Medicinal Plants and Alzheimer's Disease: Integrating Ethnobotanical and Contemporary Scientific Evidence
- 1 December 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine
- Vol. 4 (4) , 419-428
- https://doi.org/10.1089/acm.1998.4.419
Abstract
The use of complementary medicines such as plant extracts in dementia therapy, varies according to the different cultural traditions. In orthodox Western medicine, contrasting with that in China and the Far East for example, pharmacological properties of traditional cognitive or memory enhancing plants have not been widely investigated in the context of current models of Alzheimer's disease. An exception is Ginkgo biloba in which the ginkgolides have antioxidant, neuroprotective, and cholinergic activities relevant to Alzheimer's disease mechanisms. The therapeutic efficacy of Ginkgo biloba extracts in Alzheimer's disease in placebo-controlled clinical trials is reportedly similar to currently prescribed drugs such as tacrine or donepezil and, importantly, undesirable side effects of Ginkgo biloba are minimal. Old European reference books (eg, medical herbals) document a variety of other plants such as Salvia officinalis (sage) and Melissa officinalis (balm) with memory improving properties, and cholinergic activities have recently been identified in extracts of these plants. Precedents for modem discovery of clinically relevant pharmacological activities in plants with long-established medicinal use include, for example, the interaction of alkaloid opioids in Papaver somniferum (Opium poppy) with endogenous opiate receptors in the brain. With recent major advances in understanding the neurobiology of Alzheimer's disease, and as yet limited efficacy of so-called rationally designed therapies, it may be timely to re-explore historical archives for new directions in drug development. This article considers not only the value of an integrative traditional and modem scientific approach to developing new treatments for dementia, but also in the understanding of disease mechanisms. Long before the current biologically based hypothesis of cholinergic derangement in Alzheimer's disease emerged, plants now known to contain cholinergic antagonists were recorded for their amnesic and dementia- inducing properties.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Comparative Studies of Huperzine A, E2020, and Tacrine on Behavior and Cholinesterase ActivitiesPharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior, 1998
- Effect of Trasina®, an Ayurvedic Herbal Formulation, on Experimental Models of Alzheimer's Disease and Central Cholinergic Markers in RatsThe Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, 1997
- Huperzine A, a novel promising acetylcholinesterase inhibitorNeuroReport, 1996
- GalanthamineDrugs & Aging, 1996
- Proof of Efficacy of the Ginkgo Biloba Special Extract EGb 761 in Outpatients Suffering from Mild to Moderate Primary Degenerative Dementia of the Alzheimer Type or Multi-infarct DementiaPharmacopsychiatry, 1996
- Effect of Hachimi-jio-gan on scopolamine-induced memory impairment and on acetylcholine content in rat brainJournal of Ethnopharmacology, 1996
- Complementary Medicine Use in a Dementia Clinic PopulationAlzheimer Disease & Associated Disorders, 1996
- Use of Unproven Therapies by People with Alzheimer's DiseaseJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 1995
- CNS Nicotinic ReceptorsCNS Drugs, 1994
- Regeneration of Motor Nerves in Bilobalide-Treated RatsPlanta Medica, 1993