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Antioxidant effects of herbal therapies used by patients with inflammatory bowel disease: an in vitro study
Author(s) -
Langmead L.,
Dawson C.,
Hawkins C.,
Ban.,
Loo S.,
Rampton D. S.
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
alimentary pharmacology and therapeutics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.308
H-Index - 177
eISSN - 1365-2036
pISSN - 0269-2813
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2036.2002.01157.x
Subject(s) - medicine , inflammatory bowel disease , antioxidant , ulcerative colitis , reactive oxygen species , traditional medicine , superoxide , xanthine oxidase , pharmacology , biochemistry , chemistry , pathology , disease , enzyme
Background: Herbal remedies used by patients for treatment of inflammatory bowel disease include slippery elm, fenugreek, devil’s claw, Mexican yam, tormentil and wei tong ning, a traditional Chinese medicine. Reactive oxygen metabolites produced by inflamed colonic mucosa may be pathogenic. Aminosalicylates (5‐ASA) are antioxidant and other such agents could be therapeutic. Aims: To assess the antioxidant effects of herbal remedies in cell‐free oxidant‐generating systems and inflamed human colorectal biopsies. Methods: Luminol‐enhanced chemiluminescence in a xanthine/xanthine oxidase cell‐free system was used to detect superoxide scavenging by herbs and 5‐ASA, and fluorimetry to define peroxyl radical scavenging using a phycoerythrin degradation assay. Chemiluminescence was used to detect herbal effects on generation of oxygen radicals by mucosal biopsies from patients with active ulcerative colitis. Results: Like 5‐ASA, all herbs, except fenugreek, scavenged superoxide dose‐dependently. All materials tested scavenged peroxyl dose‐dependently. Oxygen radical release from biopsies was reduced after incubation in all herbs except Mexican yam, and by 5‐ASA. Conclusions: All six herbal remedies have antioxidant effects. Fenugreek is not a superoxide scavenger, while Mexican yam did not inhibit radical generation by inflamed biopsies. Slippery elm, fenugreek, devil’s claw, tormentil and wei tong ning merit formal evaluation as novel therapies in inflammatory bowel disease.

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