| Literature DB >> 30159006 |
Mengmeng Sun1,2, Wen-Te Chang3, Eduard Van Wijk4,5, Min He1, Roeland Van Wijk4,5, Mei Wang1,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Based on the principle of tradition Chinese medicine, the processing refers to various techniques that alter the overall properties of herbal materials to meet the requirements of therapeutic applications. However, the standards of quality control and scientific standard operation protocol for processing manufacturing are largely unknown and there is a huge demand for the development of scientific tools for evaluating the quality during and after the processing. The key challenge in evidence-based medicine is to characterize the processing of herbal materials from system-based perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Chinese herbal medicine; Delayed luminescence; Processing; Quality control
Year: 2018 PMID: 30159006 PMCID: PMC6109338 DOI: 10.1186/s13020-018-0202-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chin Med ISSN: 1749-8546 Impact factor: 5.455
Fig. 1DL decay curves for pooled samples from Rehmanniae radix samples. Data are plotted as the mean ± SEM. Note that the data are plotted on a log–log scale
Fig. 2Box plot summarizing the four DL properties measured in the Rehmanniae radix samples. I0 is the initial intensity of the DL curve, Beta is an index factor associated with the rate of DL decay, and Tau and T represents the DL characteristics and decay time, respectively. *p < 0.05 between raw material and all materials in processing cycles; p < 0.05 between material in processing cycle 1 and materials in the other processing cycles (one-way ANOVA with LSD)
Fig. 3PCA and OPLS-DA scores obtained from the DL data. a PCA and b OPLS-DA score plots of the DL data obtained from processed Rehmanniae radix samples, showing two separated clusters. The separated clusters were marked with a “△” (cluster 1) or a “+” (cluster 2) symbol, in which cycles 1–3 belongs to one cluster and cycles 4–9 belongs to another cluster
Fig. 4Box plot summarizing the four DL properties measured in the Ginseng radix et rhizoma samples. *p < 0.05 (two-tailed, unpaired Student’s t-test)