| Literature DB >> 30083536 |
Shin Takayama1, Ryutaro Arita1, Akiko Kikuchi1, Minoru Ohsawa1, Soichiro Kaneko1, Tadashi Ishii1.
Abstract
Frailty is defined as a state of increased vulnerability to poor resolution of homeostasis following stress, which increases the risk of adverse outcomes such as falls, delirium, and disability in the elderly. Recently in Japan, clinical practice guidelines (CPG) have recommended kampo treatment. We conducted a search for reports on Japanese CPG and kampo medicine in the treatment of symptoms in the elderly. The search was performed using the databases PubMed, Ichushi Web, J-Stage, Japan Medical Publishers Association, Medical Information Network Distribution Service, and CPG containing kampo products in Japan; reports from January 1st, 2012 to October 31st, 2017 were reviewed. Over the past 5 years, nine CPGs have recommended kampo treatment based on the evidence for improvement in skin symptoms, cough, gastro-intestinal dysfunction, urinary dysfunction, and dementia. Treatments with kampo medicine are performed depending on the coexistence of manifestations based on the original kampo concept, i.e., cognitive dysfunction and dementia with sarcopenia showing urinary disorder. Each kampo formula includes multiple crude drugs that have several pharmacological functions; these drugs include alkaloids, glycosides, and polysaccharides. Thus, kampo formula has an effect on multiple organs and coordinates the relationship between the brain, endocrine system, immune system, and skeletal muscles. Kampo treatment can be considered as supporting holistic medicine in elderly individuals with frailty.Entities:
Keywords: elderly; geriatrics; guidelines; herbal medicine; kampo medicine; review
Year: 2018 PMID: 30083536 PMCID: PMC6064728 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2018.00066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1An overview of the hypothesized molecular, physiological, and clinical pathways involved in frailty and the kampo concept of frailty [adapted from (2, 5)].
Figure 2Flowchart of the review process. CPG, clinical practice guideline.
Overview of CPGs included in the study.
| Clinical Practice Guideline for the Pruritus cutaneus universalis | Is kampo medicine effective for pruritus? | Skin pruritus, Senile pruritus | tokiinshi, orengedokuto, goshajinkigan, hachimijiogan, rokumigan | At least one RCT (5) | Permit | 2012 | ( |
| Practical Guideline for the Management of Allergic Rhinitis in Japan | What are the indications for effective kampo medicine treatment in patients with allergic rhinitis? | Allergic Rhinitis | shoseiryuto | Double-blind RCT (1) | Recommend | 2015 | ( |
| The Japanese Respiratory Society guidelines for management of cough | What is a non-specific therapeutic agent for dry cough? | Dry cough | bakumondoto | At least one RCT (1) | Recommend | 2012 | ( |
| What is a non-specific therapeutic agent for moist cough? | Moist cough | shoseiryuto | At least one RCT (1) | Recommend | |||
| Evidence-based Clinical Practice Guidelines for GERD 2015 (2nd Edition) | Identification of drug with additional gastro-intestinal regulation effect of or kampo medicine combined with proton pump inhibitor. | GERD (addition to PPI, refractory to PPI) | rikkunshito | Low quality of evidence (1) | Low recommendation | 2015 | ( |
| Evidence-based Clinical Practice Guidelines for Functional Dyspepsia | Is kampo medicine effective for Functional Dyspepsia? | Functional Dyspepsia | rikkunshito, (hangekobokuto) | High quality of evidence (2) | Low recommendation | 2014 | ( |
| Evidence-based Clinical Practice Guidelines for Irritable Bowel Syndrome | Is kampo medicine effective for Irritable Bowel Syndrome? | Irritable Bowel Syndrome | keishikashakuyakuto | Low quality of evidence (1) | Low recommendation | 2014 | ( |
| Evidence-based clinical practice guidelines for chronic constipation 2017 | Is kampo medicine effective for chronic constipation? | Chronic constipation | daiokanzoto, daikenchuto | Low quality of evidence (2) | Low recommendation | 2017 | ( |
| Clinical guidelines for overactive bladder syndrome | Overactive bladder | goshajinkigan | Small scale RCT (1) | Recommend | 2015 | ( | |
| Practice Guideline for Dementia 2017 | Patient indications for effective non-medication or medication for agitation. | Agitation | yokukansan | Low (1) | Suggest | 2017 | ( |
| Patient indications for effective non-medication or medication for hallucinations and delusions. | Hallucinations, delusions | yokukansan | Low (0) | Suggest | |||
| How do you identify correspondence to dysphagia (including prevention for pneumonia)? | Correspondence to dysphagia (including prevention for pneumonia) | hangekobokuto | Very low (1) | Suggest | |||
| How do you respond in case of edema? (side effect) | Edema | yokukansan | Low (0) | Suggest | |||
| Is there treatment for behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia, and for the sleep behavior disorder associated with Lewy body disease, and the rem period? | Behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia and the sleep behavior disorder symptom of patients with Lewy body disease | yokukansan | Low (0) | Suggest |
Over view of 13 kampo medicines introduced in CPG, its indications and components referred from STORK (40), and its characteristics in kampo theory.
| Clinical manifestation of frailty according to the traditional concept | Anorexia | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | |||||||||
| Sarcopenia | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | |||||||||||
| Cognition | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | |||||||||||
| Dementia | ◦ | ◦ | ||||||||||||
| Fatigue | ◦ | ◦ | ||||||||||||
| Weakness | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ||||||||||
| Pain | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ||||||||||
| Dysfunction of | ||||||||||||||
| Respiration | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | |||||||||||
| Circulation | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ||||||||||
| Gastro-intestine | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ||||||||
| Urinary | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | |||||||||||
| Musculoskeletal | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | |||||||||||
| Skin | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | ◦ | |||||||||
| Indications | The relief of the following symptoms of those patients who have ruddy face with comparatively strong constitution, a touch of hot flushes, and a tendency to irritability: nose bleeding, hypertension, insomnia, neurosis, gastritis, alcoholic hangover, climacteric disturbance and automatic imbalance syndrome peculiar to women resembling climacteric disturbance, dizziness, palpitation, eczema or dermatitis and pruritus cutaneous | The relief of the following symptoms of those patients with decreased urine volume or polyuria sometimes having dry mouth who are easily fatigued and easily feel cold in the extremities: Leg pain, low back pain, numbness, blurred vision in old patients, pruritus, dysuria, frequent urination and edema | The relief of the following symptoms of those patients with oversensitivity to cold: Chronic eczema (with little exudation) and itching | The relief of the following symptoms of those patients with severe fatigue or malaise, decreased urinary output or increased urinary frequency, dry mouth, and alternate cold and hot feeling in the extremities: Nephritis, diabetes mellitus, impotence, sciatica, low back pain, beriberi, cystorrhea, prostatic hypertrophy and hypertension | The relief of the following symptoms of those patients with decreased urine volume or polyuria sometimes having dry mouth who are easily fatigued: Dysuria, frequent urination, edema and pruritus | Watery sputum, watery nasal discharge, nasal obstruction, sneezing, stridor, coughing, lacrimation in the following diseases: Bronchitis, bronchial asthma, rhinitis, allergic rhinitis, allergic conjunctivitis, and common cold | The relief of the following symptoms: Coughing with a hard, obstructive sputum, bronchitis, and bronchial asthma | The relief of the following symptoms of those patients with weak stomach, loss of appetite and full stomach pit, and those who are easily fatigued, anemic and likely to have cold limbs: Gastritis, gastric atony, gastroptosis, maldigestion, anorexia, gastric pain, vomiting | The relief of the following symptoms of those patients with abdominal distension: Tenesmus alvi and abdominal pain | Constipation | The relief of abdominal cold feeling and pain accompanied by abdominal flatulence | The relief of the following symptoms of those patients with delicate constitution and nervousness: Neurosis, insomnia, night cry in children, and peevishness in children | The relief of the following symptoms of those patients who have depressed feelings and a feeling of foreign body in the throat and oesophagus and who sometimes have palpitation, dizziness, nausea, etc.: Anxiety neurosis, nervous gastritis, hyperemesis gravidarum, coughing, hoarseness, nervous oesophageal stricture, and insomnia | |
| Components of kampo medicine | JP Scutellaria Root | JP Rehmannia Root | JP Japanese Angelica Root | JP Rehmannia Root | JP Rehmannia Root | JP Pinellia Tuber | JP Ophiopogon Tuber | JP Atractylodes Lancea Rhizome | JP Peony Root | JP Rhubarb | JP Processed Ginger | JP Atractylodes Lancea Rhizome | JP Pinellia Tuber | |
| JP Coptis Rhizome | JP Achyranthes Root | JP Rehmannia Root | JP Cornus Fruit | JP Cornus Fruit | JP Processed Ginger | JP Brown Rice | JP Ginseng | JP Cinnamon Bark | JP Glycyrrhiza | JP Ginseng | JP Poria Sclerotium | JP Poria Sclerotium | ||
| JP Gardenia Fruit | JP Cornus Fruit | JP Tribulus Fruit | JP Dioscorea Rhizome | JP Dioscorea Rhizome | JP Glycyrrhiza | JP Pinellia Tuber | JP Pinellia Tuber | JP Jujube | JP Zanthoxylum Fruit | JP Cnidium Rhizome | JP Magnolia Bark | |||
| JP Phellodendron Bark | JP Dioscorea Rhizome | JP Peony Root | JP Alisma Rhizome | JP Alisma Rhizome | JP Cinnamon Bark | JP Jujube | JP Poria Sclerotium | JP Glycyrrhiz | JP Koi | JP Uncaria Hook | JP Perilla Herb | |||
| JP Plantago Seed | JP Cnidium Rhizome | JP Poria Sclerotium | JP Poria Sclerotium | JP Schisandra Fruit | JP Glycyrrhiza | JP Jujube | JP Ginger | JP Japanese Angelica Root | JP Ginger | |||||
| JP Alisma Tuber | JP Saposhnikovia Root and Rhizome | P Moutan Bark | JP Moutan Bark | JP Asiasarum Root | JP Ginseng | JP Citrus Unshiu Peel | JP Bupleurum Root | |||||||
| JP Poria Sclerotium | JP Polygonum Root | JP Cinnamon Bark | JP Peony Root | JP Glycyrrhiza | JP Glycyrrhiza | |||||||||
| JP Moutan Bark | JP Astragalus Root | JP Powdered Processed Aconite Root | JP Ephedra Herb | JP Ginger | ||||||||||
| JP Cinnamon Bark | JP Schizonepeta Spike | |||||||||||||
| JP Powdered Processed Aconite Root | JP Glycyrrhiza | |||||||||||||
JP, The Japanese Pharmacopoeia.