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Comparative Study
Quantification of sinomenine in caulis sinomenii collected from different growing regions and wholesale herbal markets by a modified HPLC method.
- Zhong Zhen Zhao, Zhi Tao Liang, Hua Zhou, Zhi Hong Jiang, Zhong Qiu Liu, Yuen Fan Wong, Hong Xi Xu, and Liang Liu.
- School of Chinese Medicine, Hong Kong Baptist University, Kowloon Tong, People's Republic of China.
- Biol. Pharm. Bull. 2005 Jan 1; 28 (1): 105-9.
AbstractCaulis Sinomenii is the dried plant stems of Sinomenium acutum and Sinomenium acutum var. cinereum and has been used in Chinese medicine for treating rheumatic diseases for over a thousand years. Previous studies have demonstrated that sinomenine is a major active constituent in both plants and can be utilized as an indicator of quality of the medicinal herb Caulis Sinomenii. Currently, S. acutum and S. acutum var. cinereum are growing over a wide geographical range in China, with equally wide variations in growing conditions. The objectives of this research were to determine whether there were difference between the species and varieties, and whether the different growing conditions could result in different quality by determining the content of sinomenine in different samples. A modified HPLC method using a diode array detector (DAD) has been developed for efficiently quantifying sinomenine in the plants. Using this method, fourteen samples of S. acutum var. cinereum and eleven samples of S. acutum from growing regions as well as eighteen herbal samples of Caulis Sinomenii from wholesale herbal markets were evaluated. The results showed that there was no marked difference in the content of sinomenine between the species and varieties collected from growing regions; however, a very large variation was found among the samples collected from different regions. Moreover, the content of sinomenine in the plants of large size (stem diameter>3 cm) was much higher than those of small size (stem diameter<1 cm). This implies that the growing region has greater impact on the quality of Caulis Sinomenii in terms of the content of sinomenine than the species and varieties. The results also showed that the content of sinomenine in commercial Caulis Sinomenii was markedly lower than that in the plants collected directly from growing regions. This suggests that to obtain the herb with higher content of sinomenine and thus ensure greater efficacy, both in clinical applications and in pharmacological investigations, the plant of Caulis Sinomenii with controlled stem size collected directly from growing regions is preferable.
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