Nutraceuticals in mental diseases - Bridging the gap between traditional use and modern pharmacology
- PMID: 34628304
- DOI: 10.1016/j.coph.2021.08.017
Nutraceuticals in mental diseases - Bridging the gap between traditional use and modern pharmacology
Abstract
In evidence-based pharmacotherapy, the complexity of etiopathogenesis and pathophysiology of mental diseases has attracted comparably little consideration so far. The choice of currently available pharmacotherapies is predominantly guided by specific clinical phenotypes and is limited by low response rates and clinically relevant side effects. Nutraceuticals typically represent multicomponent compounds and may offer high therapeutic potential, by simultaneously addressing multiple aspects in mental disease pathogenesis with rather little side effects. Here, recent pharmacological research on natural products is assessed with focus on a multitarget therapeutic concept, based on shared molecular mechanisms, and in particular, on how far nutraceuticals might address such multitargets. Overcoming deficits regarding clearly defined compositions, concentration-dependent and causative structure-activity-response relationships, evaluation of bioavailability, metabolic fate, and long-term safety are crucial for translating potential plant-based drug candidates into proof-of-concept clinical studies.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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