FROM:
Alternative Medicine Review 1998 (Dec); 3 (6): 410–421 ~ FULL TEXT
Scott Luper, N.D.
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 counsel watchful waiting for many of their patients, waiting in fact
for the time when the disease has progressed to the point that warrants
the use of heroic measures. Physicians and patients are in need of effective
therapeutic agents with a low incidence of side-effects. Plants potentially
constitute such a group.
In recent years many 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 confirmed traditional experience and wisdom by discovering the mechanisms
and modes of action of these plants as well as reaffirming 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. Just a handful have been fairly well researched.
The latter category of plants include: Silybum marianum (milk thistle),
Picrorhiza kurroa (kutkin), Curcuma longa (turmeric), Camellia sinensis
(green tea), Chelidonium majus (greater celandine), Glycyrrhiza glabra
(licorice), and Allium sativa (garlic). This review will be divided into
two parts. Silybum marianum and Picrorhiza kurroa, will be reviewed in
Part One. Curcuma longa, Camellia sinensis, Chelidonium majus, Glycyrrhiza
glabra, and Allium sativa will be reviewed in Part Two.
Silybum marianum (milk thistle)
Silybum marianum is currently the most well researched
plant in the treatment of liver disease (with over 450 published peer review
papers). The genus Silybum is a member of the daisy family (Compositae).
The plant itself is a stout thistle, growing one to three meters tall in
rocky soils, with large purple flowering heads (Figure 1) The leaves are characterized by distinct white "milky" veins that
give the plant its common name.
History, Early Authors
Silybum is cited as one of the oldest known herbal medicines.
Dioscores first described the plant. In Roman times, Pliny the Elder (A.D.
77), a noted naturalist, described the medicinal uses of milk thistle,
indicating it was "excellent for carrying off bile." [1]
Culpeper (1650) wrote of its effectiveness in removing obstructions of
the liver and spleen. [2] But it has been
relatively recent clinical research, especially in Germany, which has brought
the use of Silybum to prominence in the treatment of chronic or acute liver
disease, as well as protecting the liver against toxicity.
Active Constituents
The active constituents of milk thistle are flavonolignans
including silybin, silydianin, and silychristine, collectively known as
silymarin. Silybin (Figure 2) is the component
with the greatest degree of biological activity, and milk thistle extracts
are usually standardized to contain 70–80 percent silybin. Silymarin is
found in the entire plant but is concentrated in the fruit and seeds. Silybum
seeds also contain betaine (a proven hepatoprotector) and essential fatty
acids, which may contribute to silymarin's anti-inflammatory effect.
Pharmacokinetics
Silymarin is not water soluble and so cannot be taken
as a tea. It is typically administered as an encapsulated standardized
extract. The absorption with oral administration is rather low with only
two to three percent of the silybin recovered in 24 hours from rat bile. [3,4]
The peak plasma levels after an oral dose are achieved in four to six hours
in both animals and humans. [3–5] Silymarin
is cleared from the body predominantly via the bile and to a lesser extent
the kidney. The clearance half-life is six to eight hours. [5]
Clinical Indications
Mushroom Poisoning: The most remarkable use of silymarin
is in the treatment of Amanita mushroom poisoning. The Amanita genus is
widespread in Europe and North America, and several species are considered
choice by mushroom collectors. Unfortunately, the genus also contains several
of the most toxic mushrooms in existence. Amanita mushrooms possess two
extremely powerful hepatotoxins, amanitin and phalloidin (the LD50 of amanitin
is 0.1 mg/kg body weight). Historically, the accidental ingestion of mushrooms
containing these toxins results in about 60 cases of poisoning per year
in the United States and Europe, with a mortality rate of about 30 percent. [6]
In mice, silymarin was 100 percent effective in preventing
liver toxicity if given before or up to ten minutes after Amanita toxin
poisoning. Severe liver damage (and death) was avoided if silymarin was
administered within 24 hours. [7] In a study
with dogs (who model human Amanita poisoning quite well), none of the dogs
died when given silymarin 5–24 hours after ingesting an LD50 dose of Amanita
phalloides (85 mg/kg). In comparison, untreated dogs experienced a mortality
rate of 33 percent. Liver enzyme studies and liver biopsies in the controls
and treated dogs demonstrated a significant hepatoprotective effect for
the silymarin. [6]
The hepatoprotective effects of silymarin in humans after
ingestion of Amanita toxins have been repeatedly demonstrated. In one series
of 18 patients treated with silymarin, all patients survived except one
particularly high-dose suicide. The authors concluded, "Administration
of silymarin even up to 48 hours after mushroom ingestion appears to be
an effective measure to prevent severe liver damage in Amanita phalloides
poisoning." [8] In a 1995 study of 41 mushroom
poisoning victims, none died in the group which included silymarin in the
treatment regimen. [9]
A 1996 report made the case that silymarin may be useful
even three days post toxification. A family of four poisoned by Amanita
mushrooms was admitted to the hospital with severe liver damage. Although
all were treated with standard therapy, there was a worsening of the clinical
picture until the third day, when it was decided to add silybin dihemisuccinate
by intravenous route to the therapy. After the beginning of silybin administration
the patients showed a favorable course with a rapid resolution of the clinical
picture, although the prognosis appeared severe on the basis of hepatochemical
examination results. [10]
A particularly dramatic case of a very severe accidental
poisoning in a seven-year-old girl resulted in her entering a hepatic coma.
The authors reported the girl's survival was due in large part to treatment
with silymarin in combination with high doses of G-penicillin. [11]
General Hepatoprotective: Many studies have demonstrated
the beneficial hepatoprotective effects of treatment with silymarin. In
a Finnish military hospital study on consecutive patients with elevated
serum liver enzymes (mostly due to ethanol ingestion), 420 mg/day silymarin
was found to significantly lower liver enzymes ? aspartate aminotransferase
(AST), alanine amino-transferase (ALT) ? after four weeks. Histologic examination
of liver biopsies also demonstrated a statistically significant improvement. [12]
In an Italian study of 20 patients with chronic active
hepatitis, 240 mg/day of silybin-phosphatidylcholine complex for only seven
days was found to significantly lower serum liver enzymes ? AST, ALT, gamma-glutamyl
transferase (GGT), alkaline phosphatase, and total bilirubin. [13]
In a Hungarian study of 36 patients with chronic alcoholic
liver disease, 420 mg/day of silymarin resulted in a normalization in serum
liver enzymes (AST, ALT, GGT), total bilirubin, and an improvement in the
histological examination of liver biopsies after six months of treatment.
In addition, procollagen III peptides (a marker of active fibrosis) were
found to be significantly decreased in the treatment group. [14]
In an Austrian study involving 170 patients with liver
cirrhosis, 420 mg/day of silymarin for an average of 41 months resulted
in a significant improvement in survival (58% in silymarin-treated patients
and 39% in the placebo group (P = 0.036)). No side-effects of silymarin
were noted in this study [15] or in others
cited above.
Not every study found a beneficial effect of silymarin
administration. In a French study on 116 patients with histologically proven
alcoholic hepatitis, 420 mg/day of silymarin for three months was not found
to significantly alter the course of the disease. Both the treated and
the placebo groups had similar rates of abstinence (46%), and significant
improvement in the score of alcoholic hepatitis and serum amino transferase
activity, irrespective of treatment with silymarin or placebo. Four patients
died of hepatic failure during the trial, one in the treatment group and
three in the placebo group (not statistically significant). As usual, no
side-effects were noted. [16]
It is interesting to note that while silymarin has been
shown to have a profound hepatoprotective effect on chronic exposure to
ethanol, it has no direct effect on ethanol metabolism. When studied, silybin
had no effect on reducing blood ethanol levels or the rate at which ethanol
is removed from the body. [17]