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Archive for September, 2010

Hypertension

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September 30, 2010 at 2:50 am

Clinical Considerations

- Hypertension is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as systolic blood pressure >139 mmHg and/or diastolic pressure >90 mmHg.

- Classification according to severity

• First degree: 140 -159/90 – 99 mmHg

. Second degree: 160-179/100-109 mmHg

• Third degree: ≥180/ ≥110 mmHg

• Isolated systolic hypertension: ≥140/<90 mmHg

- Arterial hypertension can be found in 25-30% of the population. The incidence increases with age.

General treatment measures: Lifestyle changes should be carried out before initiation of therapy (e. g„ endurance sports, dietary measures such as reduced refined fat and sugar intake, weight and stress reduction).

Clinical value of herbal medicine

- Although a number of very safe and effective synthetic drugs are available, the patient compliance rates with these drugs are rather low.

- Although few study data are available on herbal antihypertensives, and although they tend to be low-potency medications, many European patients request them.

- We feel that medically supervised attempts to manage hypertension using herbal preparations are justifiable in the initial stages of the disease. Moreover, herbal preparations make it easier for relatively young and older patients to accept the lifelong need for treatment.

Recommended Herbal Remedies (Overview)

Sympatholytics

Rauwolfia (Rauwolfia serpentina).

- Action: Rauwolfia total extract has antihypertensive and sympatholytic effects due to various constituents, especially reserpine and raubasine.

• Immediate blood pressure reduction cannot be expected.

- Contraindications: Depression, peptic ulcer, pheochromocytoma, pregnancy and lactation.

- Dosage and administration: To ensure consistency of potency and for safety, use should be restricted to commercial oral rauwolfia products.

- Side effects: Sedation, dryness of the mouth, nasal congestion, reduced sex drive, depression. These effects can be reduced or avoided by reducing the dose.

- Interactions: Digitalis or other cardiac glycosides, neuroleptics, barbiturates, levodopa.

Vasodilators

Garlic cloves (Allii sativi bulbus).

- Action

• The constituents allicin and ajoene cause hyperpolarization of vascular smooth-muscle cells, resulting in vasodilatation. This is presumably due to a non-potassium channel-related reduction in the intracellular calcium concentration.

• Thanks to their wide therapeutic range (e, g„ antioxidant, slightly antilipemic, fibrinolytic, and inhibitory of platelet aggregation), garlic extracts are useful for adjunctive treatment of all forms of arteriosclerosis.

• The antihypertensive effect of garlic takes a while to become noticeable. The maximum effect develops after around 6 months of treatment. Dry garlic powder extracts have the largest therapeutic effect.

- Contraindications: Hemophilia A and other coagulation disorders.

- Dosage and administration: 600-900 mg per day, equivalent to 1,8-2,7 g of fresh garlic.

- Side effects: Gastrointestinal irritation and allergic reactions are rare side effects. Typical smelling.

Warning: Although garlic preparations are unlikely to affect blood coagulation enough to contraindicate it before or after surgery, it is safest to discontinue use before or after major surgery.

Drugs with Unclear Effects

Mistletoe (Visci albi herba).

- Action: The antihypertensive constituents in aqueous mistletoe extracts have not yet been identified. They are said to reduce occasional symptoms such as headaches, dizziness, restlessness, nervousness, and reduced exercise tolerance.

- Dosage and administration

Tea: Pour 1 cup of cold water onto 2,5 g (1 teaspoon) of the finely chopped herb, allow to stand at room temperature for 12 hours, then strain.

Dosage: One to two cups per day. Tincture (1:1) 20 to 30 drops, several times daily.

Functional Heart Disorders

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September 28, 2010 at 2:48 am

Clinical Considerations

- The diagnosis of functional heart disorder is a diagnosis of exclusion. The typical patient complains of heart palpitations.

- The most common symptoms are “loud” heartbeat, cardiac arrhythmias, subjective feeling of unrest, diffuse left precordial, non-load-dependent pressure sensation, sudden shortness of breath, nervousness, anxiety, rapid fatigability, insomnia, lack of concentration, tendency to sweat heavily, symptoms of heart “agitation.”

- The cardiac work-up usually does not reveal any abnormalities. If any changes are found, they are usually harmless extrasystoles or functional coronary spasms.

Clinical value of herbal medicine: Herbal preparations can be helpful because no specific synthetic drugs or chemical remedies for functional heart disorders exist. Beta blockers are, in many cases, either contraindicated or not accepted by the patients.

Recommended Herbal Remedies (Overview)

External Remedies: See Coronary Artery Disease.

Internal Remedies (nonglycoside drugs)

Hawthorn leaf and flower (Crataegi folium cum floribus), mother-wort herb (Leonuri cardiacae herba).

- Action:

Hawthorn

Motherwort has mild negative chronotropic, antihypertensive, and calming effects. Its use is recommended only as an additive to other cardiac remedies or sedatives.

Internal Remedies (glycoside drugs)

Adonis (Adonidis herba) and lily-of-the-valley (Convallariae herba).

Note: Larger doses of any preparation containing cardiac glycosides are toxic.

- For further information, see Heart Failure.

Range of Applications

Functional Heart Disorders

Tincture Rx: Extract. Adonidis Fluid., Tincture Convallariae, Tincture Valerianae, aa 10.0.

- Dosage and administration: 30 drops, 3 times a day.

- Clinical value: Mild cardiac sedative, useful in nervous palpitations.

Tea Rx: Leonuri cardiacae herba, Convallariae herba, Melissae folium, aa 100.0.

- Dosage and administration: Steep 2 teaspoons in 1 cup of boiling water. Take 1 cup, twice daily, for several weeks.

- Clinical value: Somewhat less potent than the first formulation.

Leonuri cardiacae herba (motherwort)

- Dosage and administration: Steep 2 teaspoons in 1 cup of boiling water, or addl-2 mLofthel: 5 tincture to a cup of water. Take 1 cup, 3 times daily.

- Clinical value: This prescription is very mild and can be recommended for long-term use.

Tea Rx: Crataegi flos, Crataegi folium, Visci albi, aa ad 100,0.

- Dosage and administration: Steep 1 to 2 teaspoons of the herbs in 1 cup of boiled water, or add 1-2 mL Tincture Crataegi tincture and 1 mL Tincture Visci to 1 cup of boiled water. Take 1 cup, 2 times a day.

- Clinical value: For mild antihypertensive action.

Functional Heart Disorders with Gastrocardiac Symptoms Complex (Roemheld’s Syndrome).

Functional Heart Disorders with Severe Anxiety

Tincture Rx: Tincture Convallariae 5,0, Tincture Crataegi 10,0, Tincture Valerianae ad 30,0,

- Dosage and administration: 15 drops, 3 times a day.

- Clinical value: The valerian component provides an additional sedative effect

Coronary Artery Disease

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September 26, 2010 at 2:21 am

Clinical Considerations

- The prevalence of coronary artery disease (CAD) is increasing in industrialized countries. This is certainly attributable to a general lack of physical exercise, increased consumption of fatty foods, and cigarette smoking, but is also due to the fact that people now live longer.

- Despite intensive research, some risk factors of CAD are still unknown or untreatable.

Herbal treatment measures

- In Germany, topical heart ointments containing aromatic herbs that increase local blood flow of cutivisceral reflex regions are thought to be beneficial in acute functional coronary artery spasms.

- Flavonoids in hawthorn extract reduce wall tension in normal and sclerotic blood vessels. These chemicals are also presumed to stimulate beta-2 receptors and, thus, to widen coronary arteries and blood vessels in skeletal muscle. The usefulness of hawthorn in CAD is therefore arguable, but has not yet been confirmed in clinical studies.

Clinical value of herbal medicine

- The recommendations in this section are solely based on empirical experience. Clinical study data or controlled studies on most of these indications are not yet available.

- Once CAD has become manifest, herbal measures should be restricted to adjunctive treatment only.

Herbal measures to help counteract risk factors

- Antilipemic herbs: Garlic, artichoke.

- Antithrombotic herbs: Garlic.

- Antihypertensive herbs: Garlic.

Clinical value of herbal medicine for risk factors of CAD

- The herbal treatments outlined here are purely prophylactic and adj unctive measures that can be recommended as home remedies. Clinical studies are available.

Recommended Herbal Remedies (Overview)

External Remedies

Aromatic plant medicaments such as camphor (Cinnamomic camphorae aetheroleum), rosemary leaf (Rosmarini folium), pine needles (Pini aetheroleum), eucalyptus leaf (Eucalypti folium), and menthol (Menthae aetheroleum).

- Action: Stimulate cutivisceral reflexes, blood flow and spasmolysis, thereby reducing CAD-related pain.

- Dosage and administration: The preparations are applied to the left precordial region of the chest and rubbed into the skin as often as needed.

Warning: Ointments containing camphor can cause skin irritation and inflammation and should not be applied to damaged skin.

Internal Remedies

Hawthorn.

Range of Applications

Acute Angina Pectoris

Hawthorn leaf and flower.

- Dosage and administration: Dose is diluted oil or other balm applied several times daily or as needed for mild pain of angina. Apply twice daily to the left precordial region, or as needed when chest pain occurs.

- Clinical value: Clinical studies have not been conducted. Large inter-individual differences in the effects of these remedies can be observed.

Prevention and Treatment of Early-stage CAD

Hawthorn leaf and flower.

- Steep 2 teaspoons of the herb in 150 mL of boiling water for 20 minutes. Sweeten lightly. This mild infusion should be used only for health-promoting benefits.

- Hawthorn tincture: 2-4 mL several times a day.

- Extract standardized to flavonoids and/or proanthocyanins: 1 to 2 capsules or tablets.

- Dosage and administration: One dose, 2 to 3 times daily.

- Clinical value: For low-potency treatment, hawthorn extracts that are not standardized have a smaller therapeutic range than the corresponding standardized commercial products.

Early-stage CAD with Mild Hypertension

Tea Rx: Crataegi flos; Crataegi folium; Visci albi, aa ad 100,0.

- Dosage and administration: 1 to 2 teaspoons per cup, 2 times daily.

- Clinical value: For low-potency treatment. The extract is not standardized and has a smaller therapeutic range than commercial products.

CAD with Gastrocardiac Symptom Complex (Roemheld’s Syndrome)

Tincture Rx: Oil Carvi 5,0; Tincture Convallariae, Tincture Crataegi, Tincture Carminativa, Spirit. Aetheris Nitrosi, ad 10,0.

- Dosage and administration: 20 drops, 3 times a day.

- Clinical value: This has proved to be a very useful remedy in elderly patients, who often develop Roemheld’s syndrome.

Long-term Treatment of CAD

Hawthorn preparations, garlic.

Heart Failure

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September 24, 2010 at 2:14 am

Clinical Considerations

- In heart failure, the heart is unable to maintain adequate circulation owing to a decrease in heart muscle function (cardiac output) resulting from cardiac myocyte death. The main causes are hypertension with increased venous pressures or cardiac volumes, valvular defects, and ischemia due to sclerotic coronary artery disease.

- The body attempts to compensate for the circulatory deficiency by stimulating mechanisms such as the sympathetic nervous system and by narrowing the blood vessels, resulting in a higher workload on the heart. Additional compensatory mechanisms lead to a further decrease in cardiac performance.

- Effective treatment measures should be initiated as early as possible to prevent the progression of heart failure.

Prognosis: The overall prognosis for heart failure remains poor although the conventional treatments (diuretics, ACE inhibitors, beta blockers, AT1-blockers, digitalis) are effective.

Classification: According to the system of the New York Heart Association (NYHA), heart failure is divided into four clinical stages:

- NYHA I: Symptoms do not occur during normal physical exercise.

- NYHA II: Symptoms occur during more strenuous exercise.

- NYHA III: Symptoms occur during light exercise.

- NYHA IV: Symptoms occur even at rest.

Clinical value of herbal medicine: Hawthorn and digitaloid herbs are used in NYHA I and II heart failure. The current knowledge does not support treatment of NYHA III and IV heart failure by herbal remedies.

Recommended Herbal Remedies

Flavonoid-containing Herbs

Hawthorn leaf and flower (Crataegie folium cum flore).

- Action: Procyanidins enhance the influx of calcium into cardiac muscle fibers while only moderately increasing the oxygen demand. These compounds widen the coronary arteries and other cardiac vessels, thereby extending the refractory time. This results in an antiarrhythmic effect.

- Advantages of hawthorn

• Effective and well-tolerated in the early stages of heart failure, especially in patients with age-related degenerative changes in the heart muscle.

• With a high rate of acceptance by patients, hawthorn leaf and flower have only few side effects.

• Since flavonoids do not reduce the afterload, hawthorn can also be used by patients with low blood pressure.

• Hawthorn can be recommended for long-term use, and it combines well with cardiac glycosides, but may have a synergistic effect. This potential interaction should be watched. It may allow a reduction in medications like digoxin while maintaining the same overall therapeutic effect.

- Dosage and administration: One oral dose, 2 to 3 times daily. Relatively large doses over time are needed for sufficient effects. A daily dose of ca. 900 mg hawthorn total extract is generally recommended. The herbal remedy takes around 4 weeks to become fully effective.

Note: Tea infusion is not the best way to extract water-soluble compounds from hawthorn. Hawthorn tea therefore has only weak effects and can be recommended, at best, only for a health-promoting effect in the very early stages of cardiac insufficiency, or as a long-term preventative measure.

Digitaloid Herbs

Adonis (Adonidis herba), lily-of-the-valley (Convallariae herba), and squill root (Scillae bulbus).

- Action: The effects are comparable to those of the isolated substances dig-oxin and digitoxin, but the herbal preparations have secondary effects such as increased urinary excretion (squill) or frequency (lily-of-the-valley).

- Advantages: The herbal preparations have a somewhat wider therapeutic range than the isolated substances, but their concentrations can extend into the toxic range.

- Disadvantages: The absorption of the active compounds in the herbal preparations is generally poor and variable. Hence, their bioavailabilities and potencies are usually low.

- Dosage and administration: One oral dose, 2 to 3 times daily. Individualized dose setting is required.

Warning: All digitaloid preparations can be toxic (similar to the glycosides digoxin and digitoxin), producing symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, stomach complaints, diarrhea, and cardiac arrhythmias.

Combinations of Flavonoid and Digitaloid Herbs

- Advantages: The tolerance is said to be better than that of preparations containing digitaloid herbs alone.

- Disadvantages: Their therapeutic range is smaller than that of pure hawthorn preparations, and their toxic effects are similar to those of digitaloid drugs.

Review of some plants with immunomodulatory activity

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September 22, 2010 at 8:42 am

Certain medicinal plants are believed to promote positive health and maintain organic resistance against infection by re-establishing body equilibrium and conditioning the body tissues. It is tempting to speculate that the restorative and rejuvenating power of these herbal remedies might be due to their action on the immune system and some of the medicinal plants are believed to enhance the natural resistance of the body to infections. A plethora of plant-derived materials (proteins, lectins, polysaccharides, etc.) have been shown to stimulate the immune system. Some of the plants with established immunomodulatory activity are Viscum album, Panax ginseng, Asparagus racemosus, Azadirachta indica, Tinospora cordifolia, Polygala senega, Ocimum santum, Withania somnifera among others.

There are a number of plants that have been reported to have immunomodulatory activity; Table: Selected Indian medicinal plants with immunomodulatory activity, and their part, extract and dose, with mechanism of action summarises some important rasayana plants mentioned in Puri (2003).

Table: Selected Indian medicinal plants with immunomodulatory activity, and their part, extract and dose, with mechanism of action

Name of plant Family Activity with route of administration/dose Reported mechanism of action
Acorus calamus L. Araceae Immunosuppressive activity of ethanolic extract of rhizome Inhibited proliferation of mitogen (PHA) and antigen (purified protein derivative)-stimulated

(PBMCs)

Alpinia galanga Wild. Scitamineae Immunostimulating activity of hot water polysaccharide extracts or the root powder at 50 and 25 mg/kg body weight Stimulating effect on the RES and increased the number of peritoneal exudates cells (PEC), and spleen cells of mice
Anacyclus pyrethrum DC Asteraceae Immunostimulating activity of hot water polysaccharide extracts of the root powder at 50 and 25 mg/kg body weight Stimulating effect on the reticuloendothelial system (RES) and increased the number of peritoneal exudate cells (PEC), and spleen cells of mice
Andrographis paniculata (Burm.f.)Wall. Ex Nees. Acanthaceae Immunostimulatory activity of the methanolic extract of diterpenes (andrographolide, 14-deoxy-andrographolide and 14-deoxy-11, 12-didehydroandrographolide) Enhances proliferation and interleukin-2 (IL-2); induction of human peripheral blood lymphocytes. Andrographolide also causes activation and proliferation of immunocompetent cells as well on the production of key cytokines and immune activation markers
Argyreia speciosa Sweet Convolvulaceae Immunomodulatory activity of ethanolic extract of root at doses 50,100 and 200 mg/kg body weight Potentiates the DTH reaction
Asparagus racemosus Wild. Liliaceae Immunoadjuvant potential of aqueous root extract at 100 mg/ kg for 15 days

Immunomodulating property of asparagus

Immunoadjuvant

Pretreatment with asparagus caused leucocytosis

Boerhaavia diffusa L. Nyctagenaceae Immunomodulation by the ethanolic extracts of roots at 100 and 500 |ig/ mL

Immunomodulatory effects of the alkaloidal fraction at 25-100 mg/kg

Immunosuppressive activity of the flavonoids

isolated

Immunosuppressive potential by inhibition of human NKcell cytotoxicity, production of NO

mouse macrophage cells, IL-2 andTNF-ain human PBMCs

In-vivo immunostimulatory activity without an in-vitro effect

Chloroform, ethanol extracts and BDI inhibited PHA stimulated proliferation of PBMC two-way MLR, NK cell cytotoxicity as well as LPS induced NO production

Boswellia serrata Roxb. Ex colebr Burseraceae Immunomodulating effect of Boswellic acid Effect on cell mediated humoral components
Centella asiatica (L.) Urban Umbelliferae Immunomodulatory activity of the methanolic extract of the whole plant at 100-500 mg/kg body weight Increases the phagocytic index and total
Crocus sativus L. Iridiaceae In vitro immune-activation of pteroglycans at concentration of 10-1000 ng/mL WBC count and also F ratio of the phagocytic index

Rapid activation of protein kinase C and NF-kB

Curculigo orchioides Gaertn. Amaryllidaceae Immunostimulatory effect of the methanolic extract (100 and 200 mg/kg body weight) of the rhizome

Immunostimulant activity of the purified glycoside fraction of the ethyl acetate extract

Increase in humoral antibody (HA) titre, DTH and levels of WBC

Stimulates both humoral and CMI responses by enhancement of HA titre and DTH

Hemidesmus indicus R. Br. Asclepiadaceae Immunomodulatory activity of the 95% alcoholic extract at 100 mg/kg body weight Suppressing both cell-mediated (CMI) and humoral components of the immune system
Ocimum sanctum L. Labiatae Immunomodulatory effects of powder at 200 mg/kg body weight for 21 days

Immunomodulatory potential of seed oil at 3 mL/kg

Immunotherapeutic potential of aqueous leaf extract.

Immunostimulatory activity by enhanced neutrophil functioning

Reduced theTBC and increases neutrophil and lymphocyte counts with enhanced phagocytic activity and phagocyti index. Increase in antibody titre

Modulates both humoral and CMI responsiveness which may be mediated by

Phoenix dactylifera Palmae Immunostimulatory immunoregulatory role of methanolic and aqueous suspension of leaves at 100 mg/kg activity of the 50% alcoholic fruit extract at 25 mg/kg body weight for 7 days Stimulating humoral immunity
Phyllanthus amarus Aschum & Thonn. Euphorbia ceae Crude extract, as well as the red pigment had immunoactivating activity _
Phyllanthus Euphorbia ceae Immunomodulatory activity of the dried fruit powder as suspension at 20 mg/kg body weight Augments natural cell-mediated cytotoxicity
Picrorhiza kurrooa Royleex Benth. Scrophulariaceae Immunostimulant activity of Picroliv, the iridoid glycoside fraction at 10 mg/kg for 7 days

Immunostimulatory activity of the 50% alcoholic extract of leaf

Immunomodulatory activity of the biopolymeric fraction at 12.5, 25 and 50 mg/kg body weight for 14 days

Enhanced the non-specific immune response characterised by an increase in macrophage migration index

Enhanced humoral immune response, phagocytic functions of the cell

Piper longum L. Piperaceae Immunoregulatory potential of ethyl acetate extract of fruits and piperinic acid at 10,20,40 and 80 mg/kg body weight

Immunomodulatory activity of alcoholic extract of the fruits (10 mg/dose per animal) and piperine (1.14 mg/dose per animal)

Increases in the proliferation of lymphocytes and cytokine levels (IL-4 and IFN-Ύ) in serum inhibition of mitogen induced human PBMC proliferation, mRNA transcripts of IL-2 (ConA) and TNFa, IL-1β and iNOS May be due to the combined action of humoral and CMI responses
Prunus amygdalus Batsch Rosaceae Immunostimulatory activity of the 50% alcoholic seed extract at 25 mg/kg body weight for 7 days Stimulating both CMI and humoral immunity in BALBc mice
Semecarpus anacardium L.f. Anacardiaceae Immunomodulatory activity of the nut extracts (alcoholic) at 1 mg/mL in mononuclear cells of normal and rheumatoid arthritis patients Inhibition of proinflammatory cytokine production
Sphaeranthus indicus L. Asteraceae Protective effect of the methanolic fraction (200 and 400 mg/kg body weight) of the methanolic extract of the flower heads against cyclophosphamide-induced suppression of humoral immunity

An immunostimulant sesquiterpene glycoside sphaeranthanolide

Influences both humoral and CMI and offers protection against immunosuppression induced by the cytotoxic agent cyclophosphamide
Terminalia chebula Retz. Combretaceae Immunomodulation studies of the 80% aqueous ethanolic extract at 400, 600 and 800 mg/kg body weight Enhanced humoral immunity
Tinospora cordifolia (Wild.) Miersex Hook.f. and Thomas Menispermaceae Immunopotentiating compounds syringin, cordial, cordioside and cordiofolioside (100 µg)

Immunomodulatory activity of the water and ethanolic extract of T. cordifolia at 100 mg/kg body weight

Immunostimatory activity of stem extract (75% methanol) at 200 mg/kg body weight

An immunologically active arabinogalactan

from

Syringin and cordiol inhibited the in vitro immunohaemolysis of antibody-coated sheep erythrocytes while cordioside, cordiofolioside A and cordiol caused macrophage activation Increased humoral response

Polyclonal mitogenic activity against B cells

Immunosuppression by inhibition of cyclophosphamide

Withania somnifera L. Solanaceae Immunomodulatory role of root powder (2% aqueous suspension) at 1000 mg/kg body weight on experimental induced inflammation

Immunomodulatory activity of the total extract (1000 mg/kg body weight) and its fraction (300 mg/kg body weight) were studied in experimental immune inflammation

Immunomodulatory drug of the root powder and extract at 100 mg/kg body weight

Potent inhibitory activity towards the complement system, mitogen-induced lymphocyte proliferation and delayed-type hypersensitivity reaction (DTH) hence immunosuppressive. Also counteraction of cyclophosphamide, azathioprin, or prednisolone induced immunosuppression
Zingiber officinale Roscoe Zingiberaceae Immunostimulatory activity of the 50% alcoholic of rhizome extract at 25 mg/kg body weight for 7 days

Immunomodulatory activity of the volatile oil of ginger 0.125,0.25 and 0.5 g/kg body weight

Stimulating both CMI and humoral immunity in BALBc mice

Influences both CMI response and non-specific proliferation of T lymphocytes

Some other plants not mentioned as ‘Rasayana’ for their immunomodulation potential
Aconitum heterphyllum Wall. Ranunculaceae Immunomodulating activity of the ethanolic extract of the rhizome at 100 mg/kg Enhanced phagocytic index and inhibits
Capparis zeylanica L Capparidaceae Immunomodulatory activity of the alcoholic and aqueous extract of the leaves at 150-300 mg/kg Prevented myelosuppression in mice treated with cyclophosphamide
Holorrhena antidysentrica Wall. Apocynaceae Immunomodulating activity of the ethanolic extract of the seeds at 100 mg/kg Enhanced phagocytic index and inhibits humoral component of immune system
Hyppophae rhamnoides L. Elaeagnaceae Immunomodulatory effect of the alcoholic leaf and fruits at 500 µg/ ml Inhibits chromium-induced lymphocyte proliferation
Mangifera Indica L. Anacardiaceae Immunomodulatory activity of the alcoholic extract of stem bark containing 2.6% mangiferin at 50-800 mg/kg for 5 days Increase in HA titre and DTH
Nigella sativa Ranunculaceae Immunomodulatory effect of proteins ranging from 94-110kDa at 10 µg/mL Suppressivefor IL-8 production either with
Nyctanthus arbor-tristris L. Oleaceae Immunostimulant activity of the 50% ethanolic extract of the seeds at 25 mg/kg Stimulation of antigen-specific and non-specific immunity
Ocimum gratissimum L. Labitae Immunomodulatory activity of the ethanolic extract of the leaves at 100 mg/kg Enhanced phagocytic index without affecting humoral component of immune system or CMI
Tridax procumbens L Compositae Immunomodulatory property of the ethanol insoluble fraction of the aqueous extract at 0.25 and 0.5 g/kg Influences both humoral as well as CMI system vis-a-vis assists in genesis of improved antibody response against specific clinical antigen
Trigonella foenum graecum L. Leguminaceae Immunomodulatory potential of the aqueous extract at 50,100 and 250 mg/kg Elevated humoral immunity with increase in phagocytic index and phagocytic capacity in macrophages
Tylophora Indica (Burmf.) Merr. Asclepiadaceae Immunomodulating activity of the ethanolic extract of the leaves at 50 mg/kg Enhanced phagocytic index and inhibits humoral component of immune system

Apart from total plant extracts, there are also some particular groups of compounds isolated from plants (both lower and higher) which have been reported as having potential immunomodulatory activity, and these are considered below.

Plant polysaccharides as immunomodulators

Many polysaccharides isolated from higher plants is considered to be biological response modifiers and have been reported to enhance various immune responses, such as complement activation, proliferation of lymphocytes and stimulation of macrophages. The use of immunomodulators derived from plants is attractive because it allows for enhanced host-derived mechanisms, while not involving the use of microorganism-specific therapeutics such as antibiotics. Arabinogalactans are a major group of polysaccharides reported to possess potent immunomodulatory activity.

The arabinogalactans can be subdivided into two main structural types. Arabinogalactan type I (AG-I) are arabinosyl-substituted derivatives of linear 1,4-linked β-D-galactopyranosyl units. Arabinosyl and galactosyl units can be linked via position 3 along the main chain. AG-I is found as ramified regions of rhamnogalacturonan backbones in pectin complexes. The second group, arabinogalactan type II (AG-II), consist of highly branched polysaccharides with ramified chains of 1,3-linked and 1,6-linked β-D-galactopyranosyl units, the former predominantly in the interior and the latter in the exterior chains. The arabinosyl units might be attached through position 3 of the 1,6-linked galactosyl side chains. In addition to arabinose and galactose, AGII contains a range of other monosaccharides, including glucuronic acid and its 4-O-methyl ether. AG-II may occur in a complex family of proteoglycans known as arabinogalactan-proteins (AGP) or be covalently linked to a rhamnogalacturonan type I backbone. It is mainly AG-II that has been reported as having immunomodulating activity.

S3A, a rhamnogalacturonan type I pectin isolated from Centella asiatica, contains L-rhamnose, arabinose, galactose, glucose and galacturonic acid in a molar ratio of 1.0 : 0.6 : 1.5 : 0.2 : 1.1, and has been found to have a backbone composed mainly of the disaccharide repeat unit (0/4)-α-D-GalpA-(10/2)-α-L-Rhap-(10/1). It has no immunological activity but its derivatives had immunostimulatory activity to some extent.

Plant flavonoids as immunomodulators

Flavonoids are also important factors for growth, development and immunity. Approximately 1 g of different flavonoids is taken in through a balanced diet every day. Many flavonoids are endowed with biological effects. The vasoprotective, anti-inflammatory, antiallergic, antimicrobial, antihepatotoxic, antiosteoporotic and antineoplastic actions of flavonoids are well documented. Because of their multiple bioactivities, the flavonoids are included among the natural ‘biological response modifiers’. This suggests that their structure can be modified to increase or decrease their biological activity. The immunopharmacological activities of flavonoids are complex and are still not completely understood. Findings in vitro do not always agree with observations in vivo. Moreover, the effects of different flavonoids may be antagonistic; in some cases they are immunosuppressive and in others, immunostimulatory. Numerous flavonoids have been seen to influence the function of enzyme systems that are critically involved in the immune response, and in the generation of inflammatory processes, especially in the transduction of cellular activation signals.

Flavonoids have been shown to inhibit the release of lysosomal enzymes in polymorphonuclear leucocytes from stimulated rabbits, quercetin being the most active. The metabolic activation of phagocytes during phagocytosis, or other stimulatory events, causes the activation of a NADPH oxidase — a complex enzymatic system with a high molecular weight, found on cell membranes, that catalyses NADPH oxidation by atmospheric oxygen to produce a superoxide radical and other reactive products of oxygen. An alternative pathway in polymorphonuclear leucocytes leads to the production of hypochlorous acid — a potent antimicrobial that works through hydrogen peroxide in a reaction catalysed by myeloperoxidase. Hypochlorous acid reacts with free amine groups on different organic molecules to produce chloroamines. The latter mediates different immunomodulant effects of polymorphonuclear leucocytes on both acute and chronic inflammations.

Conclusions

Despite the promise that they offer in new therapeutic approaches, immunomodulatory agents such as monoclonal antibodies and intravenous immunoglobulins are very expensive. In such circumstances the variety of natural substances and more or less well-defined microbial extracts in the management of diseases with immunological imbalance are an attractive possible alternative. It is still too early to conclude whether they are viable alternatives to existing therapy, and much needs to be done in terms of testing for their efficacy and safety. There is a clear need for a better understanding of their immunological profile, administration and dosage. This last factor is very important, since high doses tend to be immunosuppressive and low doses of the same tend to become immunostimulatory. Finally it should be noted that most in-vitro or in-vivo models are not adequate or not simple enough to ensure that the same can be used as a drug.

Although there are several reviews and a number of publications in the field of immunopharmacology and traditional medicines, there are some areas that still need attention. In the Indian context, there are some rasayana plants that have been traditionally used but have not been pharmacologically screened for their immunopotential, e.g. Hygropbila spinosa, Amanita muscaria, Bombax ceiba, Orchis latifolia, Celastrus paniculatus, Convolvulus pluricaulis and Ferula foetida.

Similarly, there are a number of preparations or formulations, which are sold in the name of rasayana, the activity or the use of which has not been established. Following in-vitro testing, and perhaps chemical examination of such plants and products, the clinical efficacy needs to be scientifically validated.

Immunomodulatory herbal medicinal products

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September 20, 2010 at 8:39 am

Immunomodulation means that one can modulate immunity using various substances either of natural or synthetic origin. Immunomodulation using medicinal plants can provide an alternative to conventional chemotherapy for a variety of diseases, especially when the host defence mechanism has to be activated under conditions of impaired immune response, or when a selective immunosuppression is desired in situations such as autoimmune disorders. It appears that the normal way by which the immune system works is through its own modulation by factors usually synthesised by the immune cells.

Networking and interactions within the immune system are so complex that modulation of the immune response at will to achieve designed therapeutic success is still in the realm of philosophical editorials rather than of definitive efficacy studies.

The immune response requires timely interplay of multiple cell types within specific microenvironments to maintain immune homeostasis. The selectivity and flexibility that is necessary to regulate cell traffic under homeostatic and diseased conditions are provided by the differential distribution and regulated expression of cytokines and their receptors. As a consequence, cytokines are responsible for the development of phenotypes and are, therefore, logical targets for therapeutic immune modulation.

One of the most promising recent alternative to classical antibiotic treatment is the use of immunomodulators for enhancing host defence responses. Several types of immunomodulators have been identified, including substances isolated and purified from natural sources such as plants including microorganisms. An immunomodulator may be defined as a substance, biological or synthetic, which can stimulate, suppress or modulate any of the components of the immune system including both innate and adaptive arms of the immune responses.

Ayurvedic physicians in antiquity developed certain dietary and therapeutic measures to arrest/delay ageing and to rejuvenate whole functional dynamics of the body system. This revitalisation and rejuvenation is known as the rasayan chikitsa (rejuvenation therapy) which, in the current context, can be equated to immunomodulation and adaptogenic activity.

Traditionally, rasayana drugs are used against a plethora of seemingly diverse disorders with no pathophysiological connections according to modern medicine. Although this group of plants generally possesses strong immunomodulatory activity, only some have been investigated in detail. In this chapter, apart from an insight into the role of Ayurveda and rasayana in the modulation of the immune system, immunomodulatory activities of other medicinal plants, along with some compounds isolated from plants are reviewed. Ayurveda physicians believe in preventive therapy rather than curative and the rasayanas are the disease-preventive agents of Ayurveda.

An attempt has also been made to identify the possible mechanism of the action of these plants in modifying the immune system. Finally we highlight areas of concern and opportunities for further research in this area.

Macrophages and host defence

The host defence in humans is complex and multi-levelled, involving many cell types with distinct but overlapping roles. Among the earliest cell types to respond to invasion by pathogenic organisms are the phagocytes (neutrophils, monocytes and macrophages), which are key participants in the innate immune response. Macrophages are ancient and phylogenetically conserved cells in all multicellular organisms and they, together with neutrophils, represent the first line of host defence after the epithelial barrier. In addition, macrophages can function as antigen-presenting cells and interact with T lymphocytes to modulate the adaptive immune response. Furthermore, macrophages are involved in tissue remodelling during embryogenesis, wound repair, clearance of apoptotic cells and hematopoiesis.

Macrophages perform a variety of complex microbicidal functions, including surveillance, chemotaxis, phagocytosis and destruction of targeted organisms. The development of novel therapeutics, which could non-specifically augment the innate immune response, represents an ideal strategy for addressing current worldwide concerns of how to combat classic and emerging infectious agents.

Classification of immunomodulation

In clinical perspectives, immunomodulators can be classified into three categories.

Immunoadjuvants are used for enhancing the efficacy of vaccines and therefore could be considered to be specific immune stimulants. Adjuvants such as monophosphoryl lipid A, immunostimulating complex (ISCOM) and QS-21 — a purified saponin from the bark of Quillaja saponaria Molina — and other plant extracts are under development as better and safer adjuvants.

Immunostimulants are compounds leading predominantly to a non-specific stimulation of the immune system and are also called ‘mitogens’. Non-specific immunostimulants do not affect immunological memory cells, and as their pharmacological efficacy fades comparatively quickly, they have to be administered either at frequent intervals or continuously. This kind of acquired immunity has been called paraimmunity. Non-specific stimulating agents primarily influence the cellular immune system, i.e. components of the mononuclear phagocyte system, such as macrophages and granulocytes, and, secondarily, the lymphocytes. These agents, generally, interact not just with one but also with other types of immune competent cells, because of the close link between the non-specific and specific immune system. This is one handicap in developing effective immunostimulating agents without any side-effects, since in some cases immunostimulants may also stimulate T-suppressor cells, and thereby reduce the immune resistance. The terms immunomodulators or immunoregulators therefore very often seem to be more appropriate.

Immunosuppressants are agents that could be used for control of pathological immune response in autoimmune diseases, graft rejection, graft-versus-host disease, hypersensitivity immune reaction (immediate or delayed type) and immune pathology associated with infections. The major use of these agents has been for prevention of graft rejection and treatment of autoimmune disease. Immunostimulation and immunosuppression both need to be tackled, to regulate the normal immunological functioning and the search for better agents exerting these activities is becoming a field of major interest across the world. Attention has been focused on some Indian medicinal plants since rasayanas have been claimed to possess immunomodulatory activity.

Immunomodulators in Ayurveda

A significant part of Ayurvedic therapeutics is preventive in nature. It aims to promote positive health so that individuals do not develop diseases; instead what Ayurveda calls Vyadhirodhak Chamatav, the capacity of the body to resist disease, is stimulated. The rasayanas of Ayurveda are believed to be immunomodulators in modern terminology.

Ayurveda considers that an individual, when advanced in age, accumulates wastes and toxic substances in his/her cellular system, which disrupt the normal metabolism, leading to loss of immunity, causing disorders or diseases and finally hastening the ageing process. Ayurvedic experts have developed various methods to detoxify the tissues and rejuvenate the body by a special treatment regimen called rasayana chikitsa.

The immune system is known to be involved in the aetiology of many diseases as well as in the pathophysiological mechanisms. Ayurveda emphasises the promotion of health, a concept of strengthening host defences against different diseases, so rasayana plants are particularly recommended for the treatment of immune disorders. The development of agents capable of moving the patients’ immune system from a state of deficiency to one of more normal function would be likely to have a significant impact on disease and the patient that it affects. Such agents would not be a cure but would control the manifestation and course of disease. Some plants and their constituent compounds are claimed to induce paraimmunity, the non-specific immunomodulation of macrophages, granulocytes, natural killer cells and lymphocytes and complement functions.

Many studies have been undertaken to provide scientific support for the use of rasayana drugs as immunomodulators and adaptogens. Wagner (1994), after a detailed study, concluded that rasayana preparations, which act both as herbal immunostimulants and adaptogens, regulate the immunological and endocrine systems at relatively low doses, without damaging the autoregulative functions of the organisms. Rasayana drugs have been reported to treat generalised weakness and to afford protection from cyclophosphamide-induced leucopenia.

Medicinal plants used in rasayana treatment as immunomodulators

Many medicinal plants classified as rasayanas in Ayurveda are believed to be useful in strengthening the immune system of an individual. There is therefore a need to evaluate the potential of Ayurvedic remedies as adjuvants to counteract side-effects of modern therapy and compare the cost-effectiveness of certain therapies. Immunomodulation, especially using rasayana drugs, could provide an alternative to conventional chemotherapy under the conditions of impaired immune responsiveness or following organ transplantation.

This concept of using rasayanas for health also gains a little more credibility when we realize that herbal antioxidants in Ayurvedic materials such as Shilajit and Chyavanprash awaleha exhibit significant immunomodulatory activities. Indian medicinal plants are a rich source of substances that are claimed to induce paraimmunity. Similar immunomodulatory properties have also been reported in natural products from various plants from other countries. Agarwal and Singh (1999) have reviewed Indian medicinal plants that have immunomodulatory properties and a short summary of some of these follows.

Herbal medicinal products for tinnitus

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September 18, 2010 at 4:57 pm

The nature of tinnitus

Tinnitus is a chronic, auditory disorder characterised by a ‘ringing’ or ‘buzzing’ in the ears. The two main subtypes of tinnitus are ‘objective’ and ‘subjective’ tinnitus: whereas ‘objective’ tinnitus can be heard by someone else and is usually associated with a vascular problem in the ear, ‘subjective’ tinnitus is an auditory illusion. While objective tinnitus can be treated by surgery, there is no known cure for subjective tinnitus. Subjective tinnitus can be caused by damage to the inner ear as a result of physical trauma, excessive noise, vascular insufficiency, a viral or bacterial infection, Meniere’s disease or exposure to ototoxic chemicals (e.g. aspirin or cancer chemotherapeutic agents such as cisplatin). Tinnitus can occur on its own or in combination with vestibular symptoms (e.g. as in Meniere’s disease). Either way, it is a debilitating condition that can affect all aspects of life and sometimes even leads to suicide. Parnes (1997) estimated that approximately 1 % of the population has chronic tinnitus that causes distress and that 90% of patients with hearing loss experience some tinnitus. Almost 40% of people aged 60 or over have tinnitus and as many as 50% of all tinnitus sufferers also have depression.

The mechanisms that underlie the development of subjective tinnitus are unclear. However, animal studies suggest that exposure to intense sound, resulting in cochlear hair cell damage, causes hyper-activity in the brainstem cochlear nucleus, which receives auditory information directly from the inner ear. Similar changes in cochlear nucleus neurones have been reported following outer hair cell loss as a result of treatment with cisplatin. Other studies have confirmed that this type of hyper-activity can be found in higher auditory centres in the brain, including the superior olive, the inferior colliculus and even the auditory cortex, following noise- or chemically induced trauma to the cochlea.

Such neuronal hyperactivity is similar to the epileptiform discharge that occurs in the trigeminal nucleus during trigeminal neuralgia and in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord during phantom limb pain, and it has therefore been suggested that subjective tinnitus is a form of sensory epilepsy. Consistent with this hypothesis, antiepileptic drugs are sometimes used to treat tinnitus. However, they are not always effective and can have serious adverse side-effects. For this reason, many other drugs have been tested and the search for more effective treatments continues. Because of the shortcomings of the conventional medications used to treat tinnitus, herbal remedies have been investigated, particularly Ginkgo biloba extracts. This chapter evaluates their efficacy and safety in comparison with other drug treatments.

Conventional medications for tinnitus

A diverse range of drugs has been used to treat tinnitus, but no single therapy is accepted by all clinicians. Only some of these drug treatment options are based on an understanding of the mechanisms of tinnitus; many others have been discovered serendipitously. Unfortunately, there are many spurious claims for clinical effects.

Intratympanic gentamicin therapy has been used to treat tinnitus associated with Meniere’s disease. Diamond et al. (2003) concluded that a subjective improvement in tinnitus occurred in approximately 57% of patients. Similarly, Lange et al. (2004) reported a significant reduction in tinnitus in 50% of patients treated with intratympanic gentamicin 2-4 years earlier. By contrast, a 5-year follow-up study of patients who had received intratympanic gentamicin therapy showed no significant effect on any hearing measure, even though 74% still reported complete relief from vertigo.

Other kinds of intratympanic drug therapy have been investigated. Sakata et al. (2001) used intratympanic injection of 4% lidocaine in an attempt to depress cochlear hair cell function and relieve tinnitus. Lidocaine relieved tinnitus in 81% of patients; however, vertigo developed as a result of the infusion. Intratympanic administration of steroids has also been used. Cesarani et al. (2002) studied 50 patients who received transtympanic infusion of dexamethasone, 3 times per day for 3 months. Two weeks after the last administration, tinnitus had disappeared in 34% of patients, 40% experienced a significant decrease in its intensity, and 26% reported no effect. Shulman and Goldstein (2000) also reported relief from tinnitus in 7 of 10 patients after intratympanic steroid therapy. Intratympanic administration of acetylcholinesterase inhibitors and acetylcholine receptor agonists has also been investigated, with varying success.

Because benzodiazepines activate the benzodiazepine-binding site on the GABAA receptor, increasing hyperpolarisation, benzodiazepine treatment is an obvious strategy to reduce neuronal hyperactivity associated with tinnitus. Benzodiazepines such as alprazolam have proven useful, but it is often difficult to determine how much of the therapeutic effect is attributable specifically to the relief of tinnitus and how much is due to a general anxiolytic effect.

The benzodiazepine antiepileptic drug, clonazepam, as well as the antiepileptic drugs gabapentin and phenytoin, have also been used to treat tinnitus. A retrospective survey of 25 years of clinical use suggested that tinnitus was improved in approximately 32% of patients treated with clonazepam. However, adverse side-effects, such as drowsiness, depression, nightmares and reduced libido, were reported in 16.9% of patients although they decreased with continued therapy.

Shulman et al. (2002) have argued that for patients with tinnitus of central origin, benzodiazepines can provide long-term relief in 90% of cases. In an imaging study using single photon emission computed tomography, Shulman et al. (2000) found that patients with severe tinnitus exhibited a reduction in benzodiazepine-binding sites in the medial temporal cortex, suggesting a possible neural basis for the therapeutic effects of benzodiazepines. By contrast, drugs that act as agonists at the GABAB receptor, such as baclofen, have not proven effective and have been associated with severe adverse side-effects.

Antidepressants have also been used to treat tinnitus. If tinnitus causes depression in a particular patient, then the relief of the depression will usually result in some relief from the tinnitus as well. This finding demonstrates that tinnitus is not just a sensory problem but a phenomenon that involves the entire CNS, including emotional areas of the brain such as the limbic system. Folmer and Shi (2004) studied 30 patients who developed depression after the onset of their tinnitus and received selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor therapy as treatment. At 20.6 months, the patients showed a statistically significant reduction in their tinnitus severity scores, which correlated with a decrease in their depressive symptoms.

One of the more unusual treatments for tinnitus is the intravenous administration of local anaesthetics, which was discovered in 1937. Although lidocaine was shown to reduce tinnitus, its in-vivo instability and adverse side-effects (e.g. nausea, dizziness, potentially fatal cardiovascular effects) have limited its use. There has been some controversy about whether lidocaine actually achieved its effects as a result of blocking sodium channels or as a result of some other non-specific effect of the drug, since other agents with similar actions have not produced the same effect.

Recently, there have been a number of reports of the use of systemically administered lidocaine for the treatment of tinnitus. Marzo et al. (2004) reported that intravenous lidocaine successfully treated incapacitating tinnitus caused by inner-ear tertiary syphillis. Savastano (2004) reported that intradermal injection of lidocaine relieved tinnitus with no adverse side-effects. Otsuka et al. (2003) reported that intravenous lidocaine relieved tinnitus either partially or completely in 70.9% of cases studied over a 24-year period. However, it is not clear how or where lidocaine is acting to achieve these effects, although recent studies using intratympanic injection suggest that it may be working either as a vasodilator or sodium-channel blocker in the inner ear.

Various other vasodilators have been investigated for the treatment of tinnitus but recent studies have failed to confirm their efficacy. Because prostaglandins stimulate vasodilation, the synthetic prostaglandin El (PGE1) analogue, misoprostol, has been investigated and found to be effective in relieving tinnitus in about 33% of patients. Yilmaz et al. (2004) studied 28 patients receiving misoprostol and 12 patients receiving placebo: 64% of the patients receiving misoprostol reported a reduction in tinnitus loudness (33% for placebo), with 33% showing an improvement according to their subjective tinnitus score (17% for placebo).

Finally, diuretics have been used to treat tinnitus associated with Meniere’s disease, which is believed to be caused by hypertension of the endolymphatic fluid. The loop diuretic, frusemide, has been effective in treating Meniere’s-associated tinnitus. However, other attempts to regulate osmotic pressure, using mannitol and glycerol, have had little success.

Herbal remedies

The published peer-reviewed literature on herbal medicines to treat tinnitus is dominated by the use of Ginkgo biloba extracts. From extensive PubMed and other database searches, we could find virtually no other published papers in peer-reviewed journals on the effects of herbal medicines in tinnitus.

Ginkgo biloba extracts

Ginkgo biloba (Ginkgoaceae) is an ancient Chinese tree that has been cultivated for thousands of years. Purified extracts, marketed under the trade names Rokan, Tanakan, Tebonin and Ginkgold, are used throughout the world, although they are especially popular in Europe and in the USA. Ginkgo biloba extracts have been licensed in Germany for the treatment of cerebral vascular insufficiency. They are available as over-the-counter medications in western Europe and as herbal preparations in the USA, Australia and New Zealand.

EGb-761 is a standardised extract containing 24% flavonoids, 7% proanthocyanid ins and 6% terpenoids. The flavonoids are mainly flavonol-glycosides with antioxidant properties, while the terpenoid fraction contains ginkgolides, sesquiter-pene and bilobalide. Ginkgolide B in particular has potent platelet-activating factor receptor antagonist properties. Many of the CNS effects of EGb-761 have been attributed to the combination of its antiox-idant and platelet-activating factor receptor antagonist actions. However, it is also a vasodilator, which might be the only rationale for speculating that it would be useful in the management of tinnitus.

Hilton and Stuart (2004) critically evaluated the clinical evidence for the efficacy of Ginkgo biloba in treating tinnitus and concluded that there were insufficient reliable data on which to base a conclusion, as a result of the methodological flaws of the available studies. Very few studies have used double-blind, placebo-controlled designs. Interestingly, when these sorts of controls have been employed, the results have usually been negative. In an effort to focus on the best-designed clinical trials, Ernst and Stevinson (1999) performed a meta-analysis of only those clinical trials that employed standardised Ginkgo extracts that were compared with either placebo or another active medication, and where the primary complaint was tinnitus. Only five trials fulfilled these criteria.

Meyer (1986) studied 103 patients with tinnitus using a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled design. Patients received EGb 761 (Tanakan) daily for 1-3 months and their tinnitus severity was assessed using a three-point scale. The EGb 761 group experienced a decrease in tinnitus severity but Ernst and Stevinson (1999) point out that the paper, available in French only, lacked a clear description of the methods used.

In another study, Meyer (1986) studied 259 patients with tinnitus over 1 year. Patients receiving EGb 761 (Tanakan) daily for at least 1 month were compared with those receiving nicergoline or almitrine-raubasine. According to a specialist analysis, tinnitus appeared to show greater improvement in the EGb 761 group compared with the other two treatments. However, Ernst and Stevinson (1999) criticised this study for lack of random allocation of patients to the different treatment groups and lack of methodological detail in the published report; for example, it was not clear whether the patients and experimenters were blind to the treatment groups.

Holgers et al. (1994) recruited 80 patients into an open trial in which all of them received a Ginkgo biloba extract daily (Seredrin). This was followed by a double-blind, placebo-controlled phase of the trial using only the 20 patients who appeared to respond to the extract. However, according to patients’ subjective reports, there were no significant effects of the Ginkgo biloba extract at the end of the trial.

Morgenstern and Bierman (1997) performed a randomised, double-blind study of 99 patients with chronic tinnitus, who received a Ginkgo biloba extract (Tebonin) or placebo daily for 12 weeks. The loud-ness of the tinnitus was evaluated using audiometry. They reported a significant reduction in loudness (from 42 to 39 dB) in the ginkgo-treated group. Juretzek (1998) treated 60 patients with chronic tinnitus with daily injections of EGb 761 for 10 days, and then randomly allocated them to oral EGb 761 or placebo for 3 months. The second phase of the design was double blind and tinnitus was assessed using audiometry. Juretzek also reported a significant reduction in tinnitus in the EGb 761 group compared with placebo.

The first large, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of the effect of Ginkgo biloba extracts on tinnitus was reported by Drew and Davies (2001). They recruited 1121 people between 18 and 70 years and matched 978 according to sex, age and the duration of their tinnitus. For 12 weeks, participants received either the ginkgo extract LI 1370 (Lichtwer Pharma, Berlin, Germany) or placebo. Subjects assessed their tinnitus in terms of loudness and how much it disrupted their daily life, using rating scales. However, there was no significant difference in either measure compared with placebo. In the most recent randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical trial, Rejai et al. (2004) also found no therapeutic effect of Ginkgo biloba compared with placebo in 66 patients with tinnitus. The primary outcome measures were the tinnitus handicap inventory, the Glasgow health status inventory and the average hearing threshold at 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 kHz. In a meta-analysis of clinical trials by the same authors, they found that only 21.6% of patients with tinnitus reported benefit from Ginkgo biloba versus 18.4% of patients who reported benefit from a placebo.

Because Ginkgo biloba extracts have vasodilatory effects, when they are combined with drugs such as aspirin, they can increase bleeding. Nonetheless, most of the evidence for haemorrhagic responses following the use of Ginkgo biloba extracts is based on anecdotal and case reports. Kohler et al. (2004) compared bleeding time, coagulation parameters and platelet activity in response to 2 X 120 mg/day EGb 761, or placebo, for 7 days and found no significant difference in any of these measures.

To date, only one study has investigated the effects of EGb 761 on salicylate-induced tinnitus using a conditioned-behaviour paradigm in rats. Daily oral administration of 25, 50 and 100 mg/kg EGb 761 was found to reduce tinnitus behaviour compared with vehicle. It should be noted, however, that these are very high doses and it is unlikely that they could be used in humans without adverse side-effects (even 25 mg/kg/day for a 70 kg adult corresponds to 1750 mg/day, which is more than five times the average daily dose used in humans).

Clearly, the investigation of the effects of Ginkgo biloba extracts on tinnitus has suffered from a lack of systematic clinical trials employing double-blind and placebo-controlled designs. While some clinical trials have yielded positive results, these studies are few and have been limited either by design flaws, the small size of the significant effects, or else the results have not been published in peer-reviewed journals. By contrast, the two most systematic clinical trials, which are double-blind and placebo-controlled, and are published in peer-reviewed journals, have yielded negative results.

Other herbal medicines

Very little has been published on the use of other herbal medicines to treat tinnitus. Yang (1989) has reported a blind trial in which patients with tinnitus were given either ‘Western medicines’ (i.e. diazepam, nicotinic acid, bromides, vitamin B, ATP, carbamazepine or lidocaine) and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) or the Western medicines alone. TCM consisted of Rhizoma Gastrodiae, Ramulus Uncariae cum Uncis, Poria cocos, Flos Chrysanthemi, Akebia Quinata, Radix Polygoni Multflori, Fructus Liquidambris, Radix Rehmanniae, Rhizoma Alismatis, Radix Scrophulariae, Fructus Lycii, Radix Glycyrrhizae, Semen Plantaginis and Semen Vaccariae. Relief from tinnitus was observed in 84.4% of those receiving Western medicine and traditional Chinese medicine and 55% of those receiving Western medicine only. Unfortunately, given the mixture of drug and herbal remedies the patients received, it is difficult to attribute an improvement in tinnitus to any particular agent, and in any case, there was no placebo control group.

It is important to recognise that in traditional Chinese medicine, tinnitus is believed to be caused by changes in the relationship between the ear and the internal organs, such as the kidney, the liver, the gall bladder, the spleen and the stomach. TCM aims to treat tinnitus by achieving a balance of the yin and yang, external and internal, hot and cold, weak and strong. From the viewpoint of traditional Chinese medicine, tinnitus is only one of the symptoms the patient presents with and the doctor needs to observe a series of symptoms using inspection, by listening and smelling, inquiring and palpation, to make the right diagnosis. For example, it is believed that normal kidney function will be reflected by normal hearing and a kidney dysfunction (Shen kui) will result in hearing loss or tinnitus. If the tinnitus is caused by kidney dysfunction, the patient tends also to experience vertigo and dizziness, a sore back, the tongue has a red look with no ‘fur’ or little fur and there is a weak pulse. There are many different types of tinnitus in traditional Chinese medicine and most recently, tinnitus has been divided into five types at the Third Chinese Zhong Xi Yi Je He Otolaryngology Society Annual Meeting in 2002: Wai Gan Fen Re Xing (related to respiratory infection), Gan Hou Sbang Rao Xing (related to abnormal liver function), Tan Re Yujie Xing (related to the ‘hot’ state in TCM), Shen jing Kui Xu Xing (related to kidney dysfunction) and Pi Qi Xu Ruo Xing (related to abnormal spleen function).

Japanese herbal medicines have also been used to treat tinnitus. Okamoto et al. (2005) used Yoku-kan-san (TJ-54) to successfully treat tinnitus associated with undifferentiated somatoform disorder, presenting with headache and insomnia. Unfortunately, this was only a case report and therefore no controls were employed.

Importance of animal models for testing herbal remedies

A major problem for the development of new drug treatments for tinnitus is the paucity of animal models of the disorder. It is difficult to determine whether an animal such as a rat or a mouse is actually experiencing tinnitus, and many studies of the neurophysiological and neurochemical mechanisms of tinnitus simply assume that an animal has tinnitus following cochlear lesions produced by intense sound, surgery or chemical toxicity. This is not a valid assumption given that similar conditions in humans do not necessarily produce tinnitus.

To overcome this problem, a number of researchers have developed animal models of tinnitus in which rats are trained to respond differentially in a conditioned avoidance task depending upon whether they hear certain frequencies of background noise. For example, rats trained to make a particular response in the presence of a 10-kHz background noise, will continue to make the trained response, in the absence of the background noise, if tinnitus has been induced by the administration of a drug such as salicylate. In humans, salicylates produce tinnitus of approximately 10 kHz, and rats treated with salicylates respond in behavioural tasks as if they hear a continuous background noise at around 10 kHz. Using this type of conditioned-behavioural model, it is possible to screen new drugs for their potential application to the treatment of tinnitus.

Unfortunately, at present, such animal models have not been used extensively for the investigation of the neural mechanisms of tinnitus or for potential drug treatments. In addition to more well-controlled clinical trials, it is vital that herbal medicines be tested in realistic animal models of tinnitus.

Conclusions

It is clear from the studies reviewed here that the published literature on herbal medicines and tinnitus is small and in most cases focused on Ginkgo biloba extracts, where some evidence for efficacy has been found. Nevertheless, even the research on Ginkgo biloba and tinnitus lacks a substantial number of systematic, well-controlled clinical trials, in which double-blind protocols have been used. Unfortunately, most of the trials that have been well designed have failed to demonstrate efficacy for Ginkgo biloba in the treatment of tinnitus.

The only reasonable conclusion that can be reached at present is that the available data indicate that conventional medications offer more therapeutic benefit for patients with tinnitus than herbal alternatives. Given that clinical trials are expensive to run and are usually not undertaken unless there is substantial preclinical evidence to suggest that they may establish the efficacy of a new drug, it is probably very important that researchers and clinicians, who are interested in potential herbal treatments for tinnitus, use conditioned-behavioural models of tinnitus in animals to screen herbal agents. This would provide a clear path for the development of herbal remedies to treat tinnitus before initiating clinical trials.

Herbal products with angiogenesis-inhibitory activity

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September 16, 2010 at 8:11 am

Angiogenesis modulators are present in a wide range of plant products, some of which are also consumed on a daily basis through diets in certain ethnic populations. In addition, herbal products derived from specific medicinal plants known for their curative properties on chronic angiogenesis-dependent conditions are also gaining recognition for their principal active agents.

Curcuma longa (turmeric)

The staple in India’s armoury of wound-healing plants is the common spice plant Curcuma longa (turmeric), used for injuries, burns, and as an all-purpose, topical anti-inflammatory. The principal active substance is curcumin. The use of curcumin as an inhibitor of angiogenesis has only recently been appreciated, despite great interest in this natural product for cancer chemoprevention. We showed that local delivery of curcuminoid pellets (2 mg), implanted in the cornea of rabbits, blocked angiogenesis induced by fibro-blast growth factor 2, and even oral delivery of curcuminoids to mice blocked angiogenesis induced by the same growth factor in the mouse corneal model of neovascularisation.

The anti-angiogenic activity of this class of inhibitor was demonstrated as acting through the targeting of gene expression of MMP-9, a critical proteolytic enzyme that cleaves gelatinous substrates of the vascular basement membrane. This gene expression blockade of MMP-9 was found to occur through the inhibition of AP-1 and NF-kB transcription factors, two critically important activators of proliferative and inflammatory cytokine genes. The use of turmeric in promoting growth of blood vessels to heal wounds has also been remarkable. Contrary to the anti-angiogenic activity of curcumin, its wound-healing properties are mediated through promotion of angiogenesis.

The mechanism of this natural product is believed to be dependent on disease contexts. For instance, it was shown that one of curcumin’s targets is the kinase that is responsible for activating the multipurpose signalling complex, the COP9 signalosome. This complex lies at the interface of a number of divergent stress signalling cascades, acting as a central modulator of stress response. The COP9 signalosome activates the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in tumour cells providing the cells with survival advantage by stimulating blood vessels. In this manner, curcumin’s anti-angiogenic activity causes the inhibition of VEGF expression. On the other hand, cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 is also shown to associate with COP9 signalosome, where this enzyme is targeted for proteosomal degradation.

Yet another interesting finding is that curcumin regulates the expression of the Id proteins through their association with the COP9 signalosome. Thus, complex, broad and effective activities of curcumin fall into a category of compounds that would best be described as ‘homeostatins’, which would be agents that act on stressors of dishomeostasis but do not perturb cellular balances under homeostasis. The non-pungent flavour of turmeric has also made this spice broadly appealing for oral ingestion, albeit the compound is not readily bioavailable to target organs at doses that would be necessary for severe conditions. A Phase 1 study of oral daily dose of 8 g curcumin consumed for 4 months showed no toxic effects, other than nausea and diarrhea, but higher doses were not acceptable to patients because of the bulk substance. Since a daily oral dose of 3.6 g of curcumin in the clinical setting is found to be detectable in colorectal tissues, the proposed protective effect of curcumin is largely limited to organ tissues which are exposed to the drug. Thus, the rather poor pharmacokinetic and dynamic characteristics resulting possibly from sulphation and glucuronidation of curcumin has precluded this otherwise highly effective agent to be developed for other cancers. However, novel advances in nanoparticle formulation have succeeded in making this natural product more bioavailable. It remains to be seen whether the clinical benefits of such formulations of curcumin will advance to angiogenic-dependent disease which could benefit from the therapeutic action of this homeostatin.

Panax ginseng (ginseng)

The roots of Panax ginseng are highly revered in the Far East for their medical properties. The main active principles that target blood vessels are the ginsenosides. Unlike turmeric, whose dual actions of angiomodulatory activity can be shown to result from a single compound (curcumin), the activity of ginseng is attributed to different subclasses of ginsenosides such as Rb1 and Rg1. At doses of 1 nmol/L to 1 µmol/1, 20(R)-Rg3 showed dose-dependent inhibition of endothelial cell proliferation and inhibition of VEGF-induced chemo-invasion and tube formation. Additionally, in the Matrigel plug assay in mice, 600 nmol/L of Rg3 reduced blood vessel growth by fivefold compared with controls. Rg3 also reduces the expression of MMP-2 and MMP-9, metalloproteinases that are involved in tube formation and invasion. Like Rg3, the ginsenoside Rb1 also demonstrates anti-angiogenic activity.

Notwithstanding the important anti-angiogenic activities of ginseng, it is shown that when Rb1 is combined with Rg1 in differing amounts these mixed ginsenosides can either induce or restrict blood vessel growth based on their compositional ratios. This is because the panaxatriols represented by Rg1 and Rb1 have proangiogenic activity. The proangiogenic mechanism of Rg3 which induces endothelial cell proliferation, is related to stimulation genes involved in cytoskeletal dynamics, cell-cell adhesion and migration. It would appear that the cognitive supportive activity of ginseng derives from promotion of angiogenesis, or at least the stabilisation of blood vessels that are diseased in ageing brains of humans, while that of its use in the treatment of cancer would result from the anti-angiogenic activity of Rb1 or Rg3. Panax ginseng, which is rich in Rb1, is reported to exert preventative activity in diverse cancer models, whereas Sanqi ginseng, which is rich in Rg1 ginsenoside, has been employed in treatment of trauma injuries that require the promotion of capillary growth. Given these very interesting findings on the mechanism of ginseng varieties, it is imperative that the individual bioactive agents and their abundance be characterised in formulation of ginseng extracts.

Withania somniferia (ashwagandha)

This herb plant has invigorating and tonic uses in Ayurvedic medicine. Some of the popular uses of the roots of this plant are for the treatment of arthritic conditions and for bleeding disorders that result from menstrual dysfunction. Hypothesising that an underlying angiogenic mechanism is targeted by the extracts of Withania somniferia (ashwagandha), we investigated the extracts of this plant for the presence of angiogenesis inhibitors by exploiting the 3D-ECSA. The combination of bioactivity testing in the 3D-ECSA along with assessment in the Matrigel model of angiogenesis revealed that the angiogenic inhibitory activity present in the methanolic extracts was enriched about fivefold upon further fractionation into chloroform-soluble substances. In assessing the molecular mechanism targeted by the chloroform-enriched fraction, it was found that the DNA binding activity of transcription factor NF-kB was specifically and potently inhibited by the chloroform extract (IC50 10 µg/mL). Further fractionation of the chloroform extract using HPLC afforded isolation of discrete peaks, which were individually tested for inhibitory activity in the 3D-ECSA. We characterised two of these compounds as withaferin A and withanolide D. The anti-angiogenic activity of withaferin A and withanolide D result from potent targeting of NF-kB activity (IC50 = 0.5 µM) via a mechanism linked to upstream interference with the critical protein quality control complex, the ubiquitin proteasome pathway (UPP), a therapeutic target for a range of angio-inflammatory diseases.

The UPP is a cytoplasmic proteolytic complex that regulates protein expression during signal transduction by causing the destruction of critical factors, which are involved in the cell cycle, apoptosis, differentiation and inflammatory response. Withaferin A exerts its cytostatic effect on endothelial cells at substantially lower doses, causing blockade of the cell cycle (IC50 12 nmol/L) via UPP-dependent down-regulation of the critical cell cycle regulator, cyclin D1. Based on these findings, it could be further demonstrated that the in-vivo inhibition of angio-genesis by withaferin A was also significantly lower in the basic-fibroblast growth factor stimulated Matrigel plug model, being highly effective between 7 and 200 µg/kg/day. On the other hand, assessment of withaferin A in the corneal inflammatory model of neovascularisation revealed that doses between 500 µg/kg/day and 2 mg/kg/day reduced corneal angiogenesis by 50 and 80%, respectively (Mohan, unpublished data). In testing other genetic backgrounds of mice (129 SVEV) compared with previously used C57BL6 lines in the corneal inflammatory model of neovascularisation, we found that withaferin A at 2 mg/kg/day was highly effective, resulting in inhibition of 73%. Taken together, our strategy for isolation and investigation of anti-angiogenic natural products from medicinal plants has proven to be successful with discovery of withaferin A’s angiogenesis inhibitory activity.

Perturbation of the UPP is responsible for various diseases states. For example, tumour cells possess a highly active proteasome which results in over stimulation of cell proliferation. In addition, proteasome inhibition also results in blockade of angiogenesis by causing apoptosis of vascular endothelial cells and inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor expression. Intriguingly, unlike proteasome inhibitors which directly target the enzymatic site of the 20S proteosome, withaferin A interferes with the UPP by an indirect mechanism. This UPP-targeting mechanism was recently shown to be due to binding by withaferin A to the type III intermediate filament protein vimentin. The antiangiogenic response to 2 mg/kg/day withaferin A treatment in the corneal inflammatory model of neovascularisation is found to be 3-fold-lower in vimentin-deficient mice than corresponding wild-type mice.

The multiple dose-related activities of withaferin A, and structurally related withanolides that possess anti-angiogenic activity, can be distinguished. At low nanomolar concentrations withaferin As anti-angiogenic activity is related to cytostatic blockade of the cell cycle in G1 phase, whereas at sub-to-low micromolar concentrations, withaferin A targets cell differentiation associated with tubule formation and inflammatory activation of NF-kB. At doses higher than 2 micromolar, withaferin A induces apoptosis via a mechanism linked to cleavage of vimentin and F-actin aggregation. Given such differences in the mechanisms of withaferin A with respect to its dose, one has to be careful in how extracts from this plant are prepared and of the exact amounts and proportions of the bioactive withanolides present. Studies have shown that extracts obtained from different cultivars of Withania somniferia (ashwagandha), or from different geographical locations have a wide range in amounts of withanolides. Thus it is imperative not only that there be standardising criteria to provide exact concentrations of the major chemical substances present in withania extracts but that these extracts also be biologically tested for efficacy for their intended use. Due to the heavy demand for Withania somniferia (ashwagandha), scientific attempts to produce these desirable compounds under defined laboratory conditions are being attempted. It may soon be possible to then use such techniques to produce metabolites under highly controlled environments. In addition, the application of genetic engineering approaches to modify bio-synthetic pathways in plants and plant cells so that desired metabolites are preferentially generated is another modern technology now being used to solve some of the issues of seasonal influences on natural product biosynthesis.

Hypericum perforatum (St John’s wort)

The widely used herb for depression, Hypericum perforatum (St John’s wort), is also the source of anti-angiogenic agents, hypericin and hyperforin. Attention to the angiogenesis-inhibitory activity of hyperforin has attracted attention not only to the broader uses of this plant in human diseases, but also to the potential side-effects, especially so in patients who may have other vascular complications where an anti-angiogenic agent would have contradiction. The mode of action of hyperforin is due to inhibition of MMP-9 expression, an enzyme that is responsible for basement membrane degradation during blood vessel growth. In addition, hyperforin inhibits microtubules which prevent endothelial cells from forming capillary tubes. Also, in other models hyperforin was shown to target component(s) within G-protein signalling cascades that regulate Ca2+ homeostasis, and inhibit neutrophil invasion and block inflammatory activation, suggesting that the target of this natural product is present on both vascular and inflammatory components that act in synergy during many angiogenic diseases. Interestingly, a dose of Hypericum extract 900 mg/day used as an antidepressant (which supplies 0.4 µmol/L of hyperforin) was shown to down-regulate production of the angiogenic cytokine interferon-gamma in activated T-cells with concomitant inhibition of MMP-9 expression. On the other hand, hypericin is also a potent angiogenesis inhibitor that targets activity of a related proteinase, MT1-MMP and is also responsible for inhibiting signalling events that trigger MAP kinase. Hypericin administered at 2 mg/kg intraperiteoneally, blocks activating phosphorylation of ERK1/2, which is required for the transactivation of hypoxia-inducible factor 1 alpha (HIF-1a) and in VEGF-induced blood vessel growth in models employing photodynamic therapy. Additionally, hypericin 3-50 µmol/L inhibits the activity of the proteasome complex in a dose-dependent manner. This upstream activity is shown to block activation of transcription factor NF-kB at doses of between 6 and 50 µmol/L. It is noteworthy to point out some of the adverse effects of this plant, which include sensitivity to sunlight and drug interactions with selective serotonin reuptake and protease inhibitors, as well as intermenstrual bleeding or altered menstrual bleeding in users of oral contraceptives, which may result from inherent proteasome inhibitory activity of hypericin-containing extracts of St John’s wort.

Camellia sinensis (green tea)

Epidemiological evidence has raised the interest in green tea consumption for prevention of cancers and cardiovascular diseases, and invigorated scientific research to identify the biologically active substances of tea extracts. One of the major ingredients of green tea, (—)epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), a flavonoid, was shown to inhibit angiogenesis and have chemopreventive activity. Using data derived from rodent studies, a Phase 1 study of green tea extract was performed. Cohorts of adults with cancer were administered oral GTE with water with doses provided one or three times daily for 4 weeks. The maximum-tolerated dose was 4.2 g/m2 once daily or 1.0 g/m2 three times daily. Thus, a dose for anti-angiogenic activity in humans was calculated to be 1 g/m2 three times per day (equivalent to 120 mL or 7-8 Japanese cups) for human consumption. As much as 200-500 mg of green tea consisting of 50% (—)EGCG is believed to be the pharmacological dose for angiogenesis prevention. Dose-limiting adverse effects of (—)EGCG are gastrointestinal and neurological, for which the coadministered presence of caffeine in green tea extracts is thought to be responsible for these side-effects. (—)EGCG has also been shown to inhibit COX-2 activity, an enzyme that is well known to be a target for anti-angiogenesis. The angiopreventive activity of (—)EGCG is also believed to result from inhibition of MMP-2 and MMP-9 activities. Furthermore, unlike other bioactive flavonoids that show inhibition of NF-kB activation, (—)EGCG is found to inhibit the DNA binding activity of inflammatory cytokine interleukin-1α-induced NF-kB, whereas flavonoids such as genistein do not produce this effect. It is likely that angio-inflammatory pathways that up-regulate IL-1β may be targets of this class of natural product, differentiating EGCG products from other flavonoids. Thus, this class of flavonoid may be more suitable for use in inflammatory angiogenic diseases.

Vitis vinifera (red grapes)

Red wine consumption is believed to be protective of the cardiovascular system, as evidenced in the prevention of the progression of atherosclerosis even in people who consume high amounts of red meat and cholesterol-containing foods. This was thought to be due to the major cardioprotective polyphenolic compounds found in skins and seeds of red grapes. One of these red wine polyphenolic compounds (RWPC), is the natural product resveratrol. The antiangiogenic mechanisms of resveratrol are known to be complex; since it inhibits proliferation of endothelial cells at 25 µmol/L, with inhibitory effects on cell migration and vessel tube formation occurring at 25 to 50 µmol/L.

Interestingly, the inhibitory activity of resveratrol on metalloproteinases MMP-9 was observed at 6.25 µmol/L, whereas on MMP-2 activity was at 25 µmol/L. Resveratrol inhibits VEGF-induced angiogenesis by interfering with reactive oxygen species-dependent Src kinase activation, and down-regulates the expression of angiogenic cytokines, including interleukin-8 and VEGF. It is interesting that RWPCs also show dose-dependent opposite effects on angiogenesis. In rats, 0.2 mg/kg/day of red wine polyphenolic compounds caused a pro-angiogenic effect while higher daily doses of 2 mg/kg of RWPC (equivalents found in seven glasses of red wine) showed anti-angiogenic activity in the post-ischaemic model of hind limb neovascularisation. It was found that the low-dose (1/10 glass) angiogenic effect occurs through overexpression of PI3 kinase-AKT-NOS pathway leading to increased VEGF production without affecting MMP production. Intriguingly, in the non-ischaemic leg, neither the low nor high dose of RWPC affected angiogenesis or blood flow. Thus, it appears that a prior disease condition needs to manifest, to observe these pharmacological effects of red wine polyphenolic compounds. Since normal tissues did not appear to be responsive to either high or low dose effects of red wine polyphenolic compounds, it cannot be inferred that these extracts are safe. For instance, others have shown that RWPCs at high doses can induce hypotension, decreased cardiac reactivity in rats. Interest in pharmacological activity of RWPCs has led to isolation of other principal active agents. Delphinidin, an abundant anthocyanin from RWPCs at high dose has been shown to inhibit vascularisation and blood flow at 0.6 m/kg per day, suggesting that the anti-angiogenic activity of red wine polyphenolic compounds is derived, in part, from delphinidin.

Conclusions

The field of antiangiogenesis has greatly benefitted from discoveries of targets for therapeutic development from which angiogenesis-inhibitory drugs such as Avastin have emerged for treatment of colon cancer. However, the literature is also beginning to see the emergence of undesirable side-effects of angiogenesis inhibitors. While it was once believed that adult tissues do not remodel their vasculature, it is now known that the microvasculature of the trachea and digestive system is not in a state of quiescence. Indeed, in mice, Avastin has been observed to cause normal mucosal capillaries in the trachea to regress. However, this drug-induced side-effect is ameliorated by cessation of Avastin treatment, indicative of the plasticity of the microvasculature to drug effects, and that developing safer treatments should involve careful examination of these preclinical and clinical results. As witnessed with natural product drugs emerging from traditional medicines, the guide to finding and developing highly effective and safe treatments for angiogenic diseases will need to integrate traditional knowledge with modern analytical methods of assessment and molecular pathobiology.

As the population ages, we are beginning to see many more diseases that result from vessel diseases which could benefit from angiomodulation. In these cases, one has to also remember that the physical constitution of older patients to drug activity is poorer because of weaker metabolism, reduced blood flow and general cellular ageing processes. More and more, the older patient groups will move towards more palatable medicines as older people are increasingly becoming dependent on multiple medications to support their different chronic conditions. In this context, it is critical to know contradictions to antiangiogenesis drugs. Other clinical adverse effects of anti-angiogenic drugs include gastrointestinal perforations of the bowels, arterial blood clots, and hypertension. The clinical manifestation of drug resistance to anti-angiogenic agents draws attention to yet another facet of cumulative toxic effects. That is, while the endothelial cell which is genetically stable does not become resistant to drug action, the genetic alterations that decrease the vascular dependence of tumour cells can influence the therapeutic response of tumours to angiogenesis inhibitors.

Herbal products that strive to restore the angiogenic balance must demonstrate standardisation in material quality, biological/pharmacological efficacy, and safety principles because many of the active principles have opposite effects on blood vessel growth when their concentrations or compositions are altered.

Herbal medicinal products as antiangiogenic agents

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September 14, 2010 at 8:03 am

Angiogenesis is the morphogenic process by which new blood vessels develop from a pre-existing vasculature. This process occurs during embryonic development and feeds the oxygen and nutrient requirements of growing tissues and organs. Blood vessels are lined internally by vascular endothelial cells, of mesenchymal origin. These endothelial cells are tightly compacted as a monolayer and display a cobblestone-like appearance. The endothelial cells also fulfil a role in maintenance of blood-brain and blood-retinal barrier and restrict the passage of blood components to inner tissues. However, when the vasculature is inflamed or injured such as in an oedema, substances from the blood can leak out; and the ability of the endothelial cell to re-populate the damaged tissue and re-establish cell-cell contact is critical for vascular homeostasis. In adults, the vasculature is usually dormant, except in certain instances, such as, during ovulation and menstruation in the female, and upon injury when tissue repair is required.

The vascular endothelium is thus an important beacon of humoral homeostasis and continues to guide the clinical diagnosis of underlying stress and disease. In fact, the silent and debilitating disease diabetes is at times diagnosed during a visit to the ophthalmologist for poor vision, which results from diabetic retinal capillaries leaking and causing vision impairment.

Pathological angiogenesis is an underlying disease process in tumour growth where it supports the expansion of the tumour mass in size and also acts as a means to aid tumour cells to metastasise to distal organs. In fact, it is known that tumour masses can only grow to sizes where oxygen can diffuse through tissue (approximately 200 um), hence, without establishment of new blood vessels, tumour cells are limited in their microscopic volume. The revolutionary paradigm that blocking new blood vessel growth (antiangiogenesis) could be a therapeutic means to ‘starve’ a tumour and thus arrest tumour development was at first strongly opposed by the oncology research community, who believed that directly killing the tumour cells with potent cytotoxins was the most effective means to cure cancers.

However, targeted strategies to cause interference with blood vessel formation have begun to open up antiangiogenesis as a new modality in therapeutic discovery. Today this idea has changed the treatment of cancers, with the clinical success of the neutralising antibody drug Avastin (bevacizumab), an antiangiogenic agent which binds to vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a critical survival and growth-stimulatory protein for new blood vessel growth. Because it is believed that existing blood vessels are not affected by angio-genesis inhibitors, the quest to find new treatment options that do not possess the undesirable side-effects of currently used anticancer cytotoxic drugs has turned patient awareness to this new class of anticancer drugs. In this respect, researchers and clinicians have also begun looking seriously to the wealth of herbal medicines, many of which tout efficacy without the side-effects of radiation and chemotherapy.

Although much of our knowledge about the basic mechanisms of angiogenesis and clinical practice in the field of antiangiogenesis has come about from work done in the oncology field, it should be pointed out that there is a wide range of non-oncological diseases of no less importance as burdens to society that are angiogenic-dependent. Furthermore, the list of angiogenic diseases awakens us to how critical blood vessel homeostasis is to organ functions, and it is also important to note that the promotion of angiogenesis is necessary in other clinical conditions that result from a lack of adequate vascularisation, such as ischaemic heart disease and diabetic ulcers.

From ground-breaking work done by Folkman, a whole range of diseases can now be classified as having excessive angiogenesis or insufficient vascularisation (Table: Angiogenesis in human diseases). He raised the hypothesis that tumour angiogenesis results when the net levels of stimulators of new blood vessel growth exceed that of inhibitors and devoted his laboratory in Boston, USA, to identifying the body’s endogenous activators (and inhibitors) of tumour angiogenesis. Thirty-five years later, there are over 20 such protein effectors, which have been identified and shown to possess angiomodulatory activity. By demonstrating validation in a wide range of cell culture, organ and animal models of angiogenesis, it is possible to provide therapeutic doses of angio-inhibitory molecules to block angiogenesis, and contrarily, pro-angiogenic molecules to stimulate new blood vessel growth. The ability to discover new angiomodulatory agents and assess their effectiveness in controlling angiogenesis was enabled by the development of a number of in-vitro and in-vivo angiogenesis assays (Table: In vitro and in vivo angiogenesis assays).

Table: Angiogenesis in human diseases

Organ Disease manifestation Comments
Blood vessels Vascular malformations caused by abnormal remodelling, haemangioma and atherosclerosis from increased vascularisation Localised lesions due to vascular malformation; congestive heart failure resulting from atherosclerosis
Eye Diabetic retinopathy and wet age-related macular degeneration from increased vascularisation Blindness due to leaky vessels in diabetic retina; blindness from proliferating choroidal blood vessels
Skin Psoriasis from increased vascularisation that becomes tortuous and enlarged; decubitus (stasis) ulcers from insufficient vascularisation; Kaposi’s sarcoma, allergic oedema, and neoplasms from increased vascularisation Psoriasis appears as scaly, raised red lesions as a common form of this disease; stasis ulcers are open surface wounds that fail to heal
Bone and joints Increased vascularisation of synovial joints in arthritis and of bone tissue in cancers Inflammation of synovium in rheumatoid arthritis leads to joint destruction; destruction of cartilage in osteoarthritis causes pain and impaired mobility
Heart, skeletal muscle Increased vascularisation of heart due to work overload; ischaemic heart and limb disease from insufficient vascularisation Contractile dysfunction of heart tissue leads to heart failure; coronary heart disease manifests as a result of occlusion of blood vessels and poor oxygen supply
Adipose tissue Increased vascularisation of fat tissue Fat cells accumulate around new blood vessels causing obesity
Uterus, ovary Increased vascularisation of uterine tissue, endometrium, ovary Uterine tissue becomes dysfunctional from excessive bleeding; endometriosis can cause ectopic pregnancy, miscarriage and also infertility
Brain Increased vascularisation in brain tumours; insufficient vascularisation of brain can lead to strokes Gliomas and glioblastomas are incurable diseases of brain; stroke can incapacitate the cognitive and functional aspects of the brain

Table: In vitro and in vivo angiogenesis assays

Assay Measurement Comments
Cell proliferation Inhibition of cell doubling opposing stimulatory effect of a defined angiogenic factor Cytostatic activity blocks cell proliferation without causing cell death
Cell migration Inhibition of cell migration opposing stimulatory effect of a defined angiogenic factor such as VEGF or bFGF The extension of endothelial cell processes allows cells to migrate over a substratum
Invasion Inhibition of cell invasion opposing stimulatory effect of a defined angiogenic factor The growth of endothelial cells through a porous membrane or matrix in response to a chemotactic factor
Sprouting Inhibition of migration, invasion and tube formation in a 3D matrix of collagen 1 or fibrin opposing stimulatory effect of a defined angiogenic factor An integrated assay which couples vascular invasion, tube formation and maturation in 3D matrix
Matrigel cord assay Inhibition of cord assembly by endothelial cells on complex matrix derived from tumour stroma opposing stimulatory effect of a defined angiogenic factor Endothelial cells assemble into cords over the matrix
CAM in vivo Inhibition of blood vessel growth in the CAM of a fertilised developing chicken egg The developing vasculature of the CAM is highly sensitive inhibitors of angiogenesis
Corneal angiogenesis in vivo Inhibition of de novo capillary growth in cornea opposing stimulatory effect of a defined angiogenic factor Blood vessels from surrounding scleral vessel supply invade the avascular cornea in response to slow-release growth factor implanted in cornea
Matrigel in vivo Inhibition of blood vessel growth into a Matrigel plug implanted in abdominal region of mouse Blood vessels invade the Matrigel plug in response to stimulus from growth factor impregnated plug

Tests to examine effects of plant extracts on angiogenesis

Growth of blood vessels within a matrix

In-vitro vessel formation is assessed by measuring the total length of new blood vessels formed in a matrix over a period of time. Typically, endothelial cells are cultured within a matrix of fibroblasts in the absence or presence of the test compound. The matrix is supplied with fresh medium every third day and, after 11 days, the cells are washed and fixed. A staining reagent is applied to show the blood vessels formed from the endothelial cells and then quantified using a scanner attached to a computer which is able to process the images captured.

Use of genetically modified zebra fish

The embryos of the zebra fish (Danio rerio) have been used extensively in recent studies for several types of biological activity. Transgenic lines are used which express the green fluorescent protein GCFP to visualise vasculogenesis in the tail region. The extent of vascularisation can be quantified by computer-aided image analysis and is taken as a model of angiogenesis.

Three-dimensional endothelial cell sprouting assay

Sprouting of endothelial cells is an early event in angiogenesis, which follows vasodilation and degradation of matrix and it represents a valuable target for therapies because it takes place so early in the angiogenic process. The degradation of matrix is accomplished by the family of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). The mechanisms by which sprouts progress to form a lumen and ultimately become competent to support blood flow are largely unknown. Therefore, the study of the early steps of vessel sprouting can point to new therapeutic directions once key targets in these pathways have been identified.

The most promising in-vitro assays for elucidating relevant molecules and pathways necessary for endothelial cell morphogenesis are those using three-dimensional extracellular matrices, because endothelial cells experience a richer, more complex physical environment than cells cultured on twodimensional surfaces. The collagen I and fibrin matrices represent the major matrix environments where angiogenic events take place. For example, during endothelial sprouting there is the induced expression of endogenous growth factors, transcription factors and signalling molecules, endothelial cell differentiation markers and adhesion molecules and a marked down-regulation of positive regulators of the cell cycle and ubiquitin-proteasome genes. In stark comparison, the angiogenesis-screening assay using the basement-membrane matrix Matrigel, which measures the ability of endothelial cells to form a meshwork of cords on a tumour cell-derived matrix is markedly independent of transcriptional events, and protein synthesis. These and other drawbacks with the Matrigel gel assay limit its scope for screening purposes. In the endothelial cell sprouting assay (3D-ECSA), endothelial cells are induced over a period of 24 h to form spheroids by aggregating. The spheroids are next seeded in suspension in a collagen I matrix by gelling at 37°C. Exogenous growth factors, such as vascular endothelial growth factor, when added to the three-dimenional culture, stimulate the growth of vessel-like structures that grow out from the spheroid. Extracts and drugs being tested for angiogenesis inhibition are added along with VEGF. The sprouting extent and its inhibition are observed after a period of 18-24 h, which allows one to readily identify agents that block vessel development. The assay has been used by our laboratory to identify several classes of angiogenesis inhibitors, one of which is withaferin A from the medicinal plant Witbania somnifera.

The angiogenic balance: a paradigm for herbal medicine

Several traditional medicine systems, such as those used in China and India (Ayurveda, Siddha and Unani) explain disease as the imbalances in the body’s humoral and local effectors of normal physiology. In contrast, Western medicine identifies targets and designs therapeutic agents to affect particular diseased proteins/factors. Traditional or ethnomedicines lay emphasis on multiple modalities, focusing, on the one hand, on reducing the disease burden with the use of complex mixtures of principal active agents, while, on the other hand, also laying equal emphasis on reducing the undesired effects of these principal active agents with secondary substances to alleviate drug-induced toxicities. Considering this complex paradigm, two important aspects regarding herbal products need to be considered. One is focused on understanding the molecular factors that contribute to the pathobiology of disease and the other to the toxicology of drug activity. Using modern tools of analytical chemistry, biochemistry and molecular biology, molecular descriptors (genomics, proteomics, metabolomics), the activity of plant extracts and their principal active components on cellular and animal models can be understood mechanistically and are providing a wealth of information that serve hypotheses on which targets are tractable and how best to affect their functions to reverse disease.

Herbs used to treat respiratory conditions

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September 12, 2010 at 8:13 am

Physiology of the respiratory system and asthma

The respiratory system is composed of the lungs and the air passages, the muscles of the thorax, of pleural sacs and nerves. The air passage consists of the paired nasal cavities, pharynx, larynx, trachea and bronchial tree. The trachea bifurcates to form the primary bronchi which further divide into secondary bronchi leading to smaller respiratory bronchioles terminating in alveoli, through which oxygen passes from air into blood and carbon dioxide passes from blood into air.

On the lungs and air passages, receptors such as adrenoceptor, histamine and muscarinic are present, which are responsible for regulation of different physiological functions. Stimulation of β-adrenergic receptors decreases smooth tone of the airways and inhibits the release of inflammatory mediators from mast cells. Muscarinic receptors in airways belong to M3 subtypes, which occur almost exclusively in proximal airways, and mediate contractile responses and increase the mucous secretion. Histamine receptors of H1-type are present on bronchial muscle, causing contraction of smooth muscles, but have little physiological role; thus antihistaminic drugs have limited therapeutic contribution.

The hyperactivity of respiratory smooth muscles results in airway constriction leading to asthma. Most of the disorders of the respiratory system, other than infectious diseases, results from the hyperactivity of airways. Asthma is a major congestive respiratory disorder, characterised by episodic wheezing, cough and chest tightness associated with airflow obstruction. The worldwide prevalence of asthma has been increasing, particularly in children. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), it affects about 5-10% of adults and 10% of children globally. The mortality rates from asthma have been increasing steadily over recent decades. According to the National Center for Health Statistics, the death rate from asthma in the United States increased from 0.8 per 100 000 in 1971 to 2 per 100 000 in 1991.

The pathogenesis of asthma is multifactorial and multicellular since macrophages, mast cells, eosinophils, neutrophils and platelets are involved in its pathogenesis. The cells produce an arsenal of mediators such as bradykinin, histamine, leukotrienes, platelet-activating factor, prostaglandins and thromboxane which interact in a complex way to produce numerous pathological effects. These include constriction of airway smooth muscle, increased microvascular leakage, mucus secretion and recruitment of inflammatory cells into airways. Histopathological studies of patients with asthma have shown inflammation in the airways with infiltration of inflammatory cells, particularly eosinophils, disruption of airway epithelium and mucus hypersecretion, thus indicating that airway inflammation may underlie bronchial hyperresponsiveness.

Asthma is classified into extrinsic and intrinsic types. The extrinsic type generally appears in early stages of life in individuals with a family history of either asthma or various allergies including hay fever, eczema and dermatitis. The intrinsic type, on the other hand, develops at around 40 years of age and occurs because of non-specific factors (common cold, exercise or emotion) that may trigger the asthmatic attack. Many stimuli including viral infection, environmental allergens, animal dander, stress, air pollutants, emotion (fear, anger, frustration), cold air and changes in weather enhance symptoms of asthma and alter airway physiology.

In many instances asthma has been found to run in families and multiple genes are involved in its expression. In the traditional Greco-Arab Unani system of medicine, the human race is divided genetically into four classes based on their susceptibility to develop different diseases, i.e, choleric, sanguine, phlegmatic and melancholic. Those who have the tendency to develop asthmatic disorders belong to the phlegmatic category. It has been observed that such individuals with sensitive airways respond adversely and develop bronchoconstriction and/or cough when taking allopathic medicines, such as angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors.

Drugs used to treat asthma

The common classes of drugs with proven efficacy in asthma are bronchodilators such as β2-agonists, anticholinergics, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, while glucocorticosteroids, mass cell stabilisers and leukotriene modifiers are used usually as preventive therapy in chronic cases. More recently, Ca2+ antagonists and potassium channel openers have been added to the list of potential bronchodilators. All bronchodilators currently in use are known to manifest cardiac stimulation as a serious side-effect, particularly when given orally. Inhalers are used to avoid cardiac side-effects, but are very expensive and beyond the reach of a large part of the population in developing countries, so alternate measures are being explored for safe and cost-effective treatment.

Herbs in this regard have potential not only as a source of new clinical drugs but are also gaining popularity in the form of crude herbal products or botanicals. Interestingly, a constituent of Aspalathus linearis (a popular herbal tea in South Africa, commonly known as rooibos) is chrysoeriol, a flavonoid, and was found to exhibit high selectivity for airways compared with other smooth muscles, so placing itself amongst the candidates to be developed for congestive airways disorders.

Pathology of coughing

Cough is a spasmodic contraction of the thoracic cavity that results in abrupt release of air from the lungs. It is usually very sudden in onset and very often repetitive. The cough reflex is complex, involving the central and peripheral nervous system as well as the smooth muscle of the bronchial tree. It has been suggested that irritation of the bronchial mucosa causes bronchoconstriction, which in turn stimulates cough receptors (which probably represent a specialised type of stretch receptor) located in tracheobronchial passages. The cough reflex probably includes several mechanisms or centres that are distinct from the mechanisms involved in the regulation of respiration. Excessive cough is one of the most common symptoms for which the patient seeks medical care and may represent up to one-third of a pulmonologist’s outpatient referrals. Persistent severe cough, seen in interstitial lung disease or bronchiectasis, may impair respiration as well as disrupt sleep and social functioning. Bronchospasm, syncope, rib fractures and urinary incontinence are all potential complications. On the basis of duration, cough has been divided into acute (less than 3 weeks’ duration), subacute (3-8 weeks) and chronic (more than 8 weeks) types.

The causes of acute cough are viral or bacterial infection, pneumonia, pulmonary embolism and pulmonary oedema. The most common causes of subacute and chronic cough are asthma, weather changes, smoking, inflammation of larynx or pharynx and allergies.

The drugs that directly or indirectly can affect the cough are diverse. Cough may be the first, or the only, symptom of asthma or allergy and in such cases bronchodilators and antihistaminergics have been shown to reduce cough without having significant central effects. The drugs acting primarily on central or peripheral nervous system components of the cough reflex are opioid agents, i.e. codeine and dextromethorphan, which are structurally related to morphine and act on the cough centre of the medulla, increasing the cough threshold and thus depressing the cough.

Models for respiratory studies

ln-vivo studies

Pulmonary function test

The pulmonary functions are assessed using a spirometer, just before and 2 h after administration of the test and control drugs to the patients with asthma. The subjects are asked to take a deep inspiration followed by forcible expiration into the spirometer. The various parameters such as forced vital capacity, forced expiratory volume in first second, peak expiratory flow rate and forced expiratory flow rate between 25% and 75% of forced vital capacity are recorded. Because a significant improvement is observed after 2 h, this schedule is fixed for the measurements throughout the study.

Bronchodilatory activity

Rats are anaesthetised with sodium thiopental, then intubated with a tracheal tube and ventilated with a volume ventilator (Miniature ideal pump, Bioscience, UK) adjusted at a rate of 70-80 strokes/min (to deliver 7-10 mL/kg of room air) in the supine position. A polythene catheter is inserted into the jugular vein for drug administration. Changes in airway resistance are measured by connecting a side arm of the tracheal cannula to a pressure transducer (MLT 1199). Bronchoconstriction is induced with carbachol or histamine, which is reversed within 7-10 min. The test drugs are given to the animals 5-8 min prior to administration of carbachol.

Aerosol inhalation method

Guinea pigs that reacted positively on the preliminary test of the histamine aerosol are selected and used during the in-vivo test. Four groups of the selected animals are prepared. The first group served as controls. For the three other groups, different doses of the test drug are administered by oral route 2 h before the histamine aerosol test. Then animals are placed into a 10-L transparent plastic bell jar. They are aerosolised with 5 mg/mL histamine solution during 3 min. The reaction of each animal is noted. The animal which did not present any suffocation sign during 3 min is considered as protected.

Histamine and antigen-induced bronchospasm

The animals are anaesthetised by ethyl urethane (1.25 g/kg intraperitoneally). After tracheotomy a tracheal cannula is introduced and connected to a ventilation pump and a pressure transducer. The ventilation pressure is registered with a Gemini recorder. The animals are ventilated artificially at a frequency of 50 breaths/min and the respiratory volume is adjusted to 10 mL/breath. Maximal changes in pulmonary ventilation pressure (PVP) are expressed as the percentage of the basal pulmonary ventilation pressure. For histamine-induced bronchospasm, histamine (20 µg/kg) is injected intravenously through a short polyethylene catheter inserted into the jugular vein. For antigen-induced bronchospasm, the animals are first sensitised by two successive inhalations (50 µL each) of a nebulised Oleaceae allergen. After 48 h, the animals are anaesthetised and placed under the assisted respiration and are administered with the Oleaceae allergen (100 µL) by intratracheal instillation.

In-vitro studies

Isolated tracheal strips

The trachea is dissected from a guinea pig or rabbit killed by cervical dislocation and kept in Krebs solution. The tracheal tube is cut into rings, 2-3 mm wide. Each ring is opened by a longitudinal cut on the ventral side opposite to the smooth muscle layer, forming a tracheal strip with a central part of smooth muscle in between the cartilaginous portions on the edges. The preparation is then mounted in a 20 mL tissue bath containing Krebs solution, at 37°C and aerated with carbogen (5% CO2 in 95% O2). A tension of 1 g is applied to each of the tracheal strips and is kept constant throughout the experiment. The tissue is equilibrated for 1 h before the addition of any drug. The tracheal preparations are then constricted with carbachol, histamine and potassium and the relaxant effect of a drug is assessed by adding in a cumulative fashion.

Lung parenchyma slicing

Male guinea pigs weighing 250-350 g are killed by cervical dislocation. The thoracic cavity is opened and the lungs are removed. A 1.5 mm x 20 mm strip of subpleural parenchyma is cut from an area of grossly normal lung and prepared for recording of contractile responses. The tissues are placed in organ baths containing physiological salt solution and aerated with carbogen. One end of each tissue is tied with a silk thread to a glass hook located at the bottom of the organ bath and the other end is connected by a silk thread to a force transducer. An initial load of 1 g is applied to each of the lung parenchyma strips and equilibrated for 1 h before the addition of any drug, then the preparations are constricted with different spasmogens, such as carbachol, histamine or potassium, to assess the bronchodilator effect.

Sensitisation procedure

Guinea pigs are sensitised by intraperitoneal injection of 5 mL of 0.9% saline containing 10 µg of oval-bumin dispersed with 1 mg of aluminium hydroxide. The injection is repeated after 14 days and the animals are killed 7-10 days after the second injection. After removing the trachea from the adjacent tissues, preparations are mounted for isometric recording. Following the equilibration period the tissues are constricted with carbachol. After 30 min tissues are exposed to ovalbumin (1-3 g/mL) and a contraction of the trachea confirm that the guinea pigs are successfully sensitised. The test drug is preincubated with the preparation 20 min before ovalbumin addition.

Mast cell stabilisation assay to assess prevention potential

The rats are sensitised by subcutaneous injection of horse serum along with 0.5 mL of triple antigen containing Bordetella pertussis organisms. The rats are divided into eight groups of six and treated with either saline, positive control (prednisolone or ketotifen) or the different doses of the test drug or plant extract. On the 14th day, 3 h after the last dose treatment, the rats are killed, and intestinal mesentery is taken for study of mast cells. Mesenteric and intestinal pieces are kept in a Ringer Locke’s solution at 37°C. Mesenteric pieces are then challenged with 5% horse serum in vitro for 10 min. Pieces of mesentery are stained supravitally with toluidine blue. Tissue is first immersed in 0.1% toluidine blue in 4% aqueous formal saline for 10 min. The tissue is then transferred to xylene for 5-10 min and finally rinsed two or three times with acetone and examined under a microscope. The numbers of intact and disrupted mast cells per high field are counted.