deze soort bestaat. In Oost-Aziatische landen, voornamelijk China en Japan, maar ook in Europa staat deze soort bekend als specerij. In Europa is de huidige belangstelling voor de soort als specerij beslist niet zo groot als in Azië; het wordt echter steeds vaker gebruikt in de cosmetica-industrie. De tot nu toe bewezen biologische activiteiten van de A. vulgaris hebben de hoop doen rijzen op een heropleving voor deze middeleeuwse ‘kruidenmoeder’.

Antioxidant Effect

In 2008, scientists from Cairo (Egypt) evaluated for the first time the antioxidant activity of A. vulgaris. They found that the aqueous extract of the herb was able to scavenge 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radicals at IC50 = 11.4 μg/mL and nitric oxide (NO) radicals at IC50 = 125 mg/mL in the first part of the experiment. They also estimated total phenols, flavonoids, and flavonols as 19 ± 0.16 mg/g gallic acid equivalents and 7.96 ± 0.76 and 3.4 ± 0.0 mg/g rutoside equivalents, respectively. In the second part of the experiment, they observed a significant increase in the levels of ascorbic acid and glutathione, and an increase in the activity of superoxide dismutase in the blood of rats administered with the extract at a dose of 100 mg/kg body weight (BW). The results of the study showed that A. vulgaris exhibits antioxidant activity and can thus be helpful to treat oxidative stress-related diseases [8].

Some newer investigations documented the antioxidant activity of the whole plant [101], its aerial parts [102] and leaf extracts [59], and its essential oil [120].

Various modern techniques have been applied in the above studies. Oyedemi and Coopoosamy proved the strong antioxidant potential of the extracts of A. vulgaris obtained from South Africa based on lipid peroxidation, protein glycation, xanthine oxidase, and the sTable DPPH radical scavenging assays [101]. Ben Nasr et al. investigated the antioxidant potential of the aqueous extracts of Tunisian A. vulgaris using the following in vitro techniques: ABTS (2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid assay), DPPH, hydroxyl, superoxide, and NO scavenging assays, ferric reducing power activity assay (for determining total antioxidant capacity), and thiobarbituric acid reactive species assay (for determining the inhibition of lipid peroxidation) [103].

Hypolipemic Effect

An extract obtained from the root of A. vulgaris was tested by a Hindu team. They analyzed the rats in which hyperlipidemia had been caused by the administration of a high-fat diet for a period of 30 days. In the following month, the rodents received a standard diet. The team found that the A. vulgaris root extract showed a significant lipid profile-normalizing activity. Total cholesterol (TC) was reduced to 180 mg/dL, triglycerides (TG) to 147.2 mg/dL, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol to 126.3 mg/dL, and very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) cholesterol to 28.2 mg/dL, while the level of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and atherogenicity indicator (AI) increased to 68 and 2.63 mg/dL, respectively, compared to the control group (TC = 282.23 mg/dL, TG = 243.2 mg/dL, LDL cholesterol = 209.16 mg/dL, VLDL cholesterol = 47.56 mg/dL, HDL cholesterol = 34.17 mg/dL, and AI = 8.2 mg/dL) [9].

The hypolipidemic and anti-inflammatory effects of the A. vulgaris extract were studied in hypercholesterolemic rats by a Chinese team. They induced hypercholesterolemia in rats by feeding them with a high-fat diet containing 3% cholesterol in olein oil, for 8 weeks. This led to a significant increase in the serum levels of triglycerides, TC, LDL cholesterol, malondialdehyde, NO, and tumor necrosis factor-α and a significant decrease in the serum level of HDL cholesterol, activity of hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA reductase in the liver, and activity of paraoxonase-1 as compared to the normal control group. Treatment of rats with A. vulgaris extract at a dose of 100 mg/kg per day for 4 weeks normalized the serum lipid profile, significantly increased the paraoxonase-1 activity, and decreased the serum levels of malondialdehyde, NO, and tumor necrosis factor-α as compared to the high-fat diet-treated animals. Moreover, the extract caused a decrease in the activity of hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA reductase as compared to both high-fat diet-treated animals and control ones [104].

Hepatoprotective Effect

In 2005, two teams from Pakistani universities in Karachi investigated the hepatoprotective properties of A. vulgaris herb extracts in in vivo studies on mice. They divided the test rodents into five groups and conducted an experiment. The first and second groups were administered with a saline solution; two hours later, the second group received an additional 700 mg/kg d-galactosamine and 1 μg/kg lipopolysaccharide, which caused liver inflammation as confirmed by elevated levels of hepatic function indicators—alanine aminotransferase (ALAT) and aspartate aminotransferase (ASPAT). The third, fourth, and fifth groups were given different, prophylactic, doses (from 150 to 600 mg/kg BW) of a crude hydromethanolic extract prepared from the aerial parts of A. vulgaris, and an hour later, received d-galactosamine and lipopolysaccharide. A significant reduction was noted in ASPAT and ALAT activities in plasma in all the three groups. The results observed in these groups were confirmed by a histopathological examination of the liver, which showed a decrease in cellular edema and apoptotic cell count, and no hyperemia of the hepatic parenchyma, relative to the second group [105].

Antispasmodic Effect

A group of researchers in Cardiff (UK) tested the extracts prepared from the herb of A. vulgaris for their activity toward biogenic amine receptors in the smooth muscles of the gastrointestinal tract and respiratory tract of guinea pigs. The antagonistic effects of chloroform and methanol extracts were determined using concentration–response curves for contractions of the trachea and the small intestine under the influence of 5-hydroxytryptamine, methacholine, histamine, and phenylethylamine. The team found that both extracts had an antagonistic effect on the H1 receptors and caused the relaxation of smooth muscles. Two main compounds were isolated from the chloroform fraction—yomogin and 1,2,3,4-diepoxy-11(13)-eudesmen-12,8-olide—of which the former showed significant antagonism toward the H1 receptor in the ileum [10].

Researchers in São Paulo (Brazil) studied the antinociceptive activity of A. vulgaris herb extracts and observed their antispasmodic effects. They demonstrated that in mice treated with 500 or 1000 mg/kg hydroethanolic extract, a 48% or 59% inhibition of abdominal contractions was caused by the acetic acid solution, respectively [11].

Bronchodilatory Effect

Khan and Gilani tested the antispasmodic, bronchodilatory, tracheorelaxant, and antidiarrheal activities of the crude extract of A. vulgaris in the isolated tissue preparations of rabbit jejunum and guinea pig trachea, and also analyzed the in vivo castor oil-induced bronchodilation. They found that the A. vulgaris extract exhibited a combination of anticholinergic and Ca2+ antagonist mechanisms, which seemed pharmacologically promising for the treatment of airways disorders. The authors supposed that alkaloids, coumarins, flavonoids, saponins, sterols, tannins, and terpenes are the compounds responsible for the concentration-dependent (0.03–10 mg/mL) broncholytic effect of the A. vulgaris extract [106].

Natividad et al. proved that the Philippines A. vulgaris medicinal plant exhibited antagonistic activity at selected biogenic amine receptors in the smooth muscles of the airways and gastrointestinal tract. The chloroform and methanol extracts of the plant showed histamine H1 antagonism in the ileum and trachea. The researchers indicated that yomogin (sesquiterpenoid lactone) was the compound responsible for these activities [10].

Analgesic Effect

The team from São Paulo (Brazil) also investigated the antinociceptive properties of a hydroalcoholic extract prepared from the aerial parts of A. vulgaris using a mice model. Two tests were performed by the researchers: a hot plate test to measure the central analgesic effect and a writhing test to measure the peripheral analgesic effect. In the hot plate test, the control group was given only water, while the test group received 500 or 1000 mg/kg of A. vulgaris extract. Mice given 20 mg/kg BW morphine were adopted as the positive control. The response time (response latency) was determined after placing the rodents on a plate heated to 55 °C. The time taken by the mice to respond was not found to decrease after the administration of the A. vulgaris extract. In the writhing test, the mice were divided into groups and were given water, 20 g/kg BW morphine, and the hydroalcoholic extract of A. vulgaris at doses of 100, 250, 500, and 1000 mg/kg BW. After 30 min, the rodents were administered with a 0.8% acetic acid solution and writhing episodes were determined for the next 10 min. No decrease in the number of episodes was observed with the extract administered at the doses of 100 and 250 mg/kg BW; however, a decrease was observed with the higher doses of the extract (i.e., 500 and 1000 mg/kg BW). The results proved that the tested extracts of the A. vulgaris herb had a moderate peripheral antinociceptive effect but not a central effect [11].

MAO Inhibitory Effect

Lee et al. (South Korea) isolated flavonoids (jaceosidine, eupafolin, luteolin, quercetin, apigenine) and coumarins (esculetin, esculetin-6-methylether, scopoletin) from 80% aqueous ethanol extracts of whole A. vulgaris plants, and indicated that these compounds are good inhibitors of mouse brain monoamine oxidase (MAO) enzyme. The compounds showed MAO inhibitory effects at the IC50 values of 19.0, 25.0, 18.5, 12.5, 1.0, 31.1, 32.2, and 45.0 µmol, respectively [107].

Antihypertensive Effect

The aqueous and chloroform extracts of the aerial parts of A. vulgaris were tested by two teams from the Philippines to determine the hemodynamic potential of the plant. They found that the administration of a 10% solution of the aqueous extract into the isolated perfused mesentery of rats effectively reversed the hypertensive effect induced by noradrenaline; however, the baseline blood pressure values and heart rate remained unaltered [12].

The Chinese team performed a systematic review of randomized controlled trials based on a review of articles published from 1980 to 2013 in databases (CENTRAL, Pubmed, CBM, CNKI, VIP, and online clinical trial registry websites). They exhibit that in randomized controlled trials, moxibustion (a traditional Chinese method that uses the heat generated by burning herbal preparations containing A. vulgaris to stimulate acupuncture points) showed lowering of the blood pressure compared to antihypertensive drugs by stimulation of acupoint KI 1. Meta-analysis showed superior effects of moxibustion plus antihypertensive drugs (like: Metoprolol, Nifedipine, Enalapril) on systolic blood pressure (WMD (weighted mean difference): −4.91 [−7.54, −2.28]) but no superior effects on diastolic blood pressure (WMD: −6.38 [−17.17, 4.41]) [108].

Estrogenic Effect

The flavonoids present in the aerial parts of A. vulgaris were evaluated for estrogenic activity by three scientific institutions from USA and South Korea in cooperation. Saccharomyces cerevisiae fungi containing an expression plasmid with the cDNA of the human estrogen receptor and a reporter plasmid with the α-galactosidase gene was used in the experiment. The estrogenic effect, 5% relative to 17-β-estradiol, was observed in the polar extract (extraction with ethyl acetate), whereas the less polar ethanolic extract showed no activity. After testing the individual flavonoids of the plant, it was observed that the transcription of the reporter gene was significantly induced by eriodictyol and apigenin. The activity was also found to be concentration-dependent [12].

Shaik et al. (India) confirmed the strong anti-implantation and estrogenic activities of the leaf extracts from A. vulgaris on female Wistar rats [109].

Cytotoxic Effect

A methanolic extract prepared from the aerial parts of A. vulgaris was tested by Turkish teams to analyze its cytotoxic effects on human cancer cell lines (MCF7—estrogen-dependent breast adenocarcinoma cell line, A549—non-small cell lung cancer cell line, HeLa—cervical cancer cell line), and normal cell lines (A7R5—vascular smooth muscle cell line, 293T—human embryonic kidney cell line transformed with SV40 large T antigen). Cytotoxic activity was assessed by real-time electrical impedance measurements. A statistically significant inhibitory effect was observed against MCF7 (IC50 = 190 ng/mL), HeLa (IC50 = 284 ng/mL), A7R5 (IC50 = 382 ng/mL), and 293T (IC50 = 317 ng/mL), whereas a weak influence was found on A549 (IC50 = 778 ng/mL) cells [14]. Saleh et al. from Saudi Arabia evaluated the toxicity of the essential oil extracted from the buds and leaves of the A. vulgaris plant, and characterized its growth inhibitory effects on cancer cells. The results demonstrated that the essential oil-induced apoptosis in HL-60 leukemic cell line was mediated by caspase-dependent pathways, involving caspase-3, -9, and -8, which were initiated by Bcl-2/Bax/Bid-dependent loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, leading to the release of cytochrome c to the cytoplasm to activate the caspase cascade. The results showed that the studied essential oils were more efficient in inducing apoptosis in different cancer cell lines than noncancerous cells. Based on these observations, the authors suggested that A. vulgaris might be a promising source of new anticancer agents [111].

The latest study from 2020 was performed by a Serbian team on methanolic extracts of the A. vulgaris plant. The researchers proved the genotoxic and cytotoxic activities of the extracts, both separately and in co-treatment with a known mutagen (mitomycin C). They used the cytokinesis-block micronucleus assay for measuring the micronucleus frequency in human peripheral blood lymphocytes and MTT assay as the proliferation test in SW-480 human colon cancer cells and human periodontal ligament stem cells used as control. The results of the cytokinesis-block micronucleus assay showed that both extracts significantly increased the micronucleus frequency in the peripheral blood lymphocytes treated with the A. vulgaris extract at all the tested concentrations (10, 50, 100, and 250 μg/mL), except the lowest one (10 μg/mL). The extracts induced cytotoxic activity only in co-treatment with mitomycin C after long-term exposure and did not significantly affect the viability of the human periodontal ligament stem cells. The researchers indicated that these activities were induced by the flavonoids and other phenolic compounds present in the plant [110].

Antifungal and Antibacterial Activities


Researchers from Romania investigated the antifungal activity of a commercial preparation of the essential oil extracted from the A. vulgaris herb against Candida albicans. The disk-diffusion method was used in the in vitro experiment. The observed inhibition zone measured 12.5 mm. The zone of the positive control, carried out with nystatin, measured 15.0 mm, while that of the negative control, carried out with an empty paper disc, measured 6.0 mm. The results thus confirmed the antifungal activity of the essential oil of the herb against C. albicans [15].

In 2006, Blagojević et al. from Serbia and Montenegro also studied the effects of A. vulgaris essential oil on various microorganisms. The oil was isolated from the aerial and underground parts of the plant by steam distillation. After 10- and 30-fold dilutions, the zone of inhibition of pathogen growth on paper filters was examined. The oil extracted from the aerial parts exhibited inhibitory activity against various bacteria (Escherichia coli, Salmonella enteritidis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Staphylococcus aureus) and fungi (C. albicans and Aspergillus niger), which was attributed to its high levels of 1,8-cineole and β-thujone. On the other hand, the oil extracted from the underground parts of the plant exhibited only a low activity against the listed pathogens, due to the low level of 1,8-cineole and the lack of β-thujone in the roots [16].

In another experiment, an aqueous leaf extract of A. vulgaris was found to exhibit antibacterial activity against the C and D serotypes of Streptococcus mutans [3].

Some recent studies also documented the antimicrobial activity of the whole plant and leaf extracts [102,113,121] as well as the essential oil of A. vulgaris [67,112].

Anti-Inflammatory Activity

El-Tantawy from Pakistan tested the anti-inflammatory and hypolipidemic effects of A. vulgaris extract in hypercholesterolemic rats. Hypercholesterolemia was induced in the rats by feeding them with a high-fat diet containing 3% cholesterol in olein oil, for 8 weeks. Treatment of these rats with A. vulgaris extract at a dose of 100 mg/kg per day for 4 weeks normalized the serum lipid profile, significantly increased the paraoxonase-1 activity, and decreased the serum levels of malondialdehyde, NO, and tumor necrosis factor-α as compared to the animals that received only high-fat diet. Moreover, the extract caused a significant decrease in the activity of hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA reductase as compared to both high-fat diet-treated animals and control ones [104].

Afsar et al. from India studied the anti-inflammatory activity of a methanolic extract of A. vulgaris leaves using the cotton pellet granuloma method. The A. vulgaris extract was administered to rats (150–250 g BW) at doses of 200 and 400 mg/kg BW, respectively, after surgical insertion of cotton pellets into their groin region. The study was conducted following the guidelines of the “cotton pellet granuloma method.” The extract showed anti-inflammatory activity at both 200 and 400 mg/kg, whereas the results were more significant at 400 mg/kg compared with the control [115].

The latest study performed on the extracts of Tunisian A. vulgaris plants proved their moderate anti-inflammatory activity based on lipoxygenase inhibition assay [103].

Antiallergenic Effect

Olsen et al. from Denmark studied the specificity and efficacy of immunotherapy with A. vulgaris extracts on 25 patients having seasonal rhinoconjunctivitis for more than two years and only two clinically important allergies—either to A. vulgaris and Betula verrucosa or to A. vulgaris and Phleum pratense. Twenty patients completed two years of specific immunotherapy. Nine patients were treated with the extracts of A. vulgaris and 11 with the extracts of either B. verrucosa or P. pratense. Treatment with A. vulgaris was followed by a significant decrease in skin and eye sensitivity to A. vulgaris but not to B. verrucosa or P. pratense. No significant decrease was observed in medicine consumption or symptom scores. The patients treated with B. verrucosa or P. pratense experienced a significant decrease in skin and eye sensitivity to these organisms, but not to A. vulgaris, and showed a significant decrease in medicine consumption and symptom scores in the B. verrucosa or P. pratense season but not in the A. vulgaris season. The treatment was both effective and specific, with one unexplained exception that both patient groups (A. vulgaris and B. verrucosa or P. pratense) experienced decreased skin sensitivity to A. vulgaris [116].

Antimalarial Activity

Kodippili et al. from Sri Lanka investigated the antimalarial (both antiparasitic and antidisease) activity of the A. vulgaris extract. They assessed the antiparasitic activity of the extract at three doses (250, 500, and 1000 mg/kg) in vivo in the Plasmodium yoelii rodent malaria model, using distilled water as the negative control and Coartem as the positive control. In the 4-day suppressive assay, the oral administration of the extract at 500 and 1000 mg/kg significantly inhibited parasitemia by 65.16% and 51.46%, respectively. The antinociceptive activity of the extract was analyzed using the hot plate test, which indicated a central, supraspinally mediated response in relieving pain. The antidisease activity of the extract was further corroborated by the increased survival of the infected mice treated with the 500 mg/kg dose. The A. vulgaris extract was well tolerated by the mice over a period of 14 days (assay of subchronic toxicity), with no overt signs of toxicity or stress. Hepatotoxicity (evaluated in terms of the serum levels of glutamic–oxaloacetic transaminase and serum glutamic–pyruvic transaminase), renotoxicity (in terms of serum urea and creatinine), and hematotoxicity (in terms of total RBC, WBC, and differential leukocyte counts) were also ruled out. Based on these findings, the authors concluded that A. vulgaris leaf extract is orally active and nontoxic, and that A. vulgaris is a weed with the potential to act as a cheap source of the antimalarial plant [117].

Another team from the same center from Sri Lanka studied the ethanolic leaf extract of A. vulgaris for antiparasitic activity in Plasmodium berghei ANKA murine malaria model that elicits similar pathogenesis as falciparum malaria. The extract at doses of 500, 750, and 1000 mg/kg significantly inhibited parasitemia by 79.3%, 79.6%, and 87.3% respectively, in the 4-day suppressive assay. Chronic administration of the extract at high dose ruled out the overt signs of toxicity and stress as well as hepatotoxicity, renotoxicity, and hematotoxicity. Therefore, the authors claimed that the oral administration of a crude extract of A. vulgaris is nontoxic and induces antimalarial (antiparasitic) effects [118].

Anthelmintic Activity

Caner et al. from Turkey proved that the extracts of A. vulgaris and A. absinthium induce anthelmintic effects against trichinellosis (Trichinella spiralis) in rats. The results of trichinoscopy and artificial digestion showed that during the enteral (adult) phase of the illness, 300 mg/kg of methanol extracts prepared from the aerial parts of A. vulgaris and A. absinthium reduced the larval rate by 75.6% and 63.5% in the tongue, 53.4% and 37.7% in the diaphragm, 67.8% and 46.2% in the quadriceps, and 66.7% and 60.5% in the biceps–triceps muscles of rats, respectively. Furthermore, during the parenteral (encapsulated larvae) phase, 600 mg/kg dose of both the plant extracts decreased the larval rate by 66.4% and 59.9% in the tongue, 57.4% and 50.0% in the diaphragm, 47.6% and 43.7% in the quadriceps, and 60.2% and 46.4% in the biceps–triceps muscles of rats, respectively. In addition, antibody analysis showed that A. vulgaris extract can significantly reduce the antibody response [119].

Insecticidal Activity


The insecticidal activity of A. vulgaris was studied by a Hindu team from Tiruchirappalli in India. They exposed the larvae of Aedes aegypti (Egyptian mosquito, dengue virus vector) to various concentrations of the essential oil extracted from the A. vulgaris herb. Even at a low concentration of 10 ppm, insecticidal activity was observed after 24 h, while the best results were seen at a concentration of 500 ppm, where after 8 h of exposure to the oil solution, the larvae mortality rate was 100%. Thus, the study showed that the essential oil of A. vulgaris might serve as a potential insecticide [17].

The activity of essential oil obtained from the leaves and nanoparticles prepared with leaf extracts was evaluated by Lavor et al. from Brazil and Balasubramani et al. from India [122,123].

Furthermore, other teams have documented the effect of different raw materials against another insect species—Culex quinquefasciatus [124] and some stored product insects [125]

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7583039/

donderdag, april 13, 2023

Salvia voor een beter geheugen. Een onderzoek.

Studenten nemen beter informatie in zich op als ze etherische olie van de plant Salvia lavandulaefolia - ander woord: Spaanse salie - gebruiken. Een druppeltje is voldoende om de werking van het geheugen bijna onmiddellijk beter te laten functioneren.

Studie
In 2003 publiceerden Britse psychologen een kleine humane studie in Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior, waarin ze twee dozijn gezonde studenten bij verschillende gelegenheden placebo's of capsules met olie uit Salvia lavandulaefolia gaven. In de uren na de toediening testten de onderzoekers het geheugen van de proefpersonen meerdere keren. De studenten moesten kijken naar een beeldscherm waarop kort achter elkaar 15 woorden verschenen. Onmiddellijk na de vertoning moesten de studenten proberen zoveel mogelijk van die woorden op te schrijven. Twintig minuten later vroegen de onderzoekers de proefpersonen hetzelfde nog eens te doen.
Salvia
Traditionele genezers in Europa en China hebben eeuwenlang extracten van planten uit de Salviafamilie gebruikt als middel om het geheugen en andere cognitieve vermogens op te vijzelen. Tot die planten behoren Salvia officinalis en Salvia lavandulaefolia [hieronder].

Studenten nemen beter informatie in zich op als ze olie van de plant Salvia lavandulaefolia of Spaanse salie gebruiken. Een druppeltje is voldoende om de werking van het geheugen vrijwel onmiddellijk beter te laten functioneren.
Beide planten bevatten ongeveer dezelfde bioactieve stoffen. In Salvia officinalis zit echter meer thujone dan in Salvia lavandulaefolia. Omdat thujone in hoge doses giftig is en omdat de onderzoekers het [overigens kleine] risico verder wilden reduceren dat hun proefpersonen verkeerd op suppletie zouden reageren, kozen de onderzoekers voor Salvia lavandulaefolia.
De olie in de capsules die de onderzoekers aan hun proefpersonen gaven, bestond voor 26 procent uit 1,8-ci neol en voor 24 procent uit camphor. Daarnaast bevatte de olie onder meer alpha-pinene, camphene, beta-pinene, borneol en alpha-terpineol.
De onderzoekers deden in vitro-onderzoek met de olie uit Salvia lavandulaefolia, en constateerden dat die het enzym acetylcholinesterase afremt. Omdat acetylcholinesterase in de hersenen acetylcholine afbreekt, kunnen stoffen met deze eigenschap de concentratie acetylcholine doen toenemen. Acetylcholine is een neurotransmitter die is betrokken bij leerprocessen.

Sponsor
Het onderzoek werd gesponsord door Oxford Natural Products. Over dat bedrijf weten we niet zoveel, behalve dan dat het in 2010 is opgeheven.

Resultaten
De meest effectieve dosering was 50 microliter Salvia lavandulaefolia-olie, ontdekten de Britten. Dat is 0.05 milliliter. Bij die inname konden de proefpersonen zich 60-150 minuten na inname meer woorden herinneren.
Studenten nemen beter informatie in zich op als ze etherische olie van de plant Salvia lavandulaefolia / Spaanse salie gebruiken. Een druppeltje is voldoende om de werking van het geheugen vrijwel onmiddellijk beter te laten functioneren.

Dosering

Meestal zit Salvia lavandulaefolia-olie in druppelflesjes. Een vuistregel is dat 1 druppel van een olie uit een kruid ongeveer 0.05 milliliter is. De optimale dosering volgens deze studie is dus 1 druppeltje olie.

Conclusie
De onderzoekers vermoeden dat Spaanse salie meer is dan een supplement dat gezonde mensen beter laat leren. Ze hopen dat extracten van Spaanse salie ook interessant zijn voor mensen met de ziekte van Alzheimer of een andere vorm van dementie.
"The primary symptom of Alzheimer's disease is a loss of memory", schrijven de Britten. "The encouraging memory-enhancing properties of Salvia in this acute administration paradigm and the favourable pharmacological profile suggest that Salvia is potentially a novel therapeutic treatment for Alzheimer's disease."
"Placebo-controlled trials in this patient population are indicated as are trials in nondemented elderly and those with mild cognitive impairment."

Bron: Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 2003 Jun;75(3):669-74.

dinsdag, februari 14, 2023

De eerste daslookblaadjes

Nog lang geen lente. Toch zijn ze er weer. De eerste dit, de eerste dat en dus ook de eerste daslookblaadjes. Geluk en gelik zit in een groen blaadje. Zelfs voor een oude herborist.

The plant is widely distributed in Europe and Asia and does not grow in areas above 1900 m above sea level. The active growth phase of wild garlic lasts three to four months and begins in early spring, between late February and early March. The expected flowering period of wild garlic is between April and May. All parts of the plant are edible [3], but the bulbs and leaves are most commonly consumed. For consumption, the leaves are harvested by flowering time, while for medicinal purposes, leaves or herb (Allii ursini folium/herba), collected in April and May, and bulbs (Allii ursini bulbus), collected in September and October, are used [4,5]. Wild garlic is usually collected as a wild plant species from natural habitats, but in some countries, this plant species is on the list of protected plants, so it is not possible to collect it from the wild for personal use and sale [6]. The cultivation of this species is relatively demanding, as it has special requirements, especially environmental conditions in which it grows in its natural habitats. Moreover, the propagation of this plant is difficult due to certain biological characteristics or ecological requirements, such as slow growth, specific soil requirements and low germination rates [7].

Modern pharmacological studies have confirmed many of the above traditional indications for the use of wild garlic. It is recommended as a digestive, antimicrobial, and detoxifying agent for the body, and a number of in vitro and in vivo experiments have shown Allium ursinum to be a plant with high potential for the prevention and treatment of diseases of the cardiovascular system [8,9,10,11,12,13]. It is commonly used as a remedy for respiratory diseases, such as colds or bronchitis [14]. Wild garlic is effective in wound healing, as well as chronic skin diseases [6]. It is effective in regulating blood pressure, lowering insulin levels and total cholesterol levels, with a tendency to increase HDL cholesterol. All the mentioned beneficial effects of wild garlic on human health can be attributed mainly to the sulfurous compounds, which are the most characteristic constituents of Allium plants. Allium ursinum belongs to the Allium species of methiine/alliine type, which means that it contains mainly a mixture of (+)-S-methyl-L-cysteine sulfoxide (methiine) and (+)-S-allyl-L-cysteine sulfoxide (alliine). Another important chemical constituent of wild garlic is also polyphenolic compounds. The leaves of wild garlic contain high concentrations of ferulic and vanillic acid, p-coumaric acid, and kaempferol derivatives, as well as high concentrations of flavonoids [15,16,17]. In addition, wild garlic leaves contain pigment compounds, especially chlorophylls and carotenoids, vitamins, such as vitamin C, and of the macro- and microelements in wild garlic, the iron content of 247.9 mg/kg is noteworthy [18,19]. Precisely because of the rich nutritional composition and content of phytochemicals with high therapeutic potential and the range of biological activities, from antioxidant to antimicrobial, that it exhibits, this plant species can be considered a functional food with high production potential for various functional products and food supplements of natural origin.

References
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maandag, maart 01, 2021

Heemst ook tegen eczeem

Tussen de vele wortels die in zakken mee verhuisd zijn van Bretagne naar Bonsoy zoek ik naar heemstwortels. Helaas kan ik ze op dit moment niet vinden. Even later op internet vind ik wel een mooi onderzoekje over het gebruik van heemst bij atopisch eczeem bij kinderen. Google troost?

Eczeem bij kinderen natuurlijk en veilig behandelen? Dat zou volgens een recent onderzoek mogelijk kunnen zijn met een zalf gebaseerd op echte heemst. Constitutioneel eczeem of atopische dermatitis is een chronische, terugkerende huidziekte die vooral baby’s en jonge kinderen treft. Veelal worden medicijnen zoals hormooncrèmes voorgeschreven, die vervelende bijwerkingen opleveren. In een onderzoek van Naseri et al wordt de werkzaamheid van echte heemst (Althaea officinalis) bij milde tot matige atopische dermatitis geëvalueerd.

Constitutioneel eczeem, ook bekend als atopisch eczeem of atopische dermatitis, komt vooral voor bij baby’s en jonge kinderen. Het is een chronische ontsteking van de huid, waardoor roodheid, jeuk en schilfers kunnen ontstaan. Het is een chronische ziekte. De klachten kunnen tijdelijk verminderen en dan weer terugkomen.

De klinische studie die ik tegen kwam werd opgezet om de veiligheid en werkzaamheid van fytotherapeutisch gebruik van echte heemst bij kinderen met constitutioneel eczeem te onderzoeken. Aan deze studie konden kinderen tussen drie maanden en twaalf jaar deelnemen. Zij werden in twee groepen verdeeld. De ene groep gebruikte gedurende een week twee keer per dag een zalf met 1% Althaea officinalis. De controlegroep kreeg gedurende een week twee keer per dag een zalf met 1% hydrocortison. Na deze week werden bij beide groepen de zalven drie keer per week gedurende een periode van drie weken toegediend.

In totaal voltooiden 22 patiënten het onderzoek. In beide groepen werd een significante afname van de Scorad-score waargenomen, maar de heemstgroep gaf een significant hogere verbetering dan de hydrocortison-groep.

De resultaten van deze pilotstudie toonden aan dat de werkzaamheid van Althaea officinalis-zalf hoger is dan die van hydrocortison-zalf bij kinderen met atopische dermatitis. Ook laten de resultaten zien dat eczeem bij kinderen natuurlijk behandelen zelfs effectiever kan zijn dan behandeling met hydrocortison. Er zijn natuurlijk verdere studies nodig om deze bevinding te bevestigen, maar het verwondert mij niet dat deze slijmstofplant omwille van zijn verzachtende werking bij huidaandoeningen werkzaam kan zijn.

donderdag, mei 15, 2014

De les van de paardenbloem

Les geven bij Syntra Leuven. Even buiten rondsnuffelen tussen straatstenen en stoep. Heermoes, bijvoet, smalle weegbree, paardenbloem. Superfoods zijn het, om maar eens een irritante, modieuze term te gebruiken. Draai ze maar door de smoothie, om nog maar zo'n mode-term te gebruiken.

Smoothie is toch gewoon sap van van alles en nog wat en de term superfood wordt meestal gebruikt voor planten en zeewieren die van ver komen, spirulina, gojibes... Planten die als extract meestal duur verkocht worden en zeker wel waardevol kunnen zijn, maar onze massaal voorkomende onkruiden zoals heermoes, paardenbloem en brandnetel zijn zeker even super.
Kijk bijvoorbeeld maar eens naar het wetenschappelijk onderzoek over paardenbloem.

Fitoterapia. 2004 Dec;75(7-8):760-3. The bifidogenic effect of Taraxacum officinale root. Trojanová I1, Rada V, Kokoska L, Vlková E.
The infusion of dandelion root (Taraxacum officinale) stimulated in vitro the growth of 14 strains of bifidobacteria. The utilization of oligofructans, glucose, fructose and total saccharides was determined by enzymatic and phenol-sulfuric methods. Dandelion oligofructans were important source of carbon and energy for bifidobacteria tested.

Int J Mol Sci. 2010 Jan 6;11(1):67-78. doi: 10.3390/ijms11010067.
Hypolipidemic and antioxidant effects of dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) root and leaf on cholesterol-fed rabbits. Choi UK1, Lee OH, Yim JH, Cho CW, Rhee YK, Lim SI, Kim YC.
Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale), an herbal medicine, has been shown to favorably affect choleretic, antirheumatic and diuretin properties. Recent reports have indicated that excessive oxidative stress contributes to the development of atherosclerosis-linked metabolic syndrome. The objective of this current study was to investigate the possible hypolipidemic and antioxidative effects of dandelion root and leaf in rabbits fed with a high-cholesterol diet. A group of twenty eight male rabbits was divided into four subgroups; a normal diet group, a high-cholesterol diet group, a high-cholesterol diet with 1% (w/w) dandelion leaf group, and a high-cholesterol diet with 1% (w/w) dandelion root group. After the treatment period, the plasma antioxidant enzymes and lipid profiles were determined. Our results show that treatment with dandelion root and leaf positively changed plasma antioxidant enzyme activities and lipid profiles in cholesterol-fed rabbits, and thus may have potential hypolipidemic and antioxidant effects. Dandelion root and leaf could protect against oxidative stress linked atherosclerosis and decrease the atherogenic index.

Acta Biol Hung. 2010 Jun;61(2):175-90. Hepatocurative potential of sesquiterpene lactones of Taraxacum officinale on carbon tetrachloride induced liver toxicity in mice. Mahesh A1, Jeyachandran R, Cindrella L, Thangadurai D, Veerapur VP, Muralidhara Rao D.

The hepatocurative potential of ethanolic extract (ETO) and sesquiterpene lactones enriched fraction (SL) of Taraxacum officinale roots was evaluated against carbon tetrachloride (CCl 4 ) induced hepatotoxicity in mice. The diagnostic markers such as alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and total bilirubin contents were significantly elevated, whereas significant reduction in the level of reduced glutathione (GSH) and enhanced hepatic lipid peroxidation, liver weight and liver protein were observed in CCl 4 induced hepatotoxicity in mice. Post-treatment with ETO and SL significantly protected the hepatotoxicity as evident from the lower levels of hepatic enzyme markers, such as serum transaminase (ALT, AST), ALP and total bilirubin. Further, significant reduction in the liver weight and liver protein in drug-treated hepatotoxic mice and also reduced oxidative stress by increasing reduced glutathione content and decreasing lipid peroxidation level has been noticed. The histopathological evaluation of the liver also revealed that ETO and SL reduced the incidence of liver lesions induced by CCl 4 . The results indicate that sesquiterpene lactones have a protective effect against acute hepatotoxicity induced by the administration of CCl 4 in mice. Furthermore, observed activity of SL may be due to the synergistic action of two sesquiterpene lactones identified from enriched ethyl acetate fraction by HPLC method.

En zelfs de bloemen van onze paardenbloem werden door ijverige wetenschappers onderzocht. Phytomedicine. 2005 Aug;12(8):588-97. Dandelion (Taraxacum officinale) flower extract suppresses both reactive oxygen species and nitric oxide and prevents lipid oxidation in vitro. Hu C1, Kitts
Flavonoids and coumaric acid derivatives were identified from dandelion flower (Taraxacum officinale). Characteristics of chain-breaking antioxidants, such as extended lag phase and reduced propagation rate, were observed in oxidation of linoleic acid emulsion with the addition of dandelion flower extract (DFE). DFE suppressed both superoxide and hydroxyl radical, while the latter was further distinguished by both site-specific and non-specific hydroxyl radical inhibition. DPPH-radical-scavenging activity and a synergistic effect with alpha-tocopherol were attributed to the reducing activity derived from phenolic content of DFE. A significant (p < 0.05) and concentration-dependent, reduced nitric oxide production from acterial-lipopolysaccharide-stimulated mouse macrophage RAW264.7 cells was observed with the addition of DFE. Moreover, peroxyl-radical-induced intracellular oxidation of RAW264.7 cells was inhibited significantly (p < 0.05) by the addition of DFE over a range of concentrations. These results showed that the DFE possessed marked antioxidant activity in both biological and chemical models. Furthermore, the efficacy of DFE in inhibiting both reactive oxygen species and nitric oxide were attributed to its phenolic content.

Wat paardenbloemblad knabbelen zoals de konijnen en dat kan zowat het hele jaar door, is dus een verstandige, goedkope en zelfs smakelijke manier om gezond te blijven.

https://sites.google.com/site/kruidwis/kruiden-a/taraxacum