Promoting Plant-Based Therapies for Chronic Kidney Disease

Author:

Khan Muhammad Ali12345ORCID,Kassianos Andrew J3678,Hoy Wendy E16,Alam AHM Khurshid9,Healy Helen G1367,Gobe Glenda C124

Affiliation:

1. NHMRC CKD CRE (CKD.QLD), Univ of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

2. School of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, Univ of Queensland, Australia

3. Conjoint Internal Medicine Laboratory, Chemical Pathology, Pathology Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

4. Kidney Disease Research Collaborative, Princess Alexandra Hospital and Univ of Queensland, Translational Research Institute, Brisbane, Australia

5. Department of Pharmacy, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Science and Technology University, Bangladesh

6. Centre for Chronic Disease, Faculty of Medicine, Univ of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

7. Kidney Health Service, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Brisbane, Australia

8. IHBI, Queensland Univ of Technology, Brisbane, Australia

9. Department of Pharmacy, Univ of Rajshahi, Rajshahi-6205, Bangladesh

Abstract

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is debilitating, increasing in incidence worldwide, and a financial and social burden on health systems. Kidney failure, the final stage of CKD, is life-threatening if untreated with kidney replacement therapies. Current therapies using commercially-available drugs, such as angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin II receptor blockers and calcium channel blockers, generally only delay the progression of CKD. This review article focuses on effective alternative therapies to improve the prevention and treatment of CKD, using plants or plant extracts. Three mechanistic processes that are well-documented in CKD pathogenesis are inflammation, fibrosis, and oxidative stress. Many plants and their extracts are already known to ameliorate kidney dysfunction through antioxidant action, with subsequent benefits on inflammation and fibrosis. In vitro and in vivo experiments using plant-based therapies for pre-clinical research demonstrate some robust therapeutic benefits. In the CKD clinic, combination treatments of plant extracts with conventional therapies that are seen as relatively successful currently may confer additive or synergistic renoprotective effects. Therefore, the aim of recent research is to identify, rigorously test pre-clinically and clinically, and avoid any toxic outcomes to obtain optimal therapeutic benefit from medicinal plants. This review may prove to be a filtering tool to researchers into complementary and alternative medicines to find out the current trends of using plant-based therapies for the treatment of kidney diseases, including CKD.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Complementary and alternative medicine

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