Abstract

Natural products, such as herbal medicinal products, food supplements, and functional food, are widely used to support well-being and for promoting health. In general, the effects of using these products are desired and beneficial, but unexpected adverse effects might also occur, especially when natural products are used with medication. Consumers do not often even know that they are exposed to bioactive compounds that might interact with the body and have effects on their well-being. One of the objectives of the World Health Organization is to promote herb–drug interaction monitoring, and it is important to know how marketed preparations and compounds from common foods interact when they are absorbed. In this review, we describe how a Caco-2 cell absorption model has been used to study how natural products, such as flaxseed, rapeseed, purple loosestrife, pine, echinacea, certain berries and herbs, anthranoid laxatives, and traditional medicinal plants, affect the absorption of co-administered drugs. We discuss the types of interactions and adverse effects that might occur and their possible reasons. Overall, we conclude that the Caco-2 cell absorption model is a useful tool for studying the absorption of natural products with drugs; and that to enable the safe use of natural products with medicines, concomitant use should be studied.

Full Text
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