| Literature DB >> 22991573 |
Anna Del Prete1, Antonella Scalera, Maddalena Diana Iadevaia, Agnese Miranda, Claudio Zulli, Laura Gaeta, Concetta Tuccillo, Alessandro Federico, Carmelina Loguercio.
Abstract
Complementary and alternative medicine soughts and encompasses a wide range of approaches; its use begun in ancient China at the time of Xia dynasty and in India during the Vedic period, but thanks to its long-lasting curative effect, easy availability, natural way of healing, and poor side-effects it is gaining importance throughout the world in clinical practice. We conducted a review describing the effects and the limits of using herbal products in chronic liver disease, focusing our attention on those most known, such as quercetin or curcumin. We tried to describe their pharmacokinetics, biological properties, and their beneficial effects (as antioxidant role) in metabolic, alcoholic, and viral hepatitis (considering that oxidative stress is the common pathway of chronic liver diseases of different etiology). The main limit of applicability of CAM comes from the lacking of randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials giving a real proof of efficacy of those products, so that anecdotal success and personal experience are frequently the driving force for acceptance of CAM in the population.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22991573 PMCID: PMC3443820 DOI: 10.1155/2012/837939
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Some herbal drugs associated with liver damage.
| Herbal | Application | Toxicity (clinical presentation) |
|---|---|---|
| Atractylis gummifera | Antiemetic, diuretic, chewing | Acute hepatitis, FHF (fulminant hepatic failure) |
| Callilepsis laureola | Miscellaneous | Like Atractylis gummifera |
| Chaparra | Antioxidant, liver and | Cholestasis, cholangitis, |
| Greater Celandine | Dyspepsia, irritable bowel | Chronic (cholestatic) hepatitis, |
| Germander | Weight reduction | Acute and chronic hepatitis, |
| Kava | Anxiolytic, sleeping aid | Acute and chronic hepatitis, |
| Pyrrolizidine alkaloids | Herbal tea, contamination | Veno-occlusive disease |
| Sassafras | Herbal tea | Hepatocarcinogenesis (animals) |
| Valerian | Sedative | Mild hepatitis |