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1.
Molecules ; 26(6)2021 Mar 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33809917

ABSTRACT

Gums are carbohydrate biomolecules that have the potential to bind water and form gels. Gums are regularly linked with proteins and minerals in their construction. Gums have several forms, such as mucilage gums, seed gums, exudate gums, etc. Plant gums are one of the most important gums because of their bioavailability. Plant-derived gums have been used by humans since ancient times for numerous applications. The main features that make them appropriate for use in different applications are high stabilization, viscosity, adhesive property, emulsification action, and surface-active activity. In many pharmaceutical formulations, plant-based gums and mucilages are the key ingredients due to their bioavailability, widespread accessibility, non-toxicity, and reasonable prices. These compete with many polymeric materials for use as different pharmaceuticals in today's time and have created a significant achievement from being an excipient to innovative drug carriers. In particular, scientists and pharmacy industries around the world have been drawn to uncover the secret potential of plant-based gums and mucilages through a deeper understanding of their physicochemical characteristics and the development of safety profile information. This innovative unique class of drug products, useful in advanced drug delivery applications, gene therapy, and biosynthesis, has been developed by modification of plant-based gums and mucilages. In this review, both fundamental and novel medicinal aspects of plant-based gums and mucilages, along with their capacity for pharmacology and nanomedicine, were demonstrated.


Subject(s)
Drug Carriers , Nanomedicine , Plant Mucilage , Drug Carriers/chemistry , Drug Carriers/therapeutic use , Humans , Plant Gums/chemistry , Plant Gums/therapeutic use , Plant Mucilage/chemistry , Plant Mucilage/therapeutic use
2.
Int J Biol Macromol ; 165(Pt B): 2550-2564, 2020 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33115647

ABSTRACT

Demand for safe, environmentally friendly and minimally processed food additives with intrinsic technological (stabilizing, texturizing, structuring) and functional potential is already on the rise. There are actually several natural excipients eligible for pharmaceutical formulation. Mucilage, as a class constitutes arabinoxylan and rhamnogalacturonan-based biomolecules used in the pharmaceutical, environmental as well as phytoremediation industries owing to its particular structure and properties. These compounds are widely used in pharmaceutical, food and cosmetics, as well as, in agriculture, paper industries. This review emphasizes mucilage valuable applications in the pharmaceutical and industrial fields. In this context, much focus has recently been given to the valorization of mucilage as an ingredient for food or nutraceutical applications. Furthermore, different optimization and extraction techniques are presented to develop better utilization and/or enhanced yield of mucilage. The highlighted mucilage extraction methods warrant assessing up-scale processes to encourage for its industrial applications. The current article capitalizes on cutting-edge characteristics of mucilage and posing for other possible innovative applications in non-food industries. Here, the first holistic overview of mucilage with regards to its physicochemical properties and potential novel usages is presented.


Subject(s)
Biodegradation, Environmental , Plant Mucilage/chemistry , Polysaccharides/chemistry , Xylans/chemistry , Food Additives/chemistry , Food Additives/therapeutic use , Humans , Plant Extracts/chemistry , Plant Extracts/therapeutic use , Plant Mucilage/therapeutic use , Polysaccharides/therapeutic use , Viscosity , Xylans/therapeutic use
3.
J Ethnopharmacol ; 169: 60-8, 2015 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25889554

ABSTRACT

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE: This study was planned to assess pharmacological basis for the medicinal use of Flaxseed in constipation and diarrhea. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The oil and mucilage of Flaxseeds were studied for their laxative, and antidiarrheal activities in mice. The mechanisms of laxative and antidiarrheal activities were further studied using the isolated tissue preparations (rabbit jejunum and guinea-pig ileum) immersed in Tyrode׳s solution maintained at 37°C and aerated with carbogen gas. Isotonic responses were measured on spontaneously contracting isolated jejunum and guinea-pig ileum preparations. RESULTS: Oral administration of Flaxseed oil (30 and 70mg/kg, orally) and mucilage (1 and 2.5g/kg, orally) caused dose-dependent increase in wet feces in mice. The spasmogenic effect of Flaxseed oil was partially blocked by pyrilamine (p<0.05) and atropine (p<0.01) in isolated rabbit jejunum whereas atropine completely blocked the effect of Flaxseed mucilage on isolated guinea-pig ileum. When studied for its antidiarrheal effect, Flaxseed oil reduced the castor oil-induced diarrheal score by 49.35% and 84.41% and intestinal secretions by 19% and 33.62% at the oral doses of 100 and 300mg/kg respectively. In isolated rabbit jejunum preparations, Flaxseed oil produced a dose-dependent inhibition of both spontaneous and low K(+) (25mM) -induced contractions in rabbit jejunum. The inhibitory effect against low K(+) was most sensitive to tetra-ethylammonium chloride, a non-specific K(+) channel blocker, followed by glibenclamide, a partial ATP-dependent K(+) channels blocker and 4-Aminopyridine, a voltage gated K(+)-channel blocker. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that Flaxseed oil and mucilage exhibit laxative activity, mediated primarily through cholinergic pathway with weak histaminergic effect component evident in Flaxseed oil, which also showed antidiarrheal activity, mediated possibly through K(+) channels activation. Thus this study rationalizes the medicinal use of Flaxseed in both the constipation and diarrhea with sound mechanistic basis.


Subject(s)
Constipation/drug therapy , Diarrhea/drug therapy , Flax , Plant Mucilage/therapeutic use , Plant Oils/therapeutic use , Seeds , Animals , Antidiarrheals/isolation & purification , Antidiarrheals/pharmacology , Antidiarrheals/therapeutic use , Constipation/pathology , Diarrhea/pathology , Guinea Pigs , Ileum/drug effects , Ileum/pathology , Jejunum/drug effects , Jejunum/pathology , Laxatives/isolation & purification , Laxatives/pharmacology , Laxatives/therapeutic use , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Plant Extracts/isolation & purification , Plant Extracts/pharmacology , Plant Extracts/therapeutic use , Plant Mucilage/isolation & purification , Plant Mucilage/pharmacology , Plant Oils/isolation & purification , Plant Oils/pharmacology , Rabbits , Treatment Outcome
4.
Pharm Biol ; 53(4): 615-23, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25489641

ABSTRACT

CONTEXT: Conventional therapies using mucilage plants greatly used by practitioners in Iran. The usage of mucilages is rooted in traditional knowledge with a history of more than 4000 years. Scientific assessment of these historical documents could be valuable for finding new potential usage in the current medicine. OBJECTIVE: This study assembled an inventory of mucilage plants considered important therapeutic aids for alleviating the ailments in ancient Persian medicine and compared therapeutic applications of ancient times with current findings of medicinal mucilages in the same plant species. METHODS: A literature search compiled some main traditional manuscripts of Persian medicine, including the book of AlHavi, Canon of Medicine, Zakhireh-iKharazmshahi, Qarabadine-kabir, Tohfat ol Moemenin, and Makhzan-ol-advieh, and select mucilage plants used in treating the mouth and respiratory system disorders. Also, current investigations on related subjects were considered through a search of the Pub Med and Google Scholar databases. RESULTS: In Iran, the application of medicinal plants contains mucilage date back to ancient times. In mentioned medieval Persian books, 20 medicinal plants containing mucilage were identified. Mucilages have been traditionally used via oral or topical routes for a variety of disorders. According to this study, most of the cited medicinal plant species were used for their mucilaginous, anti-inflammatory, and anti-oxidant effects. CONCLUSIONS: A scientific evaluation of these historical documents can give an insight into the ideas of the past and be valuable in finding new data on clinical use of the mucilages that should lead to future opportunities to investigate their potential medicinal use.


Subject(s)
Medicine, Arabic , Plant Mucilage/therapeutic use , Plants, Medicinal/chemistry , Manuscripts, Medical as Topic , Persia , Plant Mucilage/isolation & purification
5.
Colorectal Dis ; 16(3): 159-66, 2014 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24521273

ABSTRACT

Faecal incontinence is common and significantly affects quality of life. Its treatment involves dietary manipulation, medical treatments, perineal rehabilitation or surgery. In this paper, the French National Society of Coloproctology offers recommendations based on the data in the current literature, including those on recently developed treatments. There is a lack of high quality data and most of the recommendations are therefore based either on grade of recommendation B or expert recommendation (Level 4). However, the literature supports the construction of an algorithm based on the available scientific evidence and expert recommendation which may be useful in clinical practice. The French National Society of Coloproctology proposes a decision-making algorithm that includes recent developments of treatment. The current recommendations support sacral nerve modulation as the key treatment for faecal incontinence. They do not support the use of sphincter substitutions except in certain circumstances. Transanal irrigation is a novel often successful treatment of faecal incontinence due to neurological disorders.


Subject(s)
Anal Canal/surgery , Antidiarrheals/therapeutic use , Diet Therapy/methods , Electric Stimulation Therapy/methods , Exercise Therapy/methods , Fecal Incontinence/therapy , Cholestyramine Resin/therapeutic use , Dietary Fiber/therapeutic use , Evidence-Based Medicine , Humans , Loperamide/therapeutic use , Lumbosacral Plexus , Plant Mucilage/therapeutic use , Therapeutic Irrigation/methods , Tibial Nerve , Treatment Outcome
6.
Int J Biol Macromol ; 65: 72-80, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24418343

ABSTRACT

Mucilage from the last decades has been found to be very attractive, interesting and useful in development of desired pharmaceutical dosage forms. Various applications of plant based mucilage have a wide potentiality in drug formulations. Lepidium sativum Linn. (family: Brassicaceae) is one of the mucilage containing fast growing, edible annual herb. Its various parts (roots, leaves and seeds) have been used to treat various human ailments. It mainly contains alkaloids, saponins, anthracene glycosides, carbohydrates, proteins, amino acids, flavanoids, and sterols as chief phytochemical constituents. Its seed extracts have been screened for various biological activities like hypotensive, anti-microbial, bronchodilator, hypoglycemic and allelopathic, whereas its seed coat mucilage has been isolated using different methods to make it effective excipient of desired functionality as a part of pharmaceutical applications. Through keen references of reported work on Lepidium sativum Linn., in this review, we have focused on its seed coat mucilage isolation methods, chemical constituents, pharmacological profile and versatile application of Lepidium sativum Linn.


Subject(s)
Lepidium sativum/chemistry , Plant Mucilage , Animals , Humans , Plant Mucilage/chemistry , Plant Mucilage/isolation & purification , Plant Mucilage/pharmacology , Plant Mucilage/therapeutic use , Safety , Seeds/chemistry
7.
Curr Drug Deliv ; 10(2): 198-207, 2013 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23410108

ABSTRACT

Mucilages, and in particular plant mucilages, have gained more attention over the last few decades due to their reputable medicinal properties. Some publications have appeared in reputable Scientific Journals that have made appreciable contributions to the discovery of the functions and utilizations of such naturally occurring products. Therapeutic value of mucilages has been extended to wound healing, diabetes, immunostimulation, cancer, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition, stomachic, and antioxidant properties. Based on their sustaining capacities as well as binding and gelling properties, mucilages have been proposed to be one of the most useful materials to modulate drug delivery. Chemical analysis reveals that generally these contain monosachrides along with a range of other organic and inorganic components. Although physiological properties of various plant mucialges have been described, it still remains uncertain as to which of the component(s) is responsible for these physiological properties. Further research needs to be done to unravel the myth surrounding the biological activities and the functional properties of them. This review presents an overview of the current status and knowledge on the applications of plant mucilages as therapeutic agent and pharmaceutical additives.


Subject(s)
Pharmaceutical Preparations , Plant Mucilage/therapeutic use , Animals , Humans , Plant Mucilage/pharmacology , Wound Healing
8.
Int J Food Sci Nutr ; 60 Suppl 6: 126-36, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19548163

ABSTRACT

The effects of ingestion of flaxseed gum on blood glucose and cholesterol, particularly low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, in type 2 diabetes were evaluated. Flaxseed gum was incorporated in wheat flour chapattis. Sixty patients of type 2 diabetes were fed a daily diet for 3 months, along with six wheat flour chapattis containing flaxseed gum (5 g), as per the recommendations of the American Diabetic Association. The control group (60 individuals) consumed an identical diet but the chapattis were without gum. The blood biochemistry profiles monitored before starting the study and at monthly intervals showed fasting blood sugar in the experimental group decreased from 154 ± 8 mg/dl to 136 ± 7 mg/dl (P=0.03) while the total cholesterol reduced from 182 ± 11 mg/dl to 163 ± 9 mg/dl (P=0.03). Results showed a decrease in low-density lipoprotein cholesterol from 110 ± 8 mg/dl to 92 ± 9 mg/dl (P=0.02). The study demonstrated the efficacy of flax gum in the blood biochemistry profiles of type 2 diabetes.


Subject(s)
Anticholesteremic Agents/therapeutic use , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/diet therapy , Flax/chemistry , Hypoglycemic Agents/therapeutic use , Plant Gums/therapeutic use , Plant Mucilage/therapeutic use , Seeds/chemistry , Anticholesteremic Agents/administration & dosage , Anticholesteremic Agents/economics , Anticholesteremic Agents/isolation & purification , Bread/analysis , Bread/economics , Cholesterol, LDL/blood , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/blood , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/complications , Diet/ethnology , Female , Food Preferences/ethnology , Food, Formulated/analysis , Food, Formulated/economics , Food-Processing Industry/economics , Humans , Hypercholesterolemia/complications , Hypercholesterolemia/prevention & control , Hypoglycemic Agents/administration & dosage , Hypoglycemic Agents/economics , Hypoglycemic Agents/isolation & purification , India , Industrial Waste/analysis , Industrial Waste/economics , Male , Medicine, Ayurvedic , Middle Aged , Pilot Projects , Plant Gums/administration & dosage , Plant Gums/economics , Plant Gums/isolation & purification , Plant Mucilage/administration & dosage , Plant Mucilage/economics , Plant Mucilage/isolation & purification
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