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Drug–herb interactions: unexpected suppression of free Danshen concentrations by salicylate

✍ Scribed by Deepali Gupta; Mehri Jalali; Alice Wells; Amitava Dasgupta


Book ID
102310929
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2002
Tongue
English
Weight
137 KB
Volume
16
Category
Article
ISSN
0887-8013

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The general population of the U.S. uses over‐the‐counter herbal medicines. Danshen is a Chinese herbal product used for the treatment of cardiovascular disease. In a previous study we showed that Danshen has significant digoxin‐like immunoreactivity, and we used this parameter to monitor total and free Danshen activities in sera (10). In this report we demonstrated strong protein binding of Danshen (50–70%), and we also identified albumin as the major serum protein that binds Danshen. Because salicylate, which is also strongly bound to albumin, is a widely used over‐the‐counter medicine in the U.S., we studied Danshen–salicylate interaction in vitro. We observed no significant change in free Danshen concentrations as measured by free‐digoxin‐like activity when salicylate concentrations were subtherapeutic (≤100 μg/mL). With therapeutic concentrations of salicylate (≥150 μg/mL), the free Danshen concentrations significantly decreased from the control. On the other hand, Danshen can displace salicylate from protein binding, thereby increasing the free salicylate concentration. We conclude that salicylate in therapeutic concentration can significantly decrease free Danshen concentrations, and Danshen can displace salicylate. J. Clin. Lab. Anal. 16:290–294, 2002. © 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.