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Ce produit n'est pas destiné à diagnostiquer, traiter, guérir ou prévenir toute maladie. Ces déclarations n'ont pas été évaluées par la Food and Drug Administration.
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Ces informations sont fournies à titre éducatif uniquement et ne remplacent pas un avis médical professionnel, un diagnostic ou un traitement. Consultez toujours votre professionnel de santé avant d'utiliser des plantes, surtout si vous êtes enceinte, allaitez, prenez des médicaments ou avez une condition médicale.
Mahonia nervosa
Forest floor shrub of Pacific Northwest with long pinnate leaves, traditional medicine of Pacific Coast tribes.
Forest floor shrub of Pacific Northwest with long pinnate leaves, traditional medicine of Pacific Coast tribes. This herb is with limited but promising clinical support. Key active compounds include berberine, berbamine, flavonoids, tannins, which underpin its pharmacological activity across 6 documented traditional and modern indications.
berberine, along with berbamine and flavonoids, and to a lesser extent tannins, represent the primary bioactive constituents of Mahonia nervosa. These compounds collectively disrupts microbial cell membrane integrity and inhibits ATP synthesis in pathogens; stimulates digestive enzyme secretion, enhances gastric motility, and exerts spasmolytic effects on smooth muscle; stabilizes hepatocyte membranes, enhances glutathione synthesis, and supports phase II detoxification enzymes; promotes fibroblast proliferation, collagen deposition, and antimicrobial activity at wound sites, contributing to the herb's observed therapeutic effects.
Forest floor shrub of Pacific Northwest with long pinnate leaves, traditional medicine of Pacific Coast tribes.
Forest floor shrub of Pacific Northwest with long pinnate leaves, traditional medicine of Pacific Coast tribes. This herb is with limited but promising clinical support. Key active compounds include berberine, berbamine, flavonoids, tannins, which underpin its pharmacological activity across 6 documented traditional and modern indications.
berberine, along with berbamine and flavonoids, and to a lesser extent tannins, represent the primary bioactive constituents of Mahonia nervosa. These compounds collectively disrupts microbial cell membrane integrity and inhibits ATP synthesis in pathogens; stimulates digestive enzyme secretion, enhances gastric motility, and exerts spasmolytic effects on smooth muscle; stabilizes hepatocyte membranes, enhances glutathione synthesis, and supports phase II detoxification enzymes; promotes fibroblast proliferation, collagen deposition, and antimicrobial activity at wound sites, contributing to the herb's observed therapeutic effects.