| Literature DB >> 35276949 |
Stergios Soulaidopoulos1, Aikaterini Tsiogka2, Christina Chrysohoou1, Emilia Lazarou1, Konstantinos Aznaouridis1, Ioannis Doundoulakis1, Dimitra Tyrovola1, Dimitris Tousoulis1, Konstantinos Tsioufis1, Charalambos Vlachopoulos1, George Lazaros1.
Abstract
Despite the remarkable development of the medical industry in the current era, herbal products with therapeutic potentials arise as attractive alternative treatments. Consequently, Chios mastiha, a natural, aromatic resin obtained from the trunk and brunches of the mastic tree, has recently gained increasing scientific interest due to its multiple beneficial actions. Chios mastiha is being exclusively produced on the southern part of Chios, a Greek island situated in the northern Aegean Sea, and its therapeutic properties have been known since Greek antiquity. There is now substantial evidence to suggest that mastiha demonstrates a plethora of favorable effects, mainly attributed to the anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative properties of its components. The main use of mastiha nowadays, however, is for the production of natural chewing gum, although an approval by the European Medicines Agency for mild dyspeptic disorders and for inflammations of the skin has been given. The aim of this article is to summarize the most important data about the therapeutic actions of Chios mastiha and discuss future fields for its medical application.Entities:
Keywords: Pistacia lentiscus; anti-inflammatory effect; inflammatory bowel disease; mastic gum; mastiha; oxidative stress; oxidized LDL
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35276949 PMCID: PMC8838553 DOI: 10.3390/nu14030590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Compounds of Chios mastic.
| Compound |
|---|
| 1,4-poly-β-myrcene |
| 20(S)-3β-acetoxy-20-hydroxydammara-24-ene |
| 3-oxo-28-norlup-20 (29)-ene |
| 3β-hydroxy-28-norolean-12-ene |
| 3-oxo-28-norolean-12-ene |
| 3-oxo-dammara-20 (21),24-diene |
| (8R)-3-Oxo-8-hydroxy-polypoda13E,17E,21-triene |
| 3-oxo-malabarica-14(26),17E,21-triene |
| 3β-hydroxymalabarica-14(26),17E,21-triene |
| banillic acid |
| gallic acid trans-cinnamomic acid |
| isomasticadienonic acid |
| masticadienolic acid |
| moronic acid |
| oleanolic acid |
| oleanolic aldehyde |
| p-hydroxy-benzoic acid |
| p-hydroxy-phenylacetic acid |
| tirucallol |
| tyrosol |
Human studies assessing mastic’s effects.
| Study | Design | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Kaliora et al. | 10 pts with active CD and 8 healthy controls |
Decrease in CD activity index decrease in IL-6 and CRP no effect in plasma TNF-a |
| Kaliora et al. | 10 pts with active CD and 8 healthy controls |
Reduction of TNF-a secretion by mononuclear cells increase in macrophage migration inhibitory factor |
| Papada et al. | 60 pts with IBD randomized to either 2.8 g of mastic daily for 3 months or placebo |
Improvement in IBDQ Decrease in oxLDL Decrease in plasma cysteine and faecal lysozyme |
| Papada et al. | 68 pts with IBD randomized to either 2.8 g of mastic daily for 6 months or placebo |
No impact on serum IL-6, faecal calprotectin and faecal lactoferrin |
| Amerikanou et al. | 129 pts with IBD—68 randomized to mastic group (2.8 g daily for 6 months for pts in remission and for 3 months for pts in relapse) and 61 to placebo |
Increase in IL-17A |
| Dabos et al. | 148 pts with functional dyspepsia randomized to either mastic 350 mg tid or placebo for 3 weeks |
Significant improvement of symptoms (stomach pain in general, stomach pain when anxious, dull ache in the upper abdomen and heartburn) |
| Kanoni et al. | 98 patients with obesity (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2) and NAFLD and randomized to either mastic 2.1 g/day or placebo for 6 months |
Improvement in total antioxidant status of NAFLD pts interaction of mastic with cytokines and antioxidant biomarkers implicated in NAFLD pathogenesis |
| Moudi et al. | 147 postpartum women randomized to topical application of 15 g mastic for 3 days on episiotomy wound or to placebo |
Higher healing rates of episiotomy wound no effect on episiotomy pain |
| Triantafyllou et al. | 133 subjects were randomized to either 5 g mastic powder (high dose) or mastic solution for 18 months |
Decrease in serum total cholesterol, LDL, total lipoprotein (a), apolipoprotein A-1, apolipoprotein B, SGOT, SGPT and γ-GT levels |
| Kartalis et al. | 156 subjects received different doses of mastic for 8 weeks |
Reduction in TC in subjects receiving crude mastic 1 g/day (highest dose) no effect on LDL, HDL, triglycerides, uric acid and CRP |
| Kontogiannis et al. | 27 subject (13 hypertensive) randomized to receive one dose of 2.8 g mastic |
Acute decrease in peripheral and aortic SBP in hypertensive pts no changes in normotensive pts |
| Kottakis et al. | 5 pts with H. Pylori infection and 3 controls treated with 1 g of mastic daily for 2 months |
Mastic’s arabinogalactan proteins inhibit neutrophil activation in the presence of H. Pylori neutrophil activating protein |
| Dabos et al. | 52 pts with H. Pylori randomized to receive either 350 mg tid of mastic for 14 days (Group A), or 1.05 g tid of mastic (Group B) for 14 days, or pantoprazole 20 mg bd plus mastic 350 mg tid for 14 days (Group C) or pantoprazole 20 mg bd plus amoxicillin 1 g bd plus clarithromycin 500 mg bd for 10 days (Group D) |
Eradication of H. pylori was confirmed in 4/13 pts in Group A, in 5/13 in Group B, in 0/13 in Group C and in 10/13 in Group D |
| Bebb et al. | 8 pts with H. Pylori |
No effect on H. Pylori status |
Pts: patients; CD: Crohn’s disease; IL-6: interleukin-6; CRP: C-reactive protein; TNF-a: tumor necrosis factor-alpha; IBD: inflammatory bowel disease; IBDQ: IBD questionnaire; oxLDL: oxidized LDL; TC: total cholesterol; SBP: systolic blood pressure; tid: three times a day; bd: twice daily; NAFLD: non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
Figure 1Therapeutic potentials of Chios Mastic.