| Literature DB >> 28503571 |
Gihyun Lee1,2, Hyunsu Bae1.
Abstract
Background. Depression is a recurrent, common, and potentially life-threatening psychiatric disease related to multiple assignable causes. Although conventional antidepressant therapy can help relieve symptoms of depression and prevent relapse of the illness, complementary therapies are required due to disadvantage of the current therapy such as adverse effects. Moreover, a number of studies have researched adjunctive therapeutic approaches to improve outcomes for depression patients. Purpose. One potential complementary method with conventional antidepressants involves the use of medicinal herbs and phytochemicals that provide therapeutic benefits. Studies have revealed beneficial effects of medical herbs and phytochemicals on depression and their central nervous system mechanism. Here, we summarize the current knowledge of the therapeutic benefits of phytochemicals and medicinal herbs against depression and describe their detailed mechanisms. Sections. There are two sections, phytochemicals against depression and medical herbs against depression, in this review. Conclusion. Use of phytomedicine may be an alternative option for the treatment of depression in case conventional drugs are not applicable due to their side effects, low effectiveness, or inaccessibility. However, the efficacy and safety of these phytomedicine treatments for depression have to be supported by clinical studies.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28503571 PMCID: PMC5414506 DOI: 10.1155/2017/6596241
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Phytochemicals against depression.
| Phytochemical | Dose | Study design | Effects and mechanisms | Reference |
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| Carvacrol | 12.5–50 mg/kg | Oral administration in mice | Induce antidepressant effects that seem to be dependent on an interaction with the dopaminergic brain pathways | [ |
| 12.5 mg/kg | Oral administration in rats | Raise 5-HT and dopamine ranges in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex | [ | |
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| Curcumin | 1.25–10 mg/kg | Oral administration in rats | Reduce immobility time in the forced swimming test | [ |
| 20–40 mg/kg | Intraperitoneal injection in mice | Enhance 5-HT level | [ | |
| Restore biochemical and behavioral changes induced by the chronic stress | [ | |||
| 10 mg/kg | Oral administration in mice | Reduce duration of immobility in forced swimming test | [ | |
| 10–20 mg/kg | Oral administration in rats | Attenuate the stress-induced hippocampus 5-HT1A mRNA | [ | |
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| Ferulic acid | 100–250 mg/kg | Oral administration in mice | Attenuate stress-induced behavior | [ |
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| L-Theanine | 1–20 mg/kg | Oral administration in mice | Reduce immobility time in the forced swimming test and tail suspension test without ambulation in the open field test | [ |
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| Proanthocyanidin | 25–50 mg/kg | Oral administration in mice | Reduce immobility period in the forced swimming test and tail suspension test | [ |
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| Quercetin | 20–40 mg/kg | Oral administration in mice | Prevent hyperactivation of the HPA axis | [ |
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| Resveratrol | 20–80 mg/kg | Oral administration in mice | Decrease immobility period in the despair tests without influence on locomotor activity | [ |
| 40–80 mg/kg | Oral administration in rats | Reverse less weight gain, reduce sucrose preference and deficits in the shuttle box | [ | |
Medical herbs against depression.
| Herbs | Dose | Study design | Effects and mechanisms | Reference |
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| 5, 10, and 20 mg/kg | Oral administration in mice | Decrease immobility in the tail suspension test and forced swimming test | [ |
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| 30 mg/day | Randomized controlled clinical trials | Improve the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression | [ |
| 100 mg/day | Randomized controlled clinical trials | Improve Beck Depression Inventory and Beck Anxiety Inventory Scores with rare side effects | ||
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| 375 mg/day | Randomized controlled clinical trials | Improve the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression at week four of a study, however this result was not maintained at week six | [ |
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| 3 × 300 mg/day | Long-term follow-up study involving 426 patients | Prevent relapse after recovery from acute depression | [ |
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| 16 g containing 250 mg of kavalactones/day | Randomized controlled trials | Improve the Montgomery–Asberg Depression Rating Scale with no serious adverse effects and no clinical hepatotoxicity | [ |
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| 1.5–6 g/kg | Oral administration in rats | Increase hippocampus 5-HT level-induced proliferation of neural stem cell, repairing the damaged neuronal cells in hippocampus | [ |
| 10–20 mg/kg | Oral administration in rats | Revert decreased sucrose intake | [ | |
| 340–680 mg/day | Randomized controlled phase III clinical trial | Improve overall depression, together with insomnia, emotional instability, and somatization, but not self-esteem with no serious side effects | [ | |
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| Lavender aromatherapy | Inhalation in rats | Inhibit depression-like behaviors in forced swimming and elevated plus-maze tests | [ |
| Lavender cream | Randomized controlled clinical trials | Reduce stress, anxiety, and depression in pregnant women | [ | |
| Lavender aromatherapy | Randomized controlled clinical trials | Reduce depressive symptoms | [ | |
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| 4 g/kg | Oral administration in rats | Reverse the decreased sucrose intake and the decreased 5-HT1A receptor binding in brain | [ |
| 2.1 g/kg | Oral administration in rats | Increase struggling time and first latency time in the forced swimming test | [ | |
| 0–2000 mg/kg for rats | Oral administration in rats or beagle dogs | Improve the start latency, rearing number, grooming time, and decreased visiting counts caused by chronic mild stress in the forced swimming test | [ | |