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Inhibition of Myocardial Remodeling and Heart Failure by Traditional Herbal Medications: Evidence from Ginseng and ginkgo biloba

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REVIEWS IN CARDIOVASCULAR MEDICINE
卷 24, 期 7, 页码 -

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IMR PRESS
DOI: 10.31083/j.rcm2407212

关键词

ginseng; ginsenosides; ginkgo; ginkgolides; myocardial hypertrophy; myocardial remodeling; heart failure

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Herbal-based medications, particularly ginseng and ginkgo, have been used for thousands of years in Asian cultures and have shown beneficial effects on the cardiovascular system. The bioactive components, such as ginsenosides in ginseng and ginkgolides in ginkgo, have been demonstrated to attenuate hypertrophy and remodeling in experimental models. These compounds share common effects, including antioxidant and antiapoptotic properties, as well as the inhibition of pro-hypertrophic intracellular signaling. Although robust clinical evidence is lacking, small trials have provided limited supporting evidence for the potential use of ginseng as adjuvant therapy for myocardial remodeling and heart failure.
Herbal-based medications have been used as therapeutic agents for thousands of years, particularly in Asian cultures. It is now well established that these herbal medications contain potent bioactive phytochemicals which exert a plethora of beneficial effects such as those seen on the cardiovascular system. Among the most widely studied of these herbal agents is ginseng, a member of the genus Panax, which has been shown to produce beneficial effects in terms of reducing cardiac pathology, at least in experimental studies. The beneficial effects of ginseng observed in such studies are likely attributable to their constituent ginsenosides, which are steroid-like saponins of which there are at least 100 and which vary according to ginseng species. Many ginseng species such as Panax ginseng (also known as Asian ginseng) and P quinquefolius (North American ginseng) as well as specific ginsenosides have been shown to attenuate hypertrophy as well as other indices of myocardial remodeling in a wide variety of experimental models. Ginkgo biloba on the other hand has been much less studied although the leaf extract of the ancient ginkgo tree has similarly consistently been shown to produce anti-remodeling effects. Ginkgo's primary bioactive constituents are thought to be terpene trilactones called ginkgolides, of which there are currently seven known types. Ginkgo and ginkgolides have also been shown to produce anti-remodeling effects as have been shown for ginseng in a variety of experimental models, in some cases via similar mechanisms. Although a common single mechanism for the salutary effects of these compounds is unlikely, there are a number of examples of shared effects including antioxidant and antiapoptotic effects as well as inhibition of pro-hypertrophic intracellular signaling such as that involving the calcineurin pathway which results in the upregulation of pro-hypertrophic genes. Robust clinical evidence represented by large scale phase 3 trials is lacking although there is limited supporting evidence from small trials at least with respect to ginseng. Taken together, both ginseng and ginkgo as well as their bioactive components offer potential as adjuvant therapy for the treatment of myocardial remodeling and heart failure.

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