Herbal Medicines for Gastrointestinal and Hepatic Diseases - Novel Pharmacological and Toxicological approaches, Volume II

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About this Research Topic

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Background

This Research Topic is part of a series with:

Herbal Medicines for Gastrointestinal and Hepatic Diseases - Novel Pharmacological and Toxicological approaches, Volume I



Ethnopharmacology deals with the exchange of knowledge about people's use of herbal medicines and their pharmacological effects. The information related to therapeutic agents of plant origin and their toxic effects was preserved by oral tradition as well as recorded in materia medica. Many drugs that are now available on the market have been developed from this valuable information. Today, scientists that specialize in medicinal chemistry use these existing herbal drugs to develop and produce more therapeutically active agents with less toxic side effects.



The gastrointestinal tract (GIT) is a multi-organ system, consisting of bacteria, and digestive enzymes that have the capacity of degrading food and other molecules. Diseases associated with this organ system include peptic ulcer, inflammatory bowel disease, gastric cancer to name a few. The liver receives seventy percent of its blood supply from the GIT via the hepatic portal vein. The disruption in the gut–liver axis is associated with liver diseases including alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD), non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), and autoimmune liver disease (AILD). NAFLD can cause non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, which can develop into liver cirrhosis through inflammation and fibrosis. Liver cirrhosis is categorized as an end-stage of chronic liver disease, which impairs innate immunity-related genes. Growing evidence from preclinical studies proposes that the gut–liver axis leads to targeted therapeutic modalities for various liver injuries. Therefore, therapeutic treatment of these conditions is essential to prevent progression to these more harmful late-stage diseases.



The aim of this Research Topic is highlight the most recent scientific contributions in the research on herbal products and their active metabolites in the prevention and treatment of diseases associated with the gastrointestinal tract and liver as well as their toxicological perspectives. We welcome authors to submit Original Research Articles, Perspective Reviews, Systematic Reviews and others on the current status, challenges, and prospects of natural products for the treatment of gastrointestinal tract diseases and liver injuries. Manuscripts should contain meaningful research on the following topics, but are not limited to:



1. Pre-clinical and clinical studies of herbal products and their active metabolites in the management of GIT and liver diseases

2. Novel In vitro assays for the identification of potentially active compounds for the treatment of gastric and hepatic cancer

3. Novel cellular and molecular mechanisms that describe the therapeutic effects as well as toxic effects of herbal medicines and their active metabolites on the GIT and liver

4. The role of the GI-microbiome in preventing and treating gastrointestinal and hepatic Diseases



Please Note: Manuscripts submitted to this Specialty Section of Frontiers in Pharmacology must follow the best-practice assessment criteria defined as 'The Four Pillars of Ethnopharmacology' (for details see here). Specifically, we want to draw attention to the need of characterizing the study material, and the requirements of pharmacological experiments in the context of local and traditional uses. Overall, the description must enable a reproduction of the experimental approach.

Keywords: Ethnopharmacology, Toxicology, Herbal medicines, Traditional medicines, active ingredients from herbal medicines, GIT, Liver

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.

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