The chemical component of licorice that seems to have the greatest apparent medical benefit is Glycyrrhizin. Chemically,
glycyrrhizin is a sulphated polysaccharide, in a class known as triterpenoid saponins.
Glycyrrhizin is considered to be the active constituent of licorice, and potency is determined by glycyrrhizin content. Glycyrrhizin
is converted into glychyrrhetic acid by glycaronidase.
Glycyrrhizin
has demonstrated salutory and beneficial effectts on liver function. In situations where liver enzymes are elevated, glychorrhizin can reduce alanine transaminase and aspartate
transaminase values. While the mechanism has not been entirely elucidated, glycyrrhizin may
inhibit the immune mediated cytotoxicity against hepatocytes and on
nuclear factor (NF)-kappa B, inflammatory modulators. Glycorrhizin has shown benfit in patients with hepatitis and cirrhosis. Other than modest elevation in blood pressure, toxicity has not been demonstrated.
In clinical use, there are several uses of licorice that are effective, safe and cost-effective:
- Hepatitis C, Hepatitis B, chemical hepatitis, cirrhosis.
- Herpes Simplex
- Influenza, SARS
- Upset stomach, nausea.
- Adrenal insufficiency
I prefer an assayed 12% standardized extract, given in 450 mg dosages. This delivers about 50 mg of glycorrhizin. I prefer that patients start with one capsule in the morning, increase to a two or three time a day basis. Blood pressure should be monitored as the dosages are increased.
For hepatitis, it seems to be most beneficial to add:
- n-acetyl cysteine 500 mg, three to four times daily.
- Silymarin 100-150 mg, three times daily.
- Curcumin 500 to 750 mg, daily.
- Stages of Life offers #2 and #3 in combination, at a very reasonable price.
Pain Center of Orlando, Inc.
225 W. SR 434 Suite #205
Longwood, Florida 32750
