Authors
Maria Spanoudaki, Sousana K Papadopoulou, Georgios Antasouras, Konstantinos A Papadopoulos, Evmorfia Psara, Theofanis Vorvolakos, Evangelos Solovos, Maria Chrysafi, Michalis Psallas, Maria Mentzelou, Despoina Ourda, Constantinos Giaginis
Publication date
2024/4/5
Source
Life
Volume
14
Issue
4
Pages
479
Publisher
MDPI
Description
Background
Mental disorders in terms of depression, anxiety, and stress are one of the major causes of burden globally. Over the last two decades, the use of plant-based substances in the treatment of mental disorders in combination or not with medication has increasingly attracted the interest of the scientific research community. However, even if there is a plethora of naturally occurring bioactive compounds, most of them have low bioavailability, rendering them unable to insert into the bloodstream to exert their biological activities.
Methods
This is a comprehensive narrative review that critically summarizes and scrutinizes the new approaches to the treatment of mental disorders using curcumin, also highlighting its bioavailability properties. The most accurate were searched using effective and relevant keywords.
Results
This narrative review reveals substantial evidence that curcumin can exert significant effects on several mental disorders. However, despite the low cost, the extensive and confirmed potency of curcumin and its involvement in signaling pathways and the scientifically confirmed data regarding its molecular mechanisms of action against mental disorders, this naturally occurring compound presents low oral bioavailability. Pharmaceutical technology has provided solutions to increase the bioavailability of curcumin. Combination with piperine, galactomannosides, liposomal formulation or nanoformulation overcomes the bioavailability and solubility disadvantages.
Conclusions
Although curcumin demonstrates anti-anxiety, anti-depressive and anti-stress properties, studies on humans are limited and heterogeneous. Further …
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