| Literature DB >> 32733239 |
Yibo Hu1, Hongliang Zeng2, Jinhua Huang1, Ling Jiang1, Jing Chen1, Qinghai Zeng1.
Abstract
In Asia, the market for whitening cosmetics is expanding rapidly, more and more people prefer to use natural products. Driven by natural product demand and technical advances, herbal research is also developing fast. Lots of studies reported that Asian herbal reagents can reduce melanogenesis, these findings provide evidence for the whitening application of Asian herbs. However, the current development status and challenges of herbal research need attention too. By reviewing these studies, different problems in studying herbal formulas, extracts, and active ingredients were presented. One of the most influential troubles is that the components of herbs are too complex to obtain reliable results. Thus, an understanding of the overall quality of herbal research is necessary. Further, 90 most cited Asian herbal studies on whitening were collected, which were conducted between 2017 and 2020, then statistical analysis was carried out. This work provided a comprehensive understanding of Asian herbal research in skin whitening, including the overall status and quality, as well as the focuses and limitations of these studies. By proactively confronting and analyzing these issues, it is suggested that the focus of herbal medicine research needs to shift from quantity to quality, and the new stage of development should emphasize transformation from research findings to whitening products.Entities:
Keywords: Asian herbs; melanogenesis; pigmentation; skin whitening; traditional herbs
Year: 2020 PMID: 32733239 PMCID: PMC7358643 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2020.00982
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
The information of Asian herbal formulas.
| Study | Formula | Species, concentration | Mechanisms | Models |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Qian-wang-hong-bai-san | tubers of | suppressing tyrosinase activity and expression; inhibiting p38 MAPK signaling pathway; inhibiting PKA/CREB signaling pathway | mushroom tyrosinase; B16 cells |
|
| Qiong-yu-gao | roots and rhizomes of | suppressing tyrosinase activity | mushroom tyrosinase; B16 cells |
|
| San-bai-tang | rhizomes of | suppressing tyrosinase activity and expression; inhibiting p38 MAPK signaling pathway and MITF expression | mushroom tyrosinase; B16 cells |
|
| Ayurved Siriraj Brand Wattana formula (AVS073) |
| suppressing tyrosinase activity and mRNA; inhibiting ROS formation | G361 cells |
|
| LASAP-C | root of | suppressing tyrosinase activity and expression | B16F10 cells zebrafish |
|
| Ubtan (UF-1 to UF-4) | rhizome of | antioxidant; sun protection; suppressing tyrosinase activity |
|
Figure 1Overview of 90 Asian herbal studies in skin whitening. (A) The number of studies in different countries; (B) the number of studies on different reagent types; (C) the number of studies from 2017 to 2019; (D) the studies in four countries from 2017 to 2019; (E) the percentage of different reagent types from 2017 to 2019; (F) the percentage of different reagent types in four countries.
Figure 2Scientificity and academic value of 90 Asian herbal studies. (A) the quality control of ingredient-related studies; (B) the quality control of mixture-related studies (herbal formula, extracts, and combined studies); (C) the number of in vitro and in vivo studies; (D) the models of in vivo studies; (E) the models of in vitro studies; (F) the percentage of different mechanisms involved in studies.
Figure 3Schematic diagram of the mechanisms of herbal reagents in 90 studies.