Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.aaup.edu/jspui/handle/123456789/1557
Title: Anti-Diabesity Middle Eastern Medicinal Plants and Their Action Mechanisms
Authors: Saad, Bashar$AAUP$Palestinian
Kmail, Abdalsalam$AAUP$Palestinian
Haq, Sameena$Other$Other
Keywords: Anti-Diabesity
Medicinal Plants
Middle Eastern
Issue Date: 18-Jul-2022
Publisher: Hindawi
Citation: Saad B , Kmail A, and Sameena Z. H. Haq S.Z.H. (2022) Anti-Diabesity Middle Eastern Medicinal Plants and Their Action Mechanisms. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine. Volume 2022, Article ID 2276094, 21 pages. https://doi.org/10.1155/2022/2276094.
Series/Report no.: HinVolume 2022, Article ID 2276094, 21 pageshttps://doi.org/10.1155/2022/2276094;21 pages
Abstract: Over the last four decades, the escalation in diabetes and obesity rates has become epidemic all over the world. Diabesity describes the strong link between T2D and obesity. It correlates deeper with the elevated risks of developing cardiovascular disease hypertension, stroke, and several malignancies. Therapeutic usage of medicinal plants and natural products in the treatment of diabetes and obesity has long been known to physicians of Greco-Arab and Islamic medicine. Improved versions of their abundant medicinal plant-based formulations are at present some of the most popular herbal treatments used. Preclinical and clinical data about medicinal plants along with their bioactive constituents are now available, justifying the traditionally known therapeutic uses of products derived from them for the prevention and cure of obesity-related T2D and other health problems. The aim of this review is to systematize published scientific data dealing with the efficiency of active ingredients or extracts from Middle Eastern medicinal plants and diet in the management of diabesity and its complications. Google Scholar, MEDLINE, and PubMed were searched for publications describing the medicinal plants and diet used in the management of T2D, obesity, and their complications. The used keywords were “medicinal plants” or “herbals” in combination with “obesity,” “diabetes,” “diabetes,” or nephropathy. More than 130 medicinal plants were identified to target diabesity and its complications. The antidiabetic and anti-obesity effects and action mechanisms of these plants are discussed here. These include the regulation of appetite, thermogenesis, lipid absorption, and lipolysis; pancreatic lipase activity and adipogenesis; glucose absorption in the intestine, insulin secretion, glucose transporters, gluconeogenesis, and epigenetic mechanisms.
URI: http://repository.aaup.edu/jspui/handle/123456789/1557
ISSN: ISSN: 1741-427X (Print) ISSN: 1741-4288 (Online)
Appears in Collections:Faculty & Staff Scientific Research publications

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