The inhibitory effects of Silso-San-Gami on atherosclerosis in KHC rabbits

Won Hwan Park, Sang Seub Shin, Young Choon Lee, Cheorl Ho Kim

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

Silsosangami is a dried decoction of a mixture of seven Korean herbal medicines, consisting of Typhae pollen, Pteropi faeces, Paeoniae radicis rubra, Cnidii rhizoma, Persicae semen, Carthami flos, and Curcumae tuber. The inhibitory effect of this traditional herbal medicine, Silsosangami-water extract (SSG), on the progression of the atherosclerotic diseases was examined using the spontaneous familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) model, Kurosawa and Kusanagi-hypercholesterolemic (KHC) rabbits. Changes in blood chemistry, pathology and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation were measured in a control group and a SSG-administrated group. In the control group, the area of atheromatous aortic plaques progressed between 4 weeks (30.43%) and 8 weeks (47.48%). This progressin of atherosclerotic disease was not observed in the SSG-treated group between 4 weeks (22.65%) and 8 weeks (23.23%). Antioxidative effects on LDL were observed in the SSG group at 12 and 14 weeks. SSG improved hypercholestrolemia in the KHC rabbits. These results suggest that SSG has inhibitory effects on the development of atheromatous plaques in spontaneous FH model rabbits. The antioxidative effects of SSG on LDL appear to be the source of the beneficial effects observed in this study.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)235-241
Number of pages7
JournalThrombosis Research
Volume113
Issue number3-4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2004
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Antioxidative effect
  • Atheromatous plaque
  • Carthami flos
  • Cnidii rhizoma
  • Curcumae tuber
  • Hypercholestrolemia
  • KHC rabbits
  • Low-density lipoprotein oxidation
  • Paeoniae radicis rubra
  • Persicae semen
  • Pteropi faeces
  • Silsosangami
  • SSG
  • Typhae pollen

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