2014
DOI: 10.1007/s00414-014-1120-z
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Assessing product adulteration in natural health products for laxative yielding plants, Cassia, Senna, and Chamaecrista, in Southern India using DNA barcoding

Abstract: Medicinal plants such as Cassia, Senna, and Chamaecrista (belonging to the family Fabaceae) are well known for their laxative properties. They are extensively used within indigenous health care systems in India and several other countries. India exports over 5000 metric tonnes per year of these specific herbal products, and the demand for natural health product market is growing at approximately 10-15% annually. The raw plant material used as active ingredients is almost exclusively sourced from wild populatio… Show more

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Cited by 90 publications
(70 citation statements)
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“…The authors conclude that such substitutions may not only fail to give the expected therapeutic effect, but may also give undesirable effects as in case of Sida acuta, which contains a sixfold higher amount of ephedrine than the roots of S. cordifolia. A similar study by Seethapathy et al [74] on authentication of laxatives made from wild harvested Cassia, Senna and Chamaecrista species using four DNA barcoding markers (ITS, matK, rbcL and psbA-trnH) revealed considerable adulteration of herbal products and confirmed the suspicion that there is rampant herbal product adulteration in Indian markets.…”
Section: Sanger Dna Sequencingmentioning
confidence: 56%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The authors conclude that such substitutions may not only fail to give the expected therapeutic effect, but may also give undesirable effects as in case of Sida acuta, which contains a sixfold higher amount of ephedrine than the roots of S. cordifolia. A similar study by Seethapathy et al [74] on authentication of laxatives made from wild harvested Cassia, Senna and Chamaecrista species using four DNA barcoding markers (ITS, matK, rbcL and psbA-trnH) revealed considerable adulteration of herbal products and confirmed the suspicion that there is rampant herbal product adulteration in Indian markets.…”
Section: Sanger Dna Sequencingmentioning
confidence: 56%
“…Supportive research has documented adulteration many herbal products including 50 % in ginseng and 25 % in black cohosh [71,75], 33 % in herbal teas [76] and 16 % in Ginkgo products [69]. Estimates of adulteration are also similar in India, where they range from 37 % in Senna to 50 % for Cassia products [74]. All of these authors conclude that there is considerable product substitution, contamination and use of fillers in NHPs, and they suggest that the herbal industry should embrace DNA barcoding for authenticating herbal products through testing of raw materials used in manufacturing products.…”
Section: Sanger Dna Sequencingmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…The use of authentic medicinal plant species is a fundamental requirement in herbal medicine [12]. Adulteration, substitution, and mislabelling may cause potential harm to patients [13][14][15][16][17]. Along with safety and toxicity, there is a need to develop methods of profiling medicinal plants for the purpose of authentication.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Jouan, EG 2 110IR) Effects on cell proliferation. In order to determine the effect of Senna extract on the proliferation of HeLa cells, 4 10 cells were seeded in the wells. After 24 hours, Senna extract was added.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%