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Abstract
Neurological disorders are characterized by high morbidity, disability, and mortality
rates, which seriously threaten human health. However, clinically satisfactory agents
for treatment are still currently lacking. Therefore, finding neuroprotective agents
with minimum side effects and better efficacy is a challenge. Chinese herbal medicine,
particularly natural preparations extracted from herbs or plants, has become an unparalleled
resource for discovering new agent candidates. Astragali Radix is an important Qi
tonic drug in traditional Chinese medicine and has a long medicinal history. As a
natural medicine, it has a good prevention and treatment effect on neurological disorders.
Here, the role and mechanism of astragaloside IV in the treatment of neurological
disorders were evaluated and discussed through previous research results. Related
information from major scientific databases, such as PubMed, MEDLINE, Web of Science,
ScienceDirect, Embase, BIOSIS Previews, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled
Trials and Cochrane Library, covering between 2001 and 2021 was compiled, using "Astragaloside
IV" and "Neurological disorders," "Astragaloside IV," and "Neurodegenerative diseases"
as reference terms. By summarizing previous research results, we found that astragaloside
IV may play a neuroprotective role through various mechanisms: anti-inflammatory,
anti-oxidative, anti-apoptotic protection of nerve cells and regulation of nerve growth
factor, as well as by inhibiting neurodegeneration and promoting nerve regeneration.
Astragaloside IV is a promising natural neuroprotective agent. By determining its
pharmacological mechanism, astragaloside IV may be a new candidate drug for the treatment
of neurological disorders.
Oxidative stress is a phenomenon caused by an imbalance between production and accumulation of oxygen reactive species (ROS) in cells and tissues and the ability of a biological system to detoxify these reactive products. ROS can play, and in fact they do it, several physiological roles (i.e., cell signaling), and they are normally generated as by-products of oxygen metabolism; despite this, environmental stressors (i.e., UV, ionizing radiations, pollutants, and heavy metals) and xenobiotics (i.e., antiblastic drugs) contribute to greatly increase ROS production, therefore causing the imbalance that leads to cell and tissue damage (oxidative stress). Several antioxidants have been exploited in recent years for their actual or supposed beneficial effect against oxidative stress, such as vitamin E, flavonoids, and polyphenols. While we tend to describe oxidative stress just as harmful for human body, it is true as well that it is exploited as a therapeutic approach to treat clinical conditions such as cancer, with a certain degree of clinical success. In this review, we will describe the most recent findings in the oxidative stress field, highlighting both its bad and good sides for human health.
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