| Literature DB >> 24600529 |
Navjot Kaur1, Nusrat Shafiq1, Harish Negi1, Avaneesh Pandey1, Srinivas Reddy2, Harpreet Kaur3, Neelima Chadha4, Samir Malhotra1.
Abstract
Background. Terminalia arjuna is a popular Indian medicinal plant with its bark been used for over centuries as cardiotonic. The bark has been found to contain several bioactive compounds including saponins and flavonoids. A number of experimental and clinical studies have been conducted to explore therapeutic potential of Terminalia arjuna in cardiovascular ailments specially in patients of coronary heart disease. A number of narrative reviews have been done but no systematic review has been conducted to date. Objective. To systematically review and conduct a meta-analysis on the available literature evaluating the efficacy of Terminalia arjuna in patients of chronic stable angina. Study selection. We included randomised, pseudo-randomized and before-after comparative studies which compared Terminalia arjuna/commercial preparation of Terminalia arjuna with current standard/ conventional treatment regimens in patients with chronic stable angina. Findings. Studies were found to be of poor methodological design. We found no significant difference in the Terminalia arjuna group as compared to control arm in the outcomes for which we were able to pool data and undertake meta-analysis. Conclusions. Currently, the evidence is insufficient to draw any definite conclusions in favour of or against Terminalia arjuna in patients of chronic stable angina. Further, well-controlled multicentric clinical trials need to be conducted in large number of patients to explore the therapeutic potential of Terminalia arjuna if any.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24600529 PMCID: PMC3926224 DOI: 10.1155/2014/281483
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiol Res Pract ISSN: 2090-0597 Impact factor: 1.866
Figure 1Flow chart of methods.
Characteristics of included studies.
| S. no. | Author | Sample size | Population studied | Study design | Duration of follow-up | Test group | Control group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) | Bharani et al., 2002 [ | 58 | Male with stable angina (NYHA class II-III) | Randomized crossover placebo controlled trial | 4 weeks |
| Isosorbide mononitrate (20 mg BD) |
|
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| (2) |
Kumar et al., 1999 [ | 20 | Adult with stable angina | Open comparative trial | 12 weeks | Hartone 2 cap BD for 6 months, 1 cap BD for next 6 months | Isosorbide mononitrate (20 mg BD) |
|
| |||||||
| (3) |
Dwivedi and Jauhari, 1997 [ | 24 | Adult with stable angina (NYHA-IV) | Randomised controlled trial | 12 weeks | Conventional + | Conventional |
|
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| (4) |
Dwivedi and Agarwal, 1994 [ | 20 | Adult with stable and unstable angina | Before and after treatment comparison | 12 weeks | 500 mg | — |
|
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| (5) |
Jain et al., 1992 [ | 25 | Adult with stable angina | Before and after treatment comparison | 12 weeks | Conventional + | — |
Quality assessment of included studies.
| Study ID | Randomization | Blinding of participants and personnel | Allocation concealment | Blinded outcome assessment | Incomplete outcome data | Selective reporting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Bharani et al., 2002 [ |
|
| NS | NS | NS | NS |
|
Kumar et al., 1999 [ |
| NS | NS | NS | NS | NS |
|
Dwivedi and Jauhari, 1997 [ |
| NS | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Dwivedi and Agarwal, 1994 [ | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Jain et al., 1992 [ | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS |
NS: not specified.
Figure 2Plot of mean difference of duration of exercise in two studies comparing Terminalia arjuna and conventional therapy in patients with stable angina.
Figure 3Plot of mean difference of maximum ST segment depression in two studies comparing Terminalia arjuna and conventional therapy in patients with stable angina.
Figure 4Plot of mean difference of time to recovery from ST segment depression in two studies comparing Terminalia arjuna and conventional therapy in patients with stable angina.
Figure 5Plot of mean difference of double product in two studies comparing Terminalia arjuna and conventional therapy in patients with stable angina.