Symptom → Plant Sources
Japanese Rose (Rosa rugosa) as a tool for helping with Cold & flu
inferred from immunomodulator action
Rose hip, rose hip and seed and rose hip seed, all were negatively monographed by the German Commission E due to insufficient evidence of effects and effectiveness. Therefore a comprehensive review of the literature was conducted to summarize the pharmacological and clinical effects of Rosa canina L. to reevaluate its usefulness in traditional medicine. For various preparations of rose hip and rose hip and seed, antioxidative and antiinflammatory effects have been demonstrated. Lipophilic constituents are involved in those mechanisms of action. The proprietary rose hip and seed powder Litozin has been employed successfully in a number of exploratory studies in patients suffering from osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and low back pain. However, the sizes of the clinical effects for the different indications need to be determined to assure clinical significance. There is also a rationale behind the use of Litozin as part of a hypocaloric diet based on the rose hip probiotic, stool regulating and smooth muscle-relaxing actions, as well as the rose hip seed lipid-lowering, antiobese and antiulcerogenic effects. Further research is needed to clarify the importance of the reported promising experimental effects in clinical use and to characterize the optimum rose hip seed oil preparation for topical use in the treatment of skin diseases.
3 sources supporting Japanese Rose for Cold & flu. Includes scientific publications, books, monographs and traditional-use references.
Mechanistic basis
This use is associated with the plant's immunomodulator / immune support action. Further evidence for that pharmacology:
A Rosa rugosa cv. Plena polysaccharide (RPP1) ameliorated AOM/DSS-induced colorectal cancer in mice, reducing colonic polyps, normalising serum IL-1beta and TNF-alpha and remodelling gut microbiota and lipid metabolism, with activation of immune (NLR, PPAR) signalling, indicating immunomodulatory and anti-tumour effects.
Rosa rugosa and Rosa damascena polysaccharides are structurally diverse and show moisturizing, immunomodulation and antioxidant activities. This review compares conventional and novel extraction methods for these polysaccharides and summarises their distribution, antioxidant mechanisms and bioactive applications.