| Literature DB >> 30228928 |
Saud Alsanad1,2, Tamer Aboushanab1, Mohammed Khalil1, Osama A Alkhamees2.
Abstract
Diabetes mellitus represents a major burden in Saudi Arabia where seven million (20% of population) are living with diabetes. This article reviews the literature on usage of traditional and complementary medicine (T&CM) therapies among Saudi diabetic patients, focusing in particular on identifying the prevalence as well as discussing their safety and efficacy. Three databases (PubMed, Cochrane, and ScienceDirect) were searched prior to December 10, 2017, for articles published in peer-reviewed journals that reported primary data on the use of traditional and complementary medicine therapies among diabetic patients in Saudi Arabia. Six studies were selected according to the inclusion/exclusion criteria. In conclusion, the prevalence of use of T&CM therapies among diabetics in Saudi Arabia was 32.18%. This review identified that the most used T&CM therapy among diabetics was herbal treatment. The most used herbs were fenugreek, black seeds, neem, myrrh, helteet, harmel, and aloes. There is insufficient or little evidence to support the efficacy of the most identified herbs and therapies. This review is raising the safety concerns about the used herbs and complementary therapies which were commonly used without any medical consultation.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30228928 PMCID: PMC6136479 DOI: 10.1155/2018/6303190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientifica (Cairo) ISSN: 2090-908X
Figure 1Search results (PRISMA).
A summary of retrieved studies conducted in Saudi Arabia.
| Author (year) | Mode of data collection | Setting | Sample size | Response rate | Males | Mean age | T&CM definition | Prevalence and CI | Condition | Types |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Al-Garni et al. [ | Outpatient cross-sectional study | Jeddah Diabetic Center (JDC), Jeddah | 310 | Not reported | 75.2% | 57.58 ± 8.50 | Herbal and food supplements | 25.8% (21.10; 31.12) | Type 2 diabetes | Herbal medicine (25.8%): ginger ( |
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| Al-Rowais [ | Outpatient cross-sectional study | Riyadh city: outpatient clinics in King Khalid University, King Abdulaziz University Hospital, Prince Salman Hospital, and Riyadh Medical Complex | 296 | 98.6% | 56.7% | 51.99 ± 15.6 | Herbal | 17.4% (13.36; 22.31) | Diabetes | Herbal medicine (17.4%): myrrh ( |
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| Al Saeedi et al. [ | Outpatient cross-sectional study | Mecca city: 7 government hospitals plus private hospitals | 1039 | 89.4% | 66.7% | Not reported | Traditional remedies (herbal) | 30.1% (27.34; 33.01) | Diabetes | Herbal medicine (30.1%): fenugreek ( |
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| Bakhotmah and Alzahrani [ | Household cross-sectional study | Jeddah city | 1006 | Not reported | 53.1% | 49 ± 17 | Topical natural preparation | 34.4% (31.48; 37.44) | Diabetic foot | Honey (56.6%), myrrh ( |
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| Al-Eidi et al. [ | Outpatient cross-sectional study | Riyadh city: outpatient clinics in Diabetic Center of King Salman bin Abdulaziz Hospital | 302 | Not reported | 43.4% | 51.6 ± 10.6 | All types | 30.50% (25.42; 36.08) | Type 2 diabetes | Herbs (30.4%), wet cupping (20.9%), vitamins and minerals (17.6%), cautery (16.7%), ruqia (spiritual healing) (10.8%), honeybee products (2.0%), and medical massage (1.5%) |
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| Kamel et al. [ | Outpatient cross-sectional study | Jeddah city: King Abdulaziz University and King Fahad Hospital | 214 | 71.3% | 40% | Not reported | Herbal | 64% (57.14; 70.35) | Diabetes | Herbs (64%) |
The most used herbs among diabetics in Saudi Arabia, with their effectiveness and safety rating being extracted from the “Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database.”
| Number | Common name | Scientific name | Effectiveness rating | Safety rating for adults | Safety rating during pregnancy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Black seeds |
| Insufficient evidence | Likely safe | Likely unsafe for high doses |
| 2 | Fenugreek |
| Possibly effective | Likely safe | Likely safe |
| 3 | Myrrh |
| Insufficient evidence | Unsafe for high doses | Unsafe |
| 4 | Helteet |
| Insufficient evidence | Possibly safe | Unsafe |
| 5 | Chinaberry leaves (neem) |
| Insufficient evidence | Possibly safe (low doses for short periods) and possibly unsafe (large doses or for long periods) | Likely unsafe |
| 6 | Harmel |
| Insufficient evidence | Likely unsafe | Likely unsafe |
| 7 | Aloes |
| Insufficient evidence | By mouth: possibly unsafe | Possibly unsafe |
| 8 | Ginger |
| Insufficient evidence | Likely safe | Possibly safe |
| 9 | Cinnamon |
| Possibly effective | Therapeutic doses: likely safe; high doses or for long periods: possibly unsafe | Insufficient information, so avoid |
The most used CAM among diabetics in Saudi Arabia, with effectiveness and safety rating being extracted from the “Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database.”
| Number | Name | Effectiveness | Safety rating for adults | Safety rating during pregnancy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Honey | Insufficient evidence | Likely safe. Honey (from the nectar of | Likely safe in food amounts |
| 2 | Wet cupping | No information | No information | No information, so avoid |
| 3 | Nutritional supplements (vitamins/minerals) | |||
| a | Chromium | Possibly effective | Likely safe | Likely safe. Must be prescribed by doctors |
| b | Magnesium | Possibly effective | Therapeutic doses: likely safe. High doses: possibly unsafe | Therapeutic doses: likely safe. High doses: possibly unsafe |
| c | Calcium | Insufficient evidence | Therapeutic doses: likely safe. High doses: possibly unsafe | Likely safe |
| d | Folic acid | Insufficient evidence | Therapeutic doses: likely safe. High doses: possibly unsafe | Likely safe |
| e | Zinc | Insufficient evidence | Less than 40 mg/day is likely safe. High doses: likely unsafe. Nasal route is possibly unsafe | Therapeutic doses: likely safe. High doses: likely unsafe |
| f | Vitamin B6 | Insufficient evidence | Therapeutic doses: likely safe. Oral high doses: possibly unsafe | Therapeutic doses: likely safe. Oral high doses: unsafe |
| g | Vitamin C | Insufficient evidence | Therapeutic doses: likely safe. Doses more than 2000 mg/day are possibly unsafe | Therapeutic doses: likely safe. Doses more than 2000 mg/day are possibly unsafe |
| h | Vitamin D | Insufficient evidence | Therapeutic doses: likely safe. Doses more than 4000 units/day for long periods are possibly unsafe | Therapeutic doses less than 4000 units/day are likely safe. Higher doses are possibly unsafe |
| i | Vitamin E | Insufficient evidence | Recommended dose which is 22.4 IU/day: likely safe. High doses: possibly unsafe | Recommended dose which is 22.4 U/day is likely safe. Avoid in early pregnancy |
| j | Vitamin K | Insufficient evidence | Recommended daily dose: likely safe | Recommended daily dose: likely safe |
| 4 | Cautery | No information | No information | No information, so avoid |
| 5 | Spiritual healing (ruqia) | Insufficient evidence | Safe when used correctly, but it is not an alternative to usual medical care or other therapies | Safe when used correctly |
| 6 | Apitherapy (bee products) | Insufficient evidence | Safe if used appropriately. Bee venom must be practiced by licensed healthcare professionals | Unsafe in high doses |
| 7 | Massage | Insufficient evidence | Likely safe | Likely safe |