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THE ROLE OF GARLIC IN THE PREVENTION OF DRUG AND CHEMICAL INDUCED TOXICITY. EVIDENCE FROM PUBLISHED LITERATURE. Prof Christian C Ezeala PhD, MSc, AMLSCN, MICR , MSB, CBiol , CSci , FSAFRI, FASI College of Medicine, Nursing, & Health Sciences. Background.
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THE ROLE OF GARLIC IN THE PREVENTION OF DRUG AND CHEMICAL INDUCED TOXICITY EVIDENCE FROM PUBLISHED LITERATURE
Prof Christian C EzealaPhD, MSc, AMLSCN, MICR, MSB, CBiol, CSci, FSAFRI, FASICollege of Medicine, Nursing, & Health Sciences
Background • Drug and chemical induced toxicity is a common cause of hospital admissions in both developed and developing countries • Garlic is widely used as spice and in many traditional medical practices • Garlic has many pharmacologically active constituents • Studies have shown these to exert effective protection against drug and chemical induced toxicity
AIM • To present current evidence from published literature on the usefulness of garlic and its products in preventing chemical induced toxicity
Objectives • To determine from peer reviewed literature, the toxicity models in which garlic has been reported to exert protective effect; • To articulate suggested mechanisms for this toxicoprotection; • To determine the constituents that were reported to be toxicoprotective • Appraise the studies for their strength of evidence.
Methods • Systematic review of literature designed to answer the questions: • “Does garlic prevent drug and chemical induced toxicity?” • By what mechanisms is this protection? • Which constituents protect against toxicity?
Article Selection Criteria • Articles that report results of a primary research • Study design is experimental, preclinical or clinical studies inclusive • Studies that involve accidental or intentional chemical or drug induced toxicity in mammalian species, isolated organs, or mammalian cell lines; • Organs or systems toxicity were investigated • Positive and negative controls and/or a standard drug (or standard of care) were included; • Study endpoints included biochemical, hematological, physiological, and/or histological assessments • Time limits – articles published in the last 20 years (1994-2013)
Literature Search Strategy • Search terms used included “garlic” OR “Allium sativa;” “chemical induced” OR “drug induced;” “toxic*”; “protect*” OR “prevent*” • Search engines and databases used included PubMed/Medline, Google Scholar, Microsoft academic search, and High Wire Press. • Time limits set to articles published between Jan 1994 and December 2013.
Data Collection and Analysis • Articles that met the above criteria were analyzed and the following information extracted: • Type of garlic preparation or constituent used • Toxicity model studied • Endpoints measured • Reported mechanisms
Garlic Preparations or Constituents Used • Fresh garlic • Aged garlic extract • Aqueous extract • Alcoholic or organic extract • Garlic oil • Purified constituents: • Diallyl sulfide (DAS) • Diallyl disulfide (DADS) • Diallyltrisulfide (DATS) • Thiacremonone • S-allylmercaptocysteine (SAMC) • S-allylcysteine (SAC)
Chemical Constituents Allicin (diallylthiosulphinate) Diallyldisulphide (DADS) Alliin (S-allylcysteinesulphoxide)
Conclusion • Garlic derived products exert toxicoprotective effects by several mechanisms including antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects, inhibition of bioactivation by CYP enzymes, and inhibition of apoptosis. • Garlic products used in studies included crude and purified constituents • A wide variety of toxicity models were described including hepatotoxicity, carcinogenesis, and neurobehavioural toxicity. • All the studies were preclinical, posing restrictions on extrapolation of the results to the clinical setting