| Literature DB >> 35684573 |
Nomagugu Gxaba1, Madira Coutlyne Manganyi1.
Abstract
Harpagophytum procumbens subsp. procumbens (Burch.) DC. ex Meisn. (Sesame seed Family-Pedaliaceae) is a popular medicinal plant known as Devil's claw. It is predominantly distributed widely over southern Africa. Its impressive reputation is embedded in its traditional uses as an indigenous herbal plant for the treatment of menstrual problems, bitter tonic, inflammation febrifuge, syphilis or even loss of appetite. A number of bioactive compounds such as terpenoids, iridoid glycosides, glycosides, and acetylated phenolic compounds have been isolated. Harpagoside and harpagide, iridoid glycosides bioactive compounds have been reported in countless phytochemical studies as potential anti-inflammatory agents as well as pain relievers. In-depth studies have associated chronic inflammation with various diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease, obesity, rheumatoid arthritis, type 2 diabetes, cancer, and cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases. In addition, 60% of chronic disorder fatalities are due to chronic inflammatory diseases worldwide. Inflammation and pain-related disorders have attracted significant attention as leading causes of global health challenges. Articles published from 2011 to the present were obtained and reviewed in-depth to determine valuable data findings as well as knowledge gaps. Various globally recognized scientific search engines/databases including Scopus, PubMed, Google Scholar, Web of Science, and ScienceDirect were utilized to collect information and deliver evidence. Based on the literature results, there was a dramatic decrease in the number of studies conducted on the anti-inflammatory and analgesic activity of Devil's claw, thereby presenting a potential research gap. It is also evident that currently in vivo clinical studies are needed to validate the prior massive in vitro studies, therefore delivering an ideal anti-inflammatory and analgesic agent in the form of H. procumbens products.Entities:
Keywords: Devil’s claw; Harpagophytum procumbens; analgesic; anti-inflammatory; clinical studies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35684573 PMCID: PMC9182060 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27113637
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Figure 1Inclusion and exclusion criteria on the systematic literature search.
Figure 2Harpagophytum procumbens (Devil’s claw) (A) Devil’s claw plant with pink flowers (SANBI) [44]; (B) H. procumbens tubers; (C) Dried H. procumbens sliced tubers used for plant extracts [27] (D) Devil’s claw (SANBI) [45].
Figure 3Chemical structures of the major iridoids glycosides and phenylethanoid from H. procumbens [45].
Figure 4Chemical structure of the phenolics; phenolic glycosides of H. procumbens [29].
Figure 5Number of research papers on Harpagophytum spp., 1822–2021 (publication language/origin of research) [28].
Harpagophytum procumbens as an anti-inflammation and pain reliever associated with various diseases.
| Name of the Disease | Disease Symptoms or Complications | Part(s) Used | Biological Effects of Devil’s Claw | Compound Constitutes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer’s disease | Loss of memory and cognitive judgment | Dried roots | Anti-Alzheimer effect | Verbascoside derivatives | [ |
| Dried roots | Management of the clinical symptoms related to ad, inflamed tissues | Harpagoside | [ | ||
| Roots | Anti-inflammatory activity | Phenylethanoid glycoside | [ | ||
| Rheumatoid arthritis | Pain associated with joints, back, or muscles. | Harpagoside compound | Anti-inflammatory activity | Harpagoside | [ |
| Roots | Antiarthritic effects, anti-inflammatory activity | Harpagoside | [ | ||
| Harpagoside compound | Anti-inflammatory activity | Harpagoside | [ | ||
| Harpagoside compound | Antirheumatic effects, pain reliever, anti-inflammatory activity | Harpagoside, | [ | ||
| Roots | Anti-inflammatory activity | Harpagoside | [ | ||
| Osteoporosis | Lowered bone pain, height loss and muscle spasms. | Plant material | Anti-osteoporotic activity | Harpagide | [ |
| Plant material | Anti-osteoporotic activity | Harpagoside | [ | ||
| Harpagoside compound | Anti-inflammatory | Harpagoside | [ | ||
| Roots | Anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, analgesic | Unidentified | [ | ||
| Roots | Pain reduction and function | Unidentified | [ | ||
| Diabetes | Injury to the large blood vessels of the heart, brain and legs | Roots | Anti-inflammatory and antirheumatic properties | Harpagoside | [ |
| Obesity | Overweight, exhaustion, pot belly, or breathe heavily | Roots | Suppress appetite | Iridoid glycosides | [ |
| Psoriasis | Hives, dryness, flakiness, peeling, redness | Roots | Anti-inflammatory | Phenylethanoid glycosides verbascoside | [ |
Pre-clinical studies of Harpagophytum procumbens.
| Disease/Study Aim | Drug Formulation | Participants/Animals | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neuropathic pain | Plant extracts | Rats | Reduce pain | [ |
| Toxicity | Plant extracts | Rats | Significant sex-related effects on blood chemistry | [ |
| Toxicity | Devil’s claw capsules | 20 mice | Decrease in blood glucose level, weight gain in female | [ |
| neurotoxicity | Capsules | Rats | anti-inflammatory activity and antioxidant effects | [ |
Clinical studies of Harpagophytum procumbens.
| Disease/Study Aim | Drug Formulation | Participants/Animals | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knee Osteoarthritis | Tablets | Sixty human patients | No significant difference but consider to be safer. | [ |
| Gonarthritis | Root extracts | Ninety-two human patients | Reduced gonarthritis symptoms | [ |