Abstract

ObjectiveAs a traditional Chinese medicine, leech has obvious pharmacological activities in anticoagulantion and antithrombosis. Whitmania pigra Whitman (WP) is the most commonly used leech in the Chinese market. It is often used in clinical applications after high-temperature processing by talcum powder to remove the fishy taste and facilitate crushing. The anticoagulant and thrombolytic active ingredients are protein and polypeptide, which may denaturate and lose activity after high-temperature processing. The rationality of its processing has been questioned in recent years. This study aims to investigate the effect of talcum powder scalding on the antithrombotic activity of WP in vivo and to discuss its pharmacodynamic mechanism in vivo. MethodsRaw and talcum-powdered processed WP were administered intragastrically for 14 days, and carrageenan was injected intraperitoneally to prepare a mouse model of tail vein thrombosis. The incidence rate of tail vein thrombosis and the thrombus area under pathological tissue sections were calculated to evaluate the antithrombotic effect between raw and processed WP. Non-targeted metabolomics was conducted using UPLC-Q-TOF/MS technology to analyze the changes of small molecule metabolites in the body after administration of WP. ResultsAfter intragastric administration, both the raw product and the processed product of WP could inhibit the thrombosis induced by carrageenan, and the processed product had a more apparent antithrombotic effect than the raw product. The administration of WP could regulate the changes of some small molecular metabolites, such as amino acids, lipids, and steroids, in Sphingolipid metabolism and Glycerophospholipid metabolism. ConclusionsBased on the results of pharmacodynamics and metabolomics, processed WP will not reduce the antithrombotic activity of WP. This study provided a scientific basis for the rational use of leeches.

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