| Literature DB >> 33998991 |
Brandon Kar Meng Choo1, Mohd Farooq Shaikh1.
Abstract
Curcuma longa (Turmeric) is a tropical herbaceous perennial plant of the family Zingiberaceae and contains curcuminoids, sesquiterpenoids and monoterpenoids as its major components. Given the broad range of activities that Curcuma longa possesses and also its use as a traditional epilepsy remedy, this review attempts to systematically review the experimentally proven activities of Curcuma longa and its bioactive components, which are related to the management of epileptic seizures. Using the PRISMA model, five databases (Google Scholar, PubMed, ScienceDirect, SCOPUS and SpringerLink) were searched using the keywords ["Curcuma longa" AND "Epilepsy"] and ["Curcuma longa" AND "Seizures"], leaving 34 articles that met the inclusion criteria. The present systematic review elaborated on the experimentally proven potential of Curcuma longa components, such as an aqueous extract of Curcuma longa itself, Curcuma longa oil and active constituents like curcuminoids and bisabolene sesquiterpenoids found in Curcuma longa with anti-seizure potential. Using human equivalent dose calculations, human treatment parameters were suggested for each component by analysing the various studies in this review. This review also determined that the principal components possibly exert their anti-seizure effect via the reduction of corticosterone, modulation of neurotransmitters signalling, modulation of sodium ion channels, reduction of oxidative DNA damage, reduction of lipid peroxidation, upgregulation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) mediated inhibition. It is anticipated that this review will help pave the way for future research into the development of Curcuma longa and its neuroactive constituents as potential drug candidates for the management of epilepsy. Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at epub@benthamscience.net.Entities:
Keywords: Curcuma longa; Curcumin; Epilepsy; Seizures; Turmeric; ar-turmerone; α-atlantone.; α-tumerone; β-turmerone
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33998991 PMCID: PMC8762175 DOI: 10.2174/1570159X19666210517120413
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Neuropharmacol ISSN: 1570-159X Impact factor: 7.363
A summarized table of studies focused on active constituents of turmeric in experimental epilepsy models.
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| Curcumin (20 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Wistar Rats | • Curcumin pre-treatment for 14 days alleviated PTZ-induced seizure activity, increased myoclonic jerk latency as well as decreased the duration and severity of generalized tonic-clonic seizures under stressful conditions. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (50, 100, 200 mg/kg) | Oral, three days daily pre-treatment | Sprague-Dawley Rats | • Curcumin dose-dependently increased seizure and status epilepticus latency, decreased the percentage of seizures and status epilepticus in a dose-dependent manner as well as reduced the intensity and frequency of seizures and their resulting behavioral changes. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin | Molecular docking against human 4-aminobutyrate-aminotransferase | - | • Curcumin binds to 4-aminobutyrate-aminotransferase with Leu299, Leu301, Ala135, Gln267, Arg164 and Tyr161 being the contact points. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (100 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal, seven days daily pre-treatment | Wistar Rats | • Curcumin upregulated genes related to anti-inflammatory cytokines ( | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Oral, 21 days daily pre-treatment | Albino Mice | • A 100 and 200 mg/kg dose of the extract delayed the onset of PTZ induced convulsions. | [ | ||||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (20 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal | Wistar Rats | • The latency to the onset of myoclonic jerks and the latency to stage 3 seizures were increased by the 14-day pre-treatment. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (50, 100 mg/kg) | Oral, 14 days daily pre-treatment | Swiss Albino Mice | • Neither dose had a significant effect on MES induced tonic extension, but the 100 mg/kg dose significantly reduced the clonic phase. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (80 mg/kg) | Oral, 21 days daily pre-treatment | Wistar Albino Rats | • Curcumin pre-treatment ameliorated the pilocarpine-induced increase in nitric oxide levels, decrease in glutathione levels, decrease in catalase activity, and decrease in Na+, K+-ATPase activity. | [ | |||||||||||||||
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| Liposomal Curcumin (25, 50 mg/kg) | Oral for PTZ induced seizures and ICES, treatment duration and the number of doses were not given | Swiss Albino Inbred Mice | • Liposomal curcumin dose-dependently increased the seizure threshold current in the ICES model. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin | Oral, one-hour pre-treatment, daily for seven days up to 35 days | Swiss Albino | • Curcumin administration dose-dependently decreased the seizure score from PTZ kindling from seven days onwards. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin | Intraperitoneal, | Wistar Rats | • Curcumin at doses of 100 and 200 mg/kg significantly reduced the frequency and amplitude of spike waves. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin | Oral, multiple | Albino Mice | • Curcumin had a maximal anti-convulsive effect 45 minutes after administration. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin C3 Complex (mixture of curcumin, demethoxycurcumin and | Nanoparticles - | NMRI Albino Mice | • Curcumin C3 Complex Nanoparticles had significant anti-convulsant properties in a dose-dependent manner at 20, 40 and 80 mg/kg. | [ | |||||||||||||||
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| Curcumin (150 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal, 25 minutes pre-treatment | Mice | • Curcumin increased the seizure and tonic-clonic stage latency as well as reduced the duration of tonic-clonic seizures. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (50, 100, 200 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal, 20 minutes pre-treatment, daily for 24 days | Wistar Rats | • A 200 mg/kg curcumin dose most effectively decreased the mean frequency of PTZ-induced epileptiform activity, followed by 100 mg/kg, whereas 50 mg/kg was found ineffective. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (50, 100, 200 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal, 5, 10 or 15 days daily pre-treatment in kindled animals | Swiss Albino Mice | • Curcumin attenuated seizure severity as well as depression- | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (300 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal, 15, 30, 60 or 120 minutes pre-treatment | Swiss Mice | • No anti-convulsant effect of curcumin was found at any pre-treatment time. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin Loaded Nanoparticles (12.5, 25.0 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal, one-hour pre-treatment, daily for 10 days | NMRI Mice | • Free curcumin was found to not have an anti-seizure effect or memory improving ability. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (100, 200, 300 mg/kg) | Oral, one-hour pre-treatment, daily for up to 10 weeks | Wistar Rats | • All curcumin doses decreased seizure score in a dose-dependent manner and protected against PTZ kindling. | [ | |||||||||||||||
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| Curcumin (100 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal, 14 days daily pre-treatment after cessation of kainic acid-induced status epilepticus | Wistar Rats | • Kainic acid-induced elevation of Il-1β and Tnf-α was reduced by curcumin. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (100 mg/kg) | Oral, 30 minutes pre-treatment, daily for 40 days | Wistar Rats | • Curcumin did not affect the seizure score. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (100 mg/kg) | Oral, 30 minutes pre-treatment, daily for 40 days | Wistar Rats | • Curcumin at 100 mg/kg had no anti-convulsant potential against a PTZ induced model of chronic epilepsy but prevented cognitive deficits. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin | Curcumin supplemented food pellets, six months daily feeding | Wistar Rats | • Curcumin reduced the development and occurrence of seizures but did not completely suppress it. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin Loaded Nanoparticles (12.5 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal, one-hour pre-treatment, daily for 30 days | NMRI Mice | • Curcumin loaded nanoparticles alleviated PTZ induced neuronal cell death. | [ | |||||||||||||||
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| Curcumin (100, 200, 300 mg/kg) | Oral, 30 minutes pre-treatment, daily for up to 43 days | Wistar Rats | • Curcumin significantly increased the latency to myoclonic jerks, clonic seizures as well as generalised tonic-clonic seizures, improved seizure score and decreased the number of myoclonic jerks in a dose-dependent manner. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin Nanoparticles (50 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal, daily pre-treatment for four days | Wistar Rats | • The nanoparticles prevented a pilocarpine-induced decrease in cortical and hippocampal acetylcholinesterase, but not the decrease in Na+/K+-ATPase activity. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (80 mg/kg) | Intraperitoneal, daily for 21 days in rats with spontaneous recurrent seizures | Wistar Albino Rats | • Curcumin prevented the manifestation of seizures. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Added into the water for zebrafish larvae, one-hour pre-treatment | Zebrafish Larvae: Tg (fli 1a: EGFP)y1 strain | • | [ | ||||||||||||||||
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| Ar-tumerone | Added into the water for zebrafish larvae, one-hour pre-treatment | Zebrafish Larvae: AB strain | • All C57BI/6 mice were protected from corneal stimulation by an ar-tumerone dose between 0.1 and 50 mg/kg with a 30 minutes pre-treatment time and 70% were protected after 24 hours pre-treatment with a 50 mg/kg dose. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (20 µM) | - | Human Embryonic Kidney cells 293 (HEK293) | • Curcumin treatment did not significantly change peak current | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin (300 mg/kg) | Oral, one-hour pre-treatment | Wistar Rats | • Curcumin alone significantly increased myoclonic latency but only had a 50% protection rate against generalised tonic-clonic seizures and did not affect learning and memory. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin | Larvae: Added into the water, 30 minutes pre-treatment | Wild-Type Zebrafish | • Both curcumin and micronized curcumin treatment in zebrafish larvae did not alter the distance traveled and the number of line crossings. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin | Oral, daily pre-treatment for seven or three days | Swiss Albino Mice | • Blood samples and brain tissue biochemical parameters showed that curcumin administration had antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and antiapoptotic effects. | [ | |||||||||||||||
| Curcumin | Oral, daily pre-treatment for two weeks | Sprague-Dawley Rats | • Curcumin pre-treatment markedly decreased the number of apoptotic neurons and increased the number of surviving neurons in the hippocampus (CA1, CA3, dentate gyrus, hilus) after 24 and 72 hours post pilocarpine administration. | [ | |||||||||||||||
ASM: Anti-Seizure Medication, AMPA: L-α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid, Bdnf: brain-derived neurotrophic factor, Cxcl16: Chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 16, EEG: Electroencephalography, GABA: γ-aminobutyric acid, Gfap: Glial fibrillary acidic protein, Iba1: Ionized calcium binding adaptor molecule 1, Il-1β: Interleukin 1 beta, Il10rb: Interleukin 10 Receptor Subunit Beta, MES: Maximal ElectroShock, ICES: Increasing Current Electroshock Seizures, Mlkl: Mixed lineage kinase domain like pseudokinase, PTZ: Pentylenetetrazol, Rip-1: Receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase 1, Tnf-α: tumour necrosis factor alpha, ic: Intracortical, ihc: Intrahippocampal, ip: Intraperitoneal, iv: Intravenous, po: Oral, sc: Subcutaneous.
Details of the treatment parameters and the seizure model for selected relevant rodent studies in this systematic review. A green background represents working treatments and a red background represents non-working treatments. For working treatments, the lowest working dose/duration and the highest dose/duration used for non-working treatments is given.
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| Curcumin [ | 20 | ip | 14 days | PTZ | 60 mg/kg | ip | Single dose | Wistar Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 50 | po | 3 days | Lithium + | 3 mEq/ml/kg + | ip + sc | Single dose | SD Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 100 | ip | 7 days | Kainic Acid | 10 mg/kg | ip | Single dose | Wistar Rats | |||||
| CL Extract [ | 200 | po | 21 days | MES | - | - | - | Albino Mice | |||||
| CL Extract [ | 100 | po | 21 days | PTZ | 80 mg/kg | ip | Single dose | Albino Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 20 | ip | 14 days | PTZ | 60 mg/kg | ip | Single dose | Wistar Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 100 | po | 14 days | PTZ | 95 mg/kg | ip | Single Dose | Swiss Albino Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 100 | po | 14 days | MES | - | - | - | Swiss Albino Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 80 | po | 21 days | Pilocarpine | 380 mg/kg | ip | Single dose | Wistar Albino Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 50 | po | 7 days | PTZ | 25 mg/kg | ip | 35 days alternately | Swiss Albino Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 100 | ip | 10 minutes (single dose) | Penicillin | 200 IU, 1 µl | ic | Single dose | Wistar Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 80 | po | 45 minutes (single dose) | PTZ | 0.5% (w/v) | Infusion | Continuous (up to three minutes or onset of extension phase) | Albino Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 80 | ip | 75 minutes (single dose) | PTZ | 0.5% (w/v) | Infusion | Continuous (up to onset of forelimb clonus) | NMRI Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 150 | ip | 25 minutes (single dose) | PTZ | 80 mg/kg | ip | Single dose | Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 100 | ip | 24 days | PTZ | 35 mg/kg | ip | 24 days alternately | Wistar Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 50 | ip | 15 days | PTZ | 35 mg/kg | ip | 15 days alternately | Swiss Albino Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 300 | ip | 120 minutes (single dose) | MES | - | - | - | Swiss Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 25 | ip | 10 days | PTZ | 36.5 mg/kg | ip | 10 days alternately | NMRI Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 100 | po | 10 weeks | PTZ | 35 mg/kg | ip | 10 weeks alternately | Wistar Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 100 | ip | 14 days | Kainic Acid | 0.8 µg | ihc | Single dose | Wistar Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 100 | po | 40 days | PTZ | 40 mg/kg | ip | 30 days alternately | Wistar Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 100 | po | 40 days | PTZ | 40 mg/kg | ip | 30 days alternately | Wistar Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 100 | Food | 6 months | FeCl3 | 100 mM | ic | Single dose | Wistar Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 12.5 | ip | 30 days | PTZ | 36.5 mg/kg | ip | 20 days alternately | NMRI Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 100 | po | 43 days | PTZ | 30 mg/kg | ip | 43 days alternately | Wistar Rats | |||||
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| Curcumin [ | 80 | po | 21 days | Pilocarpine | 380 mg/kg | ip | Single dose | Wistar | |||||
| CL Oil [ | 50 | iv | - | PTZ | 7.5 mg/ml, | iv | Continuous (infused until death occurs between three to five minutes after starting) | C57BI/6 Mice | |||||
| α,β-turmerone [ | 100 | iv | - | PTZ | 7.5 mg/ml, | iv | Continuous (infused until death occurs between three to five minutes after starting) | C57BI/6 Mice | |||||
| Ar-Tumerone [ | 50 | iv | - | PTZ | 7.5 mg/ml, | iv | Continuous (infused until death occurs between three to five minutes after starting) | C57BI/6 Mice | |||||
| Ar-Tumerone [ | 50 | ip | 10 minutes (single dose) | 6 Hz Corneal Stimulation | - | - | - | NMRI Mice | |||||
| Ar-Tumerone [ | 50 | ip | 30 minutes (single dose) | PTZ | 7.5 mg/ml, | iv | Continuous | C57BI/6 Mice | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 300 | po | 60 minutes (single dose) | PTZ | 60 mg/kg | ip | Single dose | Wistar Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 300 | po | 60 minutes (single dose) | MES | - | - | - | Wistar Rats | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 200 | po | 3 days | Kainic Acid | 10 mg/kg | ip | Single dose | Swiss | |||||
| Curcumin [ | 200 | po | 2 weeks | Lithium + Pilocarpine | 125 mg/kg + | ip | Single dose | SD Rats | |||||
Abbreviations: CL: Curcuma longa, MES: Maximal ElectroShock, PTZ: Pentylenetetrazol, SD: Sprague-Dawley, ic: Intracortical, ihc: Intrahippocampal, ip: Intraperitoneal, po: Oral, sc: Subcutaneous.