| Literature DB >> 20335947 |
Colin W Wright1, Peter A Linley, Reto Brun, Sergio Wittlin, Elisabeth Hsu.
Abstract
Ancient Chinese herbal texts as far back as the 4th Century Zhou hou bei ji fang describe methods for the use of Qing Hao (Artemisia annua) for the treatment of intermittent fevers. Today, the A. annua constituent artemisinin is an important antimalarial drug and the herb itself is being grown and used locally for malaria treatment although this practice is controversial. Here we show that the ancient Chinese methods that involved either soaking, (followed by wringing) or pounding, (followed by squeezing) the fresh herb are more effective in producing artemisinin-rich extracts than the usual current method of preparing herbal teas from the dried herb. The concentrations of artemisinin in the extracts was up to 20-fold higher than that in a herbal tea prepared from the dried herb, but the amount of total artemisinin extracted by the Chinese methods was much less than that removed in the herbal tea. While both extracts exhibited potent in vitro activities against Plasmodium falciparum, only the pounded juice contained sufficient artemisinin to suppress parasitaemia in P. berghei infected mice. The implications of these results are discussed in the context of malaria treatment using A. annua infusions.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20335947 PMCID: PMC6257115 DOI: 10.3390/molecules15020804
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Artemisinin content, efficiency of artemisinin extraction and in vitro antiplasmodial activities of preparations made from A. annua herb grown from Anamed (high artemisinin) and Chiltern (low artemisinin) seeds.
| Type of | Methodb | Total artemisinin | Amount of artemisinin extracted, volume of juice and artemisinin concentration in juice | Proportion of total artemisinin extracted (Extraction efficiency), (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anamed, fresh herb | Wrung | 49.5 mg in 150g | 2.23 mg, 48.6 mL, ≡ 45.9 mg/L | 4.51 | 1:222,222 ≡ 0.21 ng/mL artemisinin |
| as above | Wrung | as above | 3.60 mg, 49.3 mL, ≡ 72.6 mg/L | 7.27 | 1:222,222 ≡ 0.33 ng/mL artemisinin |
| Anamed, dried herb (artemisinin 0.27%, n = 4) | Dried herb infusion (10 g/L) | 27 mg in 10 g | -, -, 14.5 mg /L | 53.8 | NT |
| Anamed, fresh herb (artemisinin 0.033%, n = 5) | Pounded | 43.2 mg in 131 g | 6.44 mg, 22.0 mL, ≡ 293 mg/L | 14.9 | 1:500,000 ≡ 0.59 ng/mL artemisinin |
| Chiltern, fresh herb (artemisinin 0.009%, n = 4) | Wrung | 13.5 mg in 150 g | 0.843 mg, 34.3 mL, ≡ 24.6 mg/L | 6.24 | 1:48.780 ≡ 0.50 ng/mL artemisinin |
| Artemisinin | 3.8 ng/mL |
a Artemisinin content of herb samples was determined by extracting with hexane several times and analysing the extract using gas-liquid chromatography; values obtained were taken to represent 100%. b Wrung juices were prepared by soaking 150 g fresh herb in sufficient water to cover the herb for either 2 or 12 h; after removing the herb excess water was allowed to drain before wringing out the juice by hand. Pounded juice was prepared by pounding fresh herb in a mortar and then squeezing the resulting pulp by hand; the yield of juice was 0.18 mL/g. The infusion was prepared by adding 1000 mL boiling water to the dried herb and allowing to stand until cool; 10 g dried herb is equivalent to 34.3 g fresh herb. c Artemisinin content of extracts was determined by extracting several times with hexane and analysing the extracts as for the herb samples above. NT, not tested.
In vivo evaluation of orally administered fresh pounded juice (Anamed) against P. berghei in mice.
| Extract/drug | Dose | Parasitaemia (%) | Suppression of Parasitaemia (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pounded juice (Anamed) | 500 μL a × 1 | 16 | 52 |
| 500 μL × 2 | 1.6 | 95 | |
| 500 μL × 3 | 1.4 | 96 | |
| Artemisinin | 30 mg/kg × 1 | 3.9 | 88 |
| Untreated control | 34 | 0 |
a 500 μL correspond to doses of 9 mg/kg artemisinin.