Silybum marianum (Milk Thistle)

Chapter 123 Silybum marianum (Milk Thistle)




Silybum marianum (family: Compositae)


Synonym: Carduus marianus


Common names: milk thistle, marian thistle, St. Mary’s thistle




image Chemical Composition


Silybum marianum contains silymarin, a mixture of flavanolignans, consisting chiefly of silybin, silydianin, and silychristine.13 The concentration of silymarin is highest in the fruit, but it is also found in the seeds and leaves. Other flavanolignans contained in Silybum include silandrin, silyhermin, silymonin, and neosilyhermin.1 Silybin is the silymarin component with the greatest degree of biological activity (Figure 123-1).





image Pharmacology


Currently S. marianum extracts (usually standardized to contain 70% silymarin) are widely used in European pharmaceutical preparations for hepatic disorders. Silymarin is one of the most potent liver-protecting substances known.18



Hepatoprotection Effects





Protection from Liver-Damaging Chemicals and Drugs


The protective effect of Silybum against liver damage has been demonstrated in a number of experimental and clinical studies. Experimental liver damage in animals can be produced by such diverse toxic chemicals as carbon tetrachloride, galactosamine, ethanol, and praseodymium nitrate. Silymarin has been shown to protect the liver from all of these toxins.147


Perhaps the most impressive of silymarin’s protective effects is against the severe poisoning by Amanita phalloides (the “death cap” or toadstool mushroom), an effect that has long been recognized in folk medicine.57 Ingestion of A. phalloides or its toxins causes severe poisoning and, in approximately 30% of victims, death.


Among the experimental models for measuring protection against liver damage, those based on amanitin or phalloidin toxicity are the most important because these two peptides from A. phalloides are the most powerful liver-damaging substances known. Silymarin has demonstrated impressive results in these experimental models. When silymarin was administered before amanita toxin poisoning, it was 100% effective in preventing toxicity.5,7 Even if given 10 minutes after the amanita toxin, it completely counteracted the toxic effects.


In two cases reported in the literature, silymarin prevented death and greatly reduced the amount of liver damage as long as 24 hours after ingestion of A. phalloides.6 This study reported on a husband and wife who ate toxic mushrooms and experienced gastrointestinal symptoms 18 hours later. Despite initial conventional treatment with gastric emptying, intravenous fluids, activated charcoal, and a duodenal tube, both patients’ laboratory parameters showed deteriorating liver and renal function. Mild hepatic encephalopathy developed in one of the patients. Treatment with intravenous silybinin at a dose of 20 mg/kg body weight, penicillin, and glucose for 3 days resulted in reversal of both the organ failures and encephalopathy.


Silymarin may also be of great value as an adjunct in patients receiving long-term drug therapy. A very interesting study found that silymarin, in an unusually high dose of 800 mg/day, given to psychiatric patients receiving phenothiazines or butyrophenones resulted in significant protection of the liver as measured by malondialdehyde serum liver enzyme levels.9 The silymarin did not interfere with the efficacy of the antidepressants.



Stimulation of Hepatic Protein Synthesis


Perhaps the most interesting effect of Silybum components on the liver is their ability to stimulate protein synthesis.4,10,11 This results in an increase in the production of new liver cells to replace the damaged old ones. Sonnenbichler and Zetl11 have suggested that “silybinin imitates in some way a physiological regulator in animal cells, so that the structure fits into a specific binding site on the polymerase and in such a way causes the observed effects on rRNA synthesis making the drug from Silybum marianum indeed interesting for liver therapy.” Interestingly, silybinin does not have a stimulatory effect on malignant hepatic tissue.10



Antiinflammatory Effects


Leukotrienes, key chemical mediators of inflammation produced by the transfer of oxygen to polyunsaturated fatty acids (a reaction catalyzed by the enzyme lipoxygenase), can also damage the liver. Silymarin has been shown to be a potent inhibitor of this enzyme, thereby inhibiting the formation of damaging leukotrienes.12


Silymarin has also been demonstrated to inhibit prostaglandin synthesis during inflammation.13 Free radical damage to membrane structures due to organic disease or intoxication results in increased release, through lipolysis, of fatty acids. This leads, among other things, to greater prostaglandin and leukotriene synthesis. Silymarin counteracts this deleterious process by suppressing the pathologic decomposition of membrane lipids and inhibiting prostaglandin formation.13 Leukotrienes and inflammatory prostaglandins are also involved in damage of the liver by toxins, so their neutralization by silybin is another mechanism for its protection of the liver.




Sep 12, 2016 | Posted by in MANUAL THERAPIST | Comments Off on Silybum marianum (Milk Thistle)

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