FUNDAMENTALS OF PHYTOTHERAPY
Characteristics and Status of Herbal Medicines
Preliminary Remarks
- Herbal
medicine is a scientifically recognized complementary and alternative
treatment method with proven efficacy.
- In
North America, herbal remedies are considered dietary supplements by law
and are considered safe unless proven otherwise. Manufacturing standards
are not as stringent as required for pharmaceutical drugs. While only a
few “structure and function” claims (such as “benefits digestion”) can be
made by manufacturers, many work around that limitation by making
extensive use of “third-party” advertising in magazines and through
company representatives.
- In
Germany, herbal remedies are defined as medicinal products by German Drug
Law.
- German
legislators regard herbs and herbal remedies as medicinal products with
specific pharmaceutical characteristics. Together with homeopathic and
anthroposophic medicines, herbal medicines are classified as drugs of a
special system of therapeutics.
- According
to German law, every physician must be knowledgeable about herbal
medicine. North American physicians are not required to have this
training, and few classes are offered in herbs or natural medicine in
medical school.
- The
public interest in alternative therapies for general health maintenance
and supportive treatment of chronic diseases has increased tremendously.
- Herbal products: One of the main distinguishing features of herbal preparations is their complex chemical composition.
- Chemical or synthetic drugs: Chemically defined drugs in general contain precisely definable quantities of usually one particular active ingredient and also accompanying substances.
- Homeopathic remedies: Homeopathic products are prepared according to special formulation techniques and are prescribed according to the principles introduced by Samuel Hahnemann in the early nineteenth century. His “Law of Similars” states that the remedy prescribed, in a more or less highly diluted form, to cure a given condition or disease should be a substance that induces similar symptoms in healthy individuals when given in much higher amounts.
- Anthroposophic remedies: Anthroposophic remedies are prepared according to the ideas and teachings of Rudolf Steiner.
Definitions
Ø Herbal medicine:
A time-honored system of
healing practiced in every culture in
the world. Science has modernized the system using analytical and pharmaceutical
testing. The science-based practice of herbal medicine is now called phytomedicine Or phytotherapy,
which is a system of therapeutics in which diseases and disorders are treated with medicinal plants and
preparations made
from them using scientific principles.
Ø Medicinal herbs: Medicinal products whose active ingredients consist
exclusively
Ø of medicinal plants and preparations made from them.
Using modern chemical and pharmaceutical methods, a number of popular herbal
remedies are nowadays “standardized” to provide consistent levels of proven identified
active compounds.
Ø Phytochemistry: The study of plant chemistry, including the
identification, isolation, analysis, and characterization of plant constituents,
and determination of the chemical structures of plant constituents.
Ø Pharmaceutical
biology: The field of research concerned
with the extraction
and development of biogenic
drugs from plants and other living organisms as well as the processing and application of these drugs.
Ø Phytopharmacology: The study of the uptake, distribution, and effect of
herbal
preparations and of their
elimination from the body.
Ø Active
principles: Substances or substance groups
definable by chemical analysis that
essentially contribute to the therapeutic action of a medicinal herbal preparation.
Ø Active
ingredients of medicinal herbal preparations: Plant
ingredients in
their natural states and
preparations made from them.
Ø Minor
constituents:
Substances that have an indirect
or slight effect on the therapeutic action of an herbal drug.
Ø Single-herb
herbal preparation:
Herbal medicinal preparation
from one
medicinal plant.
Ø Target
constituents: Herbal drug preparation
constituents definable by chemical analysis that are used as parameters of
in-process quality control and may contribute to a characteristic
pharmaceutical property.
Ø Species, genus,
family:
Taxonomic terms classifying a
plant. A genus may include one
or more species, and a family may include one or more genera.
Research on
Herbal Remedies: State of the Art
Ø Remarkable
advances in phytotherapeutic research have been made within the past 15 years.
Ø The worldwide interest in herbal drug research is steadily
increasing.
o
Collaboration between
universities, the dietary supplement and herbal industry, and the
pharmaceutical industry is essential to promote the success of this research.
In North America, government funding of human studies on the efficacy and
safety of herbal preparations is just beginning.
o
Comparable to research on
chemically defined drugs, research on herbal preparations is also carried out
using molecular biological, pharmacological, and clinical techniques of
investigation.
o
The findings of herbal research
are published in recognized medical journals such as JAMA, the British Medical Journal, and Arzneimittelforschung
o
Researchers are developing
high-quality standardized extracts with proven efficacy.
o
Both basic research and
clinical studies have repeatedly shown that wholedrug complexes are superior
with respect to range of action and tolerability to isolated chemical
constituents.
From the Plant to the Remedy
Origins
of Medicinal Plants for the Manufacture of Herbal Products
Ø Wild
harvested herbs
– Half of all medicinal plants on the market
and two-thirds of all plant species are harvested from the wild.
– For economic reasons, wild harvested herbs
are preferably used in the cases of certain slow-growing plants and of plants
of which there is a naturally abundant supply.
Ø Cultivated
herbs
– Cultivated herbs are used when the natural
supply is not sufficient to meet demand or if a herb required for medicinal
purposes is a protected plant species, such as purple coneflower, Echinacea
purpurea, and goldenseal, Hydrastis
canadensis
– Advantages of controlled farming
· Uniform seed material, optimal growing
conditions and harvesting times
· Reduced risk of mistaken identity or
adulteration
· Reduction of impurities, microbial contamination,
and residues from pesticides and
heavy metals (especially in plants imported from developing countries)
–
Organic
farming: Ensures the
maintenance of natural growing conditions and is environmentally friendly.
Ø Cultivation
of special crops
– Mainly used to enrich and optimize the
primary constituents of medicinal plants. A way of standardizing active
constituent levels.
– Reduces the number and quantity of
undesirable substances in the plants.
– Enhances the resistance of the plants to
atmospheric influences, diseases, and pests.
Quality
Assurance
Ø Homogeneous
starting materials
– Homogeneity is achieved by optimization and
wide-scale standardization of growing conditions (e. g., in cultures), and
asexual propagation
Note : The concentrations of constituents in a
given plant (e. g., ginseng or arnica) tend to vary according to location of
origin, season of harvesting, and age.
Ø Standardized
preparation process
– Manufacturers use exact specifications for
analyzing parent substances— meaning the herbs and their parts used—and herbal
extracts made from them, using solvents such as ethanol. Specifications for
assaying the content of target or primary constituents are just as exact and
are designed to ensure that the chemical composition of the herbal extracts
remains consistent from batch to batch.
– Standardization ensures that the quality of
medicinal plants and extracts made from them are reproducible and consistent.
– Minimum concentrations of active principles
in raw (unprocessed) herbs are specified in sources such as the German and
European Pharmacopeias and, lately, the US Pharmacopeia.
Note : Insofar as the manufacturers of
phytomedicines use different methods of processing, the final products may vary
greatly with respect to the type and/ or concentration of their ingredients. This
is especially true of liquid tinctures of all kinds, including glycerites, and
herb products that contain powdered herbs.
Ø Chemical
standardization: Many manufacturers
today sell products that contain standardized extract powders in capsule and
tablet form, and the levels of identified active constituents vary much less in these products.
Ø Quality
is ensured through
good harvesting, drying, processing, and storage practices of both herbs and preparations
(see also section on storage):
– Good harvesting practice takes into account
the growth phase (time of year) and best time of day to harvest a given plant.
– The drying process should be performed at a
suitable temperature, without overheating, and under appropriate lighting
conditions.
– The plant material should be cut, cleaned,
and stored without direct light exposure at an appropriate temperature in
accordance with the rules of good professional practice. Herbal preparations
such as liquids, capsules, or tablets should be stored away from heat and
direct sunlight, preferably in glass containers that exclude oxygen.
Ø In-process
controls: The manufacturer
should monitor each step of the process of converting raw materials into
finished medicinal products by applying the appropriate analytical tests.
Ø Drug
safety for herbal medicinal preparations
– In Germany, herbal medicinal preparations
are subject to essentially the same standards for toxicity, teratogenicity, and
mutagenicity/carcinogenicity as chemically defined drugs. End user suppliers
and storage specifications are described below.
– The processed plant material must be tested
for a wide variety of different pesticides. In North America, manufacturers of
herbal products must follow good manufacturing practices based on regulations
for food products regarding cleanliness and safety. The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) does not currently require manufacturers to test herbal
medicines that are generally recognized as safe (GRAS) and have been used in
food products before 1 January 1958 for toxicity in the same way as
pharmaceutical drugs, since manufacturers are allowed to make only minimal “structure–function”
claims for herbal preparations.
Note: Plants collected in the wild, as well as
plants raised in conventional (nonorganic) farms, may have high
concentrations of pesticides and/or heavy metals.
Ø End
user suppliers: Pharmacies,
supermarkets, health food stores, web-based suppliers, or by direct order from certain
suppliers.
Ø Storage
– Store in a cool (not cold), dark place, out
of the reach of children.
– Discard after the expiration date.
– Factors that can reduce the shelf life of
herbal medicines:
· Exposure to air (keep in airtight bottles)
· Humidity
· Heat
· Light (leading to oxidation-related
decomposition)
· Fungal or bacterial contamination (leading
to formation of poisonous metabolites)
· Evaporation
Note: Plants infested
with pests or mold must be destroyed.
– In order to identify plants that are
spoiled or infested, the plant material should be inspected for mold, altered
or unpleasant odor, insects, and traces of insects (cobwebs, etc.).
– The pharmacist should be able to furnish
information on the shelf life of herbal medicines (e. g., teas and other herbal
remedies prepared in the pharmacy).
– Herbal preparations should be stored in
containers that are airtight, waterproof, lightproof, and fragrance-free.
– Storage temperature: 10 – 20 °C (50 – 68 °F).
Comparison of Efficacy
Ø It is virtually impossible to compare the
efficacy of herbal remedies prepared by different manufacturers, even when they
are derived from the same plant species, because different companies use
different drying, processing, and manufacturing processes, and because plants
from different populations vary in constituent levels.
Ø The therapeutic efficacy of herbal remedies
with comparable concentrations of primary constituents but produced by
different manufacturers may vary because of the differences in the content of
minor constituents.
Ø In the future, individual pharmaceutical
companies will be required to test the efficacy and tolerability of plant
extracts prepared by different manufacturing processes.
Constituents and Active Principles
Primary and
Secondary Metabolism
Ø A distinction is generally made between primary and
secondary plant metabolism. The products of primary metabolism
maintain the plant’s vital functions, whereas the products of secondary
metabolism, as far as is currently known, are not essential for the plant’s
immediate survival.
Ø Products of
primary metabolism: Carbohydrates, fats and
proteins are basic nutrients for humans and animals, but are rarely relevant as
pharmacologically active substances. Nonetheless, they may have a positive or
negative effect on the efficacy of the active principles in drugs.
Ø Products of
secondary metabolism: Many
secondary plant substances protect plants from feeding damage, act as storage
or waste products, or ward off pests and diseases. Some are pharmacologically
active.
Examples of
Products of Primary Metabolism
Ø Pectins
–
Substance group: Carbohydrates.
–
Example: Apple
pectin.
–
Structural properties: High-molecular weight compounds comprising sugarlike
molecules.
–
Plant sources: Found
in many kinds of fruit, especially when unripe.
– Pharmacological properties: Pectins cannot be digested by endogenous intestinal juices
and have a high water-binding capacity.
–
Indications: Diarrhea.
· Pectins lower the pH of the bowel because they
encourage growth of beneficial bacteria. This produces less favorable living
conditions for the pathological bacteria that cause diarrhea (see p. 190, “Diarrhea”).
Ø Essential
omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids
–
Substance group: Fats.
–
Examples: Alpha-linolenic
acid and gamma-linolenic acid.
–
Plant sources: Flaxseed,
rape seed, evening primrose seed, etc.
–
Structural properties: Fatty acids.
– Pharmacological properties: Used in the synthesis of tissue hormones of the eicosanoid,
prostaglandin, and thromboxane groups.
–
Indications: Symptoms
and ailments involving inflammation.
Products of
Secondary Metabolism
Ø Alkaloids
–
Examples: Atropine,
caffeine, morphine, colchicine, nicotine, berberine.
– Plant sources: Mainly
in nightshades such as belladonna, bittersweet, and thornapple, but also in
papaveraceous plants (opium poppy, greater celandine), the borage family
(coltsfoot, comfrey), and the spea family (Crotalaria).
–
Structural properties: Alkaloids contain nitrogen have complex structures, and
undergo alkaline reactions.
– Pharmacological properties: Most alkaloids have a potent effect on the central nervous
system, e. g., sympathomimetic or parasympatholytic effect.
– Indications
· Isolated alkaloids used in pure form (e. g., atropine)
are highly potent drugs that are available by prescription only.
· Chelidonine (celandine), berberine, caffeine, and
theophylline are less potent alkaloids.
· Pyrrolizidine alkaloids (present in members of the
borage and aster family): Their significant toxicological features are
hepatotoxicity and mutagenicity.
Ø Essential oils
–
Examples
of individual essential oil components: Menthol,
thymol, α-pinene, eugenol, chamazulene. Essential or volatile oils are highly
complex mixtures of monoterpenes (containing 10 carbon atoms) and other types
of compounds.
–
Plant
sources: Found in a variety of plants, such
as conifers, and members of the mint and parsley families.
– Structural
properties: Monoterpenes (e. g., menthol,
thymol), sesquiterpenes (e. g., constituents of chamomile such as bisabolol),
sesquiterpene lactones (parthenolide in feverfew), iridoid substances
(gentopicrin in gentian root), and phenylpropane (e. g., chemicals in ginger root,
eugenol).
– Pharmacological
properties: Essential oils are aromatic,
highly volatile, fatsoluble substances that stimulate chemoreceptors. They are
readily absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract and by the skin (e. g., when
used in bath salts and liniments).
Ø Bitter substances
–
Examples:
Gentianin, gentiopicrin,
cynaropicrin.
–
Plant
sources: Members of the Aster (artichoke,
dandelion) and Gentian (gentian, centaury) families.
–
Structural
properties: Mainly derivatives of terpenes
and seco-iridoides.
– Pharmacological
properties: Bitter substances stimulate the
reflex production of gastrointestinal secretions (especially saliva and gastric
juices) via lingual taste buds.
–
Indications:
For treatment of dyspeptic complaints;
to stimulate appetite and improve digestion and assimilation of nutrients.
Ø Carotinoids
–
Examples:
β-carotene, lycopene, lutein.
–
Plant
sources: Colored fruit, leafy
vegetables.
–
Structural
properties: Tetraterpene derivatives.
–
Pharmacological
properties: Antioxidants and
immunomodulators; vitamin A precursors (β-carotene).
–
Indications: Inflammation, immunodeficiency, photodermatosis.
Ø Flavonoids
–
Examples:
Rutin, silymarin, kaempferol,
quercetin.
–
Plant
sources: Found in a wide variety of
plants.
– Structural
properties: Flavonoids have a molecular
skeleton consisting of acetic acid units and a phenylpropane group. Their
pharmacological properties are determined by those of their substituents.
– Pharmacological
properties: Flavonoids have a nonspecific
protective effect on the capillaries, act as radical scavengers, and stabilize
the cell membrane. They additionally have anticonvulsant and diuretic effects
and increase the tolerance of cells to oxygen deficiency.
–
Indications: For treatment of varicose veins, inflammations, edema,
dyspeptic complaints and liver disorders; to stimulate bile secretion.
Ø Tannins
–
Examples: Proanthocyanides;
phenolcarboxylic acids such as chlorogenic acid, cynarin, and ursolic acid.
– Plant sources
· Relatively high concentrations can be found in many
parts of woody plants (e. g., oak bark) and in rose plants, blackberries,
silverweed (goosewort), stag-horn, blackthorn, and tormentil.
· Lower concentrations are present in many plant-based
foods and beverages (black and green tea, bilberries [blueberries]).
– Structural properties
· Phenolcarboxylic acids are derived from caffeic acid,
salicylic acid, and bile acid.
· Condensed proanthocyanides consist of catechinic acids.
–
Pharmacological properties: Tannins irreversibly link protein chains and have
astringent action on the skin and mucous membranes. Hence, they have
anti-inflammatory, styptic, counterirritant, and weakly antibacterial effects
and prevent the excess secretion of mucus.
–
Indications: External
uses: for irritations of the skin and mucous membranes. Internal uses: for
acute unspecific diarrhea.
Ø Glycosides
–
Examples: Cardiac
glycosides, anthranoids, flavonol glycosides.
–
Plant sources: Found
in many members of the plant kingdom.
– Structural properties: Contain one or multiple sugar molecules as well as a nonsugar
component that determines their pharmacological activity.
– Pharmacological
properties
· Positively inotropic (cardiac glycosides); laxative
(anthranoids); improve circulation (flavonol glycosides in ginkgo leaves).
· Higher doses can induce severe side effects and, in
some cases, poisoning (cardiac glycosides, anthranoids).
–
Indications: Cardiac
failure, constipation; to improve the circulation.
Ø Phytosterins (phytosterols)
–
Examples: β-Sitosterol.
–
Plant sources: Pumpkin
seed, nettle root, saw palmetto fruit.
–
Structural properties: Very similar to those of cholesterol.
– Pharmacological properties: Phytosterols occupy cholesterol receptors and thus
lower cholesterol levels. They also stabilize cell walls and inhibit the synthesis
of mediators of inflammation.
– Indications: To
counteract elevated concentrations of lipids (antilipemic); for treatment of
benign prostatic hyperplasia.
Ø Saponins
–
Examples: α-Hederine
(ivy), diosgenin (wild yam), glycyrrhizic acid (licorice).
–
Plant sources: Widely
distributed in plants such as ivy (leaf), licorice (rootstock), and horse
chestnut.
– Structural
properties
· Consist of a water-soluble sugar chain and a
fat-soluble component (aglycone or genin).
· Triterpene, steroid, and steroidal alkaline saponins
are distinguished by their aglycone component.
– Pharmacological properties: Saponins induce local tissue irritation and reflex expectoration,
inhibit the growth of microorganisms, especially fungi, and have partial
anti-inflammatory and antiedematous effects.
– Indications:
To emulsify watery
and oily solutions and to promote the dissolution of substances that are not easily
absorbed.
Note: Most saponins retain their hemolytic properties, even when highly
diluted. Hence, they should not be used to treat injuries or inflammations of
the digestive organs.
Ø Mucilage
– Examples:
Arabinolactans,
glucans, lichenin.
– Plant
sources: Marshmallow root,
Iceland moss, ribwort, linden flower.
– Structural
properties: Polysaccharides.
– Pharmacological
properties: Mucilaginous
substances swell when added to water, forming viscous solutions or gels.
Water-soluble mucilages are demulcent and reduce inflammation. Insoluble
mucilages swell in the gastrointestinal tract and regulate the bowels.
– Indications:
To soothe irritated
mucous membranes of the mouth, throat, and gastrointestinal tract; to alleviate
dry cough and to regulate the bowels.
Ø Mustard
oils
– Examples:
Sinalbin,
glucobrassicin.
– Plant
sources: Black radish,
mustard, great nasturium.
– Structural
properties: Steam-volatile,
pungent compounds formed by organosulfuric acids.
– Pharmacological
properties: Mustard oils have
antibacterial effects and induce hyperemia of the skin.
– Indications:
Used externally to
increase the blood flow.
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