FROM:
Alternative Medicine Review 1999 (Jun); 4 (3): 178–189 ~ FULL TEXT
Scott Luper, N.D.
Botanical medicines have been used
traditionally by herbalists and indigenous healers worldwide for the prevention
and treatment of liver disease. Clinical research in this century has confirmed
the efficacy of several plants in the treatment of liver disease, while
basic scientific research has uncovered the mechanisms by which some plants
provide their therapeutic effects. This article is Part Two in a review
of botanicals used in the treatment of liver disease. Curcuma longa (turmeric),
Camellia sinensis (green tea), and Glycyrrhiza glabra (licorice) are reviewed
in this installment. Silybum marianum (milk thistle) and Picrorhiza kurroa
(kutkin) were reviewed in Part One. (Altern Med Rev 1999; 4 (3): 178-189)\
Introduction
Treatment options for common liver diseases such as cirrhosis,
fatty liver, and chronic hepatitis are problematic. The effectiveness of
treatments such as interferon, colchicine, penicillamine, and corticosteroids
are inconsistent at best, and the incidence of side-effects profound. All
too often the treatment is worse than the disease. Conservative physicians
often use a "wait and see approach" for many of their patients,
waiting for the time when the disease has progressed to the point to warrant
the use of heroic measures. Physicians and patients are in need of effective
therapeutic agents with a low incidence of side effects. Several botanical
medicines potentially constitute such a group.
In recent years, researchers have examined the effects
of plants used traditionally by indigenous healers and herbalists to support
liver function and treat diseases of the liver. In most cases, research
has borne out the traditional experience and wisdom by discovering the
mechanisms and modes of action of these plants, as well as confirming the
therapeutic effectiveness of certain plants or plant extracts in clinical
studies.
Several hundred plants have been examined for use in a
wide variety of liver disorders. Only a handful have been fairly well researched.
These plants include Silybum marianum (milk thistle), Picrorhiza kurroa
(kutkin), Curcuma longa (turmeric), Camellia sinensis (green tea), and
Glycyrrhiza glabra (licorice). Silybum marianum and Picrorhiza kurroa were
reviewed in Part One. Curcuma longa, Camellia sinensis, and Glycyrrhiza
glabra are reviewed in this article.
Green Tea (Camellia sinensis)
Description: Green, black, and oolong teas all
derive from of the leaves of Camellia sinensis, which is cultivated widely
in China, India, Japan, and Indonesia. When cultivated, it grows as a well-trimmed
bush with alternating evergreen leaves. Originally from East Asia, the
wild plant grows as a large shrub or tree. Green tea is made from unfermented
leaves which are lightly steamed to inactivate the enzymes which would
allow fermentation, then dried. The leaves of oolong tea are partially
fermented, and black tea is fully fermented. The greater the fermentation,
the lower the polyphenol content and the higher the caffeine content. Black
tea has 2-3 times the caffeine content of green tea. [26]
History and Folk Use: Tea has been used as both
a drink and a medicine for approximately 5000 years in China. Historical
uses of tea are as a stimulant, an astringent for clearing phlegm, and
as a digestive aid. [27]
Active Constituents: Tea contains a wide assortment
of bioactive constituents, most of which are contained in two groups, alkaloids
and polyphenols. Examples of alkaloids found in tea include caffeine, theobromine,
and theophylline. [28]
These alkaloids provide the stimulant effects of tea and figure prominently
in the experience of tea drinking, although they are not thought to be
central to tea's medicinal effects.
The polyphenols found in all tea give it its astringent,
somewhat bitter flavor. The hepatoprotective and other health effects of
green tea are believed to be chiefly dependent on the polyphenol content. [29–31]
The polyphenols contained in teas are classified as catechins, which are
considered to be bioflavonoids, which in turn is a subcategory of the larger
group of polyphenols. [28]
Green tea contains six primary catechin compounds: (+)-catechin, gallocatechin,
epicatechin, epigallocatechin, epicatechin gallate, and epigallocatechin
gallate. Epigallocatechin gallate (also known as EGCG) is considered to
be the most active component, and is the best researched of the green tea
polyphenols (GTP). [30, 32]
Green tea contains about 30-40 percent polyphenols (dry
weight), whereas the polyphenol content of black tea is 3-10 percent. The
average cup of green tea contains 50 to 150 mg of polyphenols. [28]
Pharmacokinetics: The bioactive constituents of
green tea are absorbed following oral administration in a dose dependent
manner. The catechins are metabolized by the liver and kidneys, and cleared
from the body chiefly by the kidneys. The plasma half-life of epigallocatechin
gallate is 5.5 hours. [26, 33]
Based on the author's clinical experience, a typical recommended dose of
green tea solids with polyphenols standardized to 50 percent is from 100
to 300 mg three times daily.
Hepatoprotective Activity: Green tea has been found
to provide protection to the liver against a variety of toxic insults,
including the industrial solvent 2-nitropropane (also found in cigarette
smoke), [34] alcohol, [35]
d-galactosamine, [36]
and 1,4-naphthoquinone. [31] In addition, the anti-carcinogenic effect of
green tea on the liver and other organs has been well researched. [32, 34, 37, 38]
Much is known about the hepatoprotection afforded by green
tea. Catechins have been discovered to be powerful antioxidants, which
is though to be at least in part responsible for green tea's hepatopro-tective
activity. In 2-nitropropane poisoning, epigallocatechin gallate administration
lowered hepatic lipid peroxide levels 100 percent at six hours and 30 percent
at 15 hours. Histopathological examination revealed effective protection
against induction of hepatic degenerative changes by 2-nitropropane at
15 hours.37 Catechins have also been shown to inhibit lipid peroxidation
due to other toxins, including tert-butyl hydroperoxide and bromotrichloromethane, [29]
1,4-naphthoquinone, [31]
and singlet oxygen. [39]
The hepatoprotective effect of green tea is not dependent
on its direct antioxidant effects alone. Green tea catechins have been
shown to maintain intracellular protein thiol levels. [31]
Protein thiols help maintain the intra-cellular reduction-oxidation (redox)
balance. Protein tertiary configuration (shape), and therefore cellular
function, is dependent on the maintenance of the redox balance. In rat
liver cells exposed to 1,4-naphthoquinone, green tea extract prevented
the expected cellular damage. This protective effect was suggested to be
due to maintenance of protein thiol levels by green tea. [31]
Detoxification Activity: Glucuroni-dation, the
predominant human Phase II liver detoxification pathway, has been shown
to be enhanced with green tea administration. [40, 41]
Glucuronic acid is conjugated with toxins to facilitate their elimination
from the body via the bile. Examples of toxins eliminated in this manner
include aflatoxin and acetaminophen metabolites. Green tea administration
in rats (as their only drinking fluid) increased glucuronidation by 100
percent. The authors of the study suggest the increase in glucuronidation
may contribute to the anti-carcinogenic effect of green tea by facilitating
the metabolism of chemical carcinogens into inactive, readily-excretable
products. [40]
The effect of green tea on other detoxifying and antioxidant
enzymes is controversial. Some researchers found oral feeding of green
tea in drinking water (0.2%, w/v) to mice for 30 days significantly increased
the activities of glutathione peroxidase, catalase, and quinone reductase
in small bowel, liver, and lungs, and glutathione S-transferase in small
bowel and liver. GTP feeding to mice also resulted in considerable enhancement
of glutathione reductase activity in the liver. [38]
Other researchers reported no increase in glutathione
peroxidase, catalase, or superoxide dismutase following a much larger exposure
of rats to green tea in drinking water (2.5%, w/v, as the sole drinking
fluid, for four weeks). [40]
Green Tea and Hepatitis: One of the polyphenols
present in green tea, (+)-catechin, has been studied for its effects on
animal models of hepatitis, as well as in human clinical studies. Pure
(+)-catechin (also known as (+)-cyanidanol-3 trade name Catergen)
has been used to treat hepatitis since 1976. [42]
This compound has been shown to be an efficient immune stimulator, promoting
activation of macrophages, cytotoxic-T-lymphocytes, and natural killer
cells in mice in a dose-dependent manner. [42]
Several clinical studies demonstrate the effectiveness
of (+)-catechin in the treatment of viral hepatitis. One double-blind study
found a significant drop in antibodies to hepatitis B e antigen (HBeAg)
in patients with HBeAg positive hepatitis B. Patients were given 1.5 g
for two weeks, followed by 2.25 g for 14 weeks. HBeAg antibody titers decreased
at least 50 percent in 31 percent of patients, (P < 0.01), and HBeAg
completely disappeared in approximately 11 percent (P < 0.05). The patient
group responding best to the treatment had higher initial values of SGPT,
SGOT and gamma-globulin than the patients whose HBeAg titers remained unchanged.
Mean values for these liver enzymes also fell significantly in the treatment
group. The compound was reported to be well tolerated in this study, the
only notable side-effect being a transient febrile reaction in 13 patients. [43]
In another double-blind study, 12 patients with chronic
hepatitis B were treated with the combination of recombinant human alpha-interferon
and (+)-catechin Ñ three million units of interferon twice per week
and 2.5 g of (+)-catechin daily for 24 weeks. Four patients experienced
clinical improvement in which HBeAg and DNA polymerase disappeared from
sera, and aminotransferase activities fell to normal levels. Side-effects
were minimal, and all patients tolerated the treatment. [44]
Pure (+)-catechin has been found to cause hemolysis in
some patients, [45, 46]
possibly by the promotion of antibody formation against (+)-catechin, which
might cross-react with red blood cells. [47]
However, there are no reports in the literature of green tea, green tea
extracts, or green tea polyphenols causing this side-effect.
In an animal model of viral hepatitis, pre-treatment with
green tea extract significantly prevented increases in hepatic transaminases
and alkaline phosphatase levels in a dose-related manner. [48]
With this information, as well as the research on (+)-catechin, one might
surmise that green tea could be used as part of a hepatitis treatment protocol,
although more human research is needed in this area before a solid recommendation
can be made.
Green Tea and Liver Cancer: Much of the green tea
research involves its effects on cancer prevention and treatment. A full
review of the anti-cancer properties of green tea is beyond the scope of
this review, but at least a passing mention must be made on the subject
with regard to liver cancer.
Green tea has been found to reduce or prevent the growth
of hepatic neoplasms in rodents. One study used mice which had been exposed
to the known carcinogen diethylnitro-samine (DENA) (50 micrograms/kg bw,
i.p., once per week for eight weeks). The mice were treated with green
(and black) tea for 40 weeks. After treatment, the mice were examined for
pulmonary and hepatic tumors. Mice treated with both DENA and tea displayed
a significant decrease in the mean number of lung and liver tumors, compared
to DENA-only treated animals. Mice receiving 0.63 or 1.25 percent green
tea, or 1.25 percent black tea, exhibited a reduction in the incidence
of liver tumors of 54, 50, and 63 percent, respectively, compared to DENA-only
treated mice. [32]
Other researchers found similar results in rats, [49, 50]
although one research group found a slight, but significant increase in
the number of liver tumors in rats treated with green tea catechins and
a decrease in intestinal cancer in the same animals. [51]
Toxicity: Green tea has not been found to be toxic
at any dose. Animal studies (and the experience of a billion tea drinkers)
have found no toxicity. [29]
Single doses of decaffeinated green tea solids up to 4.5 g/day (equal to
45 cups of tea) have been well tolerated by humans. [34]