Kampo herbal ointments for skin wound healing

Front Pharmacol. 2023 Feb 10:14:1116260. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2023.1116260. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

The management of skin wound healing problems is a public health issue in which traditional herbal medicines could play a determining role. Kampo medicine, with three traditionally used ointments, provides interesting solutions for these dermatological issues. These ointments named Shiunkō, Chuōkō, and Shinsen taitsukō all have in common a lipophilic base of sesame oil and beeswax from which herbal crude drugs are extracted according to several possible manufacturing protocols. This review article brings together existing data on metabolites involved in the complex wound healing process. Among them are representatives of the botanical genera Angelica, Lithospermum, Curcuma, Phellodendron, Paeonia, Rheum, Rehmannia, Scrophularia, or Cinnamomum. Kampo provides numerous metabolites of interest, whose content in crude drugs is very sensitive to different biotic and abiotic factors and to the different extraction protocols used for these ointments. If Kampo medicine is known for its singular standardization, ointments are not well known, and research on these lipophilic formulas has not been developed due to the analytical difficulties encountered in biological and metabolomic analysis. Further research considering the complexities of these unique herbal ointments could contribute to a rationalization of Kampo's therapeutic uses for wound healing.

Keywords: Kampo; ethnopharmacology; herbal medicines; skin; traditional medicines; wound healing.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This research was supported by the French National Research Agency in the framework of the “Investissements d’avenir” programs ANR-15-IDEX-02 and CBH-EUR-GS, ANR-17-EURE-0003. Univ. Grenoble Alpes (France), IRIG-BGE CEA (France), and Yokohama University of Pharmacy (Japan) supported this research.