Medicinal herbs with anti-depressant effects

Depression is a life-threatening chronic illness which affects people worldwide. Drugs used to treat this disease have multiple side effects and may cause drug-drug or drug-food interactions. Additionally, only 30% of patients respond adequately to the existing drugs and the remaining do not achieve...

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Main Author: Mahbubeh Setorki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nikan Research Institute 2020-10-01
Series:Journal of HerbMed Pharmacology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://herbmedpharmacol.com/PDF/jhp-9-309.pdf
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spelling doaj-c37fd2dd66e44ae5a0a5acfc4c3690c12021-08-02T21:28:17ZengNikan Research InstituteJournal of HerbMed Pharmacology2345-50042020-10-019430931710.34172/jhp.2020.39jhp-6336Medicinal herbs with anti-depressant effectsMahbubeh Setorki0Department of Biology, Izeh Branch, Islamic Azad University, Izeh, IranDepression is a life-threatening chronic illness which affects people worldwide. Drugs used to treat this disease have multiple side effects and may cause drug-drug or drug-food interactions. Additionally, only 30% of patients respond adequately to the existing drugs and the remaining do not achieve complete recovery. Thus, finding effective treatments that have adequate efficacy, fewer side effects and lower cost seem to be necessary. The purpose of this study was to review animal and double-blind clinical studies on the anti-depressant effects of medicinal herbs. In this study, validated scientific articles indexed in PubMed, SID, Web of Science and Scopus databases were reviewed. A database search was performed using the following terms: clinical trials, depression, major depressive disorder, essential oil, extract and medicinal plant. Positive effects of a number of herbs and their active compounds such as St John’s-wort, saffron, turmeric, ginkgo, chamomile, valerian, Lavender, Echium amoenum and Rhodiola rosea L. in improvement of symptoms of mild, moderate or major depression have been shown in clinical trials. The above plants show antidepressant effects and have fewer side effects than synthetic drugs. Hence, they have the potential to treat patients with depression.http://herbmedpharmacol.com/PDF/jhp-9-309.pdfdepressionclinical trialsmedicinal plantsherbal medicines
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mahbubeh Setorki
spellingShingle Mahbubeh Setorki
Medicinal herbs with anti-depressant effects
Journal of HerbMed Pharmacology
depression
clinical trials
medicinal plants
herbal medicines
author_facet Mahbubeh Setorki
author_sort Mahbubeh Setorki
title Medicinal herbs with anti-depressant effects
title_short Medicinal herbs with anti-depressant effects
title_full Medicinal herbs with anti-depressant effects
title_fullStr Medicinal herbs with anti-depressant effects
title_full_unstemmed Medicinal herbs with anti-depressant effects
title_sort medicinal herbs with anti-depressant effects
publisher Nikan Research Institute
series Journal of HerbMed Pharmacology
issn 2345-5004
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Depression is a life-threatening chronic illness which affects people worldwide. Drugs used to treat this disease have multiple side effects and may cause drug-drug or drug-food interactions. Additionally, only 30% of patients respond adequately to the existing drugs and the remaining do not achieve complete recovery. Thus, finding effective treatments that have adequate efficacy, fewer side effects and lower cost seem to be necessary. The purpose of this study was to review animal and double-blind clinical studies on the anti-depressant effects of medicinal herbs. In this study, validated scientific articles indexed in PubMed, SID, Web of Science and Scopus databases were reviewed. A database search was performed using the following terms: clinical trials, depression, major depressive disorder, essential oil, extract and medicinal plant. Positive effects of a number of herbs and their active compounds such as St John’s-wort, saffron, turmeric, ginkgo, chamomile, valerian, Lavender, Echium amoenum and Rhodiola rosea L. in improvement of symptoms of mild, moderate or major depression have been shown in clinical trials. The above plants show antidepressant effects and have fewer side effects than synthetic drugs. Hence, they have the potential to treat patients with depression.
topic depression
clinical trials
medicinal plants
herbal medicines
url http://herbmedpharmacol.com/PDF/jhp-9-309.pdf
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