Traditional Chinese Medicine and Herbal Hepatotoxicity
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) with its focus on herbal
use became popular worldwide. Treatment was perceived as safe, with neglect of
rare adverse reactions including liver injury. To compile worldwide cases of
liver injury by herbal TCM, we undertook a selective literature search in the
PubMed database and searched for the items Traditional Chinese Medicine, TCM,
Traditional Asian Medicine, and Traditional Oriental Medicine, also combined
with the terms herbal hepatotoxicity or herb induced liver injury. The search
focused primarily on English-language case reports, case series, and clinical reviews.
We identified reported hepatotoxicity cases in 77 relevant publications with 57
different herbs and herbal mixtures of TCM, which were further analyzed for
causality by the Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences
(CIOMS) scale, positive reexposure test results, or both. Causality was
established for 28/57 different herbs or herbal mixtures, Bai Xian Pi, Bo He,
Ci Wu Jia, Chuan Lian Zi, Da Huang, Gan Cao, Ge Gen, Ho Shou Wu, Huang Qin,
Hwang Geun Cho, Ji Gu Cao, Ji Xue Cao, Jin Bu Huan, Jue Ming Zi, Jiguja, Kudzu,
Ling Yang Qing Fei Keli, Lu Cha, Rhen Shen, Ma Huang, Shou Wu Pian, Shan Chi,
Shen Min, Syo Saiko To, Xiao Chai Hu Tang, Yin Chen Hao, Zexie, and Zhen Chu
Cao. In conclusion, this compilation of liver injury cases establishes
causality for 28/57 different TCM herbs and herbal mixtures, aiding diagnosis
for physicians who care for patients with liver disease possibly related to herbal
TCM.
Source: Teschke R, Zhang L, Long H, Schwarzenboeck A, Schmidt-Taenzer W, Genthner A, Wolff A, Frenzel C, Schulze J, Eickhoff A. Traditional Chinese Medicine and herbal
hepatotoxicity: a tabular compilation of reported cases. Ann Hepatol. 2015 Jan-Feb;14(1):7-19.
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