Japanese Traditional Herbal Medicine, Rikkunshito, Partially Suppresses Inflammatory Responses in Myocardial Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury
Tomoe Sato, Yasuaki Sawashita, Yusuke Yoshikawa, Michiaki Yamakage

TL;DR
This study shows that Rikkunshito, a traditional Japanese herbal medicine, reduces inflammation in heart tissue after ischemia/reperfusion injury, but does not reduce the size of heart damage.
Contribution
The study is the first to investigate Rikkunshito's effects on inflammation in myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury in a mouse model.
Findings
Rikkunshito reduced the expression of interleukin-1β, interleukin-6, and transforming growth factor-β in the heart after I/R injury.
Rikkunshito did not reduce myocardial infarct size or cardiac congestion markers NPPA and NPPB.
Rikkunshito had no effect on plasma ghrelin or Sirt1 levels.
Abstract
Introduction: Myocardial ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury can cause additional damage to an ischemic myocardium, even after successful reperfusion therapy. Inflammation is a mechanism that exacerbates myocardial damage after I/R injury. Rikkunshito (RKT) is a traditional Japanese herbal medicine widely used to treat gastrointestinal symptoms. It attenuates inflammation and fibrosis in some diseases of the heart; however, it remains unclear whether RKT exerts cardioprotective effects against myocardial I/R injury. To elucidate this, we evaluated the effects of RKT pre-treatment by oral administration on the myocardium in a mouse model of in vivo I/R injury. Methods: Mice were randomly assigned to a group receiving distilled water (DW) or one receiving RKT (1000 mg/kg/day) for 14 days orally. For each of the RKT and DW groups, a sham group, an I/R 2 h group, and an I/R 24 h group were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac Ischemia and Reperfusion · Cardiac Fibrosis and Remodeling · Signaling Pathways in Disease
