The Multifunctional Role of Herbal Products in the Management of Diabetes and Obesity: A Comprehensive Review.
Mohammad Mominur RahmanMohammad Rezaul IslamSheikh ShohagMd Emon HossainMohammad Saidur RahamanFahadul IslamMuniruddin AhmedSaikat MitraMayeen Uddin KhandakerAbubakr M IdrisKumarappan ChidambaramTalhah Bin EmranDaniela Simona CavaluPublished in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Obesity and diabetes are the most demanding health problems today, and their prevalence, as well as comorbidities, is on the rise all over the world. As time goes on, both are becoming big issues that have a big impact on people's lives. Diabetes is a metabolic and endocrine illness set apart by hyperglycemia and glucose narrow-mindedness because of insulin opposition. Heftiness is a typical, complex, and developing overall wellbeing worry that has for quite some time been connected to significant medical issues in individuals, all things considered. Because of the wide variety and low adverse effects, herbal products are an important hotspot for drug development. Synthetic compounds are not structurally diverse and lack drug-likeness properties. Thus, it is basic to keep on exploring herbal products as possible wellsprings of novel drugs. We conducted this review of the literature by searching Scopus, Science Direct, Elsevier, PubMed, and Web of Science databases. From 1990 until October 2021, research reports, review articles, and original research articles in English are presented. It provides top to bottom data and an examination of plant-inferred compounds that might be utilized against heftiness or potentially hostile to diabetes treatments. Our expanded comprehension of the systems of activity of phytogenic compounds, as an extra examination, could prompt the advancement of remedial methodologies for metabolic diseases. In clinical trials, a huge number of these food kinds or restorative plants, as well as their bioactive compounds, have been shown to be beneficial in the treatment of obesity.
Keyphrases
- type diabetes
- glycemic control
- insulin resistance
- cardiovascular disease
- weight loss
- big data
- metabolic syndrome
- public health
- clinical trial
- healthcare
- mental health
- weight gain
- high fat diet induced
- blood glucose
- adipose tissue
- risk factors
- body mass index
- physical activity
- emergency department
- deep learning
- drug induced
- skeletal muscle
- diabetic rats