About this Research Topic
The aim of this Research Topic is to gather new and creative studies that covers the subject as thoroughly as possible and provide useful directions for managing or solving complications of MeSy using medicinal plants and their active constituents. We hope that this Research Topic will enhance the knowledge on the development and progression of MeSy and provide further insights into the understanding of the pathogenesis of MeSy, which may give a reliable basis for new strategies in preventing and treating conditions associated with MeSy. Hopefully, the Research Topic will add to the existing understanding, as well as generate interest in further studies in this area that may be useful for medical application.
We encourage researchers to submit their contributions to the activity of medicinal plants and their active constituents that could help manage and treat MeSy and its complications. Food interventions as such may not be considered due to the low bioavailability (dietary food components in vitro effects are often of limited or no therapeutic relevance), but only interventions that have a pharmacological basis.
We welcome the following subtopics, but not limited to:
● Medicinal plants and their active constituents in the management of insulin resistance.
● Structure-activity relationship of active constituents in the treatment of MeSy.
● Active constituents in management of obesity and hypertension.
● Pharmaceutical formulation in MeSy-related cardiovascular diseases.
● Management of MeSy and diabetes by different pharmacologically active constituents.
● Medicinal plants in management of diabetes and diabetic complications.
● Links between local/traditional uses and biomedical assessments of herbal medicines.
● Impact of MeSy on the bioavailability of active constituents.
The treatment of symptoms of MeSy as defined by local/traditional practices should normally form the basis for pharmacological investigations and a potential focus might be on anti-diabetic, anti-inflammatory, or antioxidant activity. Clearly, there is no direct link between local/traditional uses and the biomedical investigation on MT, and therefore, we encourage an assessment of how local and traditional interventions may form a basis for selecting species for research on MT.
With this Research Topic, we are aiming at a global perspective, with contributions from all continents and traditional medicine systems such as Chinese Medicine, Kampo, Ayurvedic, South Africa or the Americas. MeSy network pharmacological studies must be conducted in combination with a hypothesis-based assessment using established experimental pharmacological models.
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All the manuscripts submitted to the collection will need to fully comply with the Four Pillars of Best Practice in Ethnopharmacology (you can freely download the full version here).
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Keywords: Medicinal plants, Metabolism syndrome, Bioavailability, Obesity, Hypertension
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.