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Herbal medicine, especially traditional Chinese medicine and Ayurvedic medicine have played and still play an important role in fighting against various diseases. Emerging clinical studies regarding traditional Chinese medicine have provided convincing evidence for the first time to gain credibility and reputation outside China. Although synergistic therapeutic actions of herbal ingredients have been frequently reported, few reports have offered clear underlying mechanisms. This might be the main reason for the conflicting views with respect to the therapeutic efficacy of medicinal herbs. Therefore, this paper reviews the herb synergisms reported in the recent literature and discusses thoroughly the mechanisms underlying synergistic actions of herbal ingredients. The authors conducted an electronic literature search to detect articles published mainly in the last five years. Articles were included if they pertained to synergy research of ethnomedicines or the active compounds derived from them, included verification of synergy effects using modern analytical tools and molecular-biological methods. Results have revealed that the multi-component nature of medicinal herbs makes them particularly suitable for treating complex diseases and offers great potential for exhibiting synergistic actions. The mechanisms underlying synergistic therapeutic actions of herb medicines are (1): different agents may regulate either the same or different target in various pathways, and therefore cooperate in an agonistic, synergistic way; (2): regulate the enzymes and transporters that are involved in hepatic and intestinal metabolism to improve oral drug bioavailability; (3): overcome the drug resistance mechanisms of microbial and cancer cells; and (4): eliminate the adverse effects and enhance pharmacological potency of agents by "processing" or by drug-drug interaction. The exploration of synergistic mechanisms of herbal ingredients will not only help researchers to discover new phytomedicines or drug combinations but also help to avoid the possible negative synergy. Further clinical research is required for verifying these reported drug combinations and discovered synergistic mechanisms.

作者:Yong, Yang;Zaiqi, Zhang;Shuping, Li;Xiaoli, Ye;Xuegang, Li;Kai, He

来源:Fitoterapia 2014 年 92卷

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作者:
Yong, Yang;Zaiqi, Zhang;Shuping, Li;Xiaoli, Ye;Xuegang, Li;Kai, He
来源:
Fitoterapia 2014 年 92卷
标签:
5-HT 5-hydroxytryptamina ABC ALP ALT AST ATP-binding cassette BCRP CYPs DTL Drug resistance ERK FDA HPLC–SPE–NMR MAPK MDR MRT Mechanisms OAT OATPs P-gp PC PKA PKC Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamic basis RC ROS Rhizoma Coptidis SLC Synergy effects TCM TUNEL Traditional Chinese medicine Transporters US Food and Drug Administration YCHT alanine amino transferase alkaline phosphatase aspartate amino transferase breast cancer resistance protein cytochrome P450 enzymes docetaxel extracellular signal-regulated kinase high-performance liquid chromatography–solid-phase extraction–nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy mean residence time mitogen-activated protein kinase multidrug resistance organic anion transporter organic anion-transporting polypeptides p-glycoprotein phosphatidylcholine protein kinase A protein kinase C reactive oxygen species. solute carrier family terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling traditional Chinese medicine yin-chen-hao-tang
Herbal medicine, especially traditional Chinese medicine and Ayurvedic medicine have played and still play an important role in fighting against various diseases. Emerging clinical studies regarding traditional Chinese medicine have provided convincing evidence for the first time to gain credibility and reputation outside China. Although synergistic therapeutic actions of herbal ingredients have been frequently reported, few reports have offered clear underlying mechanisms. This might be the main reason for the conflicting views with respect to the therapeutic efficacy of medicinal herbs. Therefore, this paper reviews the herb synergisms reported in the recent literature and discusses thoroughly the mechanisms underlying synergistic actions of herbal ingredients. The authors conducted an electronic literature search to detect articles published mainly in the last five years. Articles were included if they pertained to synergy research of ethnomedicines or the active compounds derived from them, included verification of synergy effects using modern analytical tools and molecular-biological methods. Results have revealed that the multi-component nature of medicinal herbs makes them particularly suitable for treating complex diseases and offers great potential for exhibiting synergistic actions. The mechanisms underlying synergistic therapeutic actions of herb medicines are (1): different agents may regulate either the same or different target in various pathways, and therefore cooperate in an agonistic, synergistic way; (2): regulate the enzymes and transporters that are involved in hepatic and intestinal metabolism to improve oral drug bioavailability; (3): overcome the drug resistance mechanisms of microbial and cancer cells; and (4): eliminate the adverse effects and enhance pharmacological potency of agents by "processing" or by drug-drug interaction. The exploration of synergistic mechanisms of herbal ingredients will not only help researchers to discover new phytomedicines or drug combinations but also help to avoid the possible negative synergy. Further clinical research is required for verifying these reported drug combinations and discovered synergistic mechanisms.