Medicinal plants and Alzheimer's disease:
from ethnobotany to
phytotherapy
by
Perry EK, Pickering AT, Wang WW, Houghton PJ, Perry NS
Medical Research Council,
Newcastle General Hospital,
Newcastle upon Tyne.
e.k.perry@ncl.ac.uk
J Pharm Pharmacol 1999 May; 51(5):527-34
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 Gingko biloba in which the gingkolides have
antoxidant, neuroprotective and cholinergic activities relevant to Alzheimer's
disease mechanisms. The therapeutic efficacy of Ginkgo 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 Gingko are minimal. Old European reference books, such as those on
medicinal herbs, 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 modern discovery of clinically relevant pharmacological
activity 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 modern
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 amnesia-
and dementia-inducing properties.
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