Propolis Has Proved To Be A Product With Ability To Have
Beneficial Effects For Health
Main Category:
Complementary Medicine /
Alternative Medicine
Article Date: 28 Oct 2009 - 3:00 PDT
Growing concerns about health has caused the scientific community to
focus their interest on investigating functional foods which contribute
to boosting the prevention and reduction of the risk of suffering from
certain illnesses. The benefits of this product lies in its composition
and, thus, its study, identification and subsequent extraction provides a
useful tool which enables making high added-value products, given their
high concentration of biologically active compounds.
Over the past 5 years, Neiker-Tecnalia, in collaboration with the
Fundación Kalitatea, apicultural associations in the Autonomous Community
of the Basque Country, honey producing plants and Basque governmental
bodies, has undertaken R+D projects associated with the beekeeping
sector. Various products derived from the beehive have been studied and
propolis has proved to be a product having beneficial results for human
health.
Propolis (Pro-before, Polis-city = defence of the city), is the resinous
substance that bees gather from the leaf buds of trees and certain
vegetables. The bee gathers this and transforms it in order to disinfect
the beehive, seal cracks, build panels, as well as using it as a
microbiocidal agent, disinfectant and also for embalming intruders
otherwise difficult to expel due to their size. Propolis is, thus,
directly responsible for guaranteeing the asepsis of the beehives,
locations prone to developing viruses and bacteria, given their
conditions of temperature and humidity.
Although the precise composition of propolis depends on the zone of
beehive activity (climate, surrounding vegetation, and so on), as a rough
guide, we can mention the following: resins and balsams (50-60%), waxes
(20-25%), essential oils (5-10%), pollen (5%), others (minerals, enzymes,
etc. 5%).
The fraction of resins and balsams is the one that contains most of the
biologically active compounds, mainly phenolic ones derived from the
vegetable kingdom and having proven pharmacological abilities. Due to the
great number of active ingredients present, tincture (alcoholic extract)
of propolis is well-known and used for its therapeutic properties,
principally for its stimulant action on the organism's defence system.
Notable amongst its properties are its antioxidant and anti-microbial
action, its activity as a stimulant and its healing, analgesic,
anaesthetic and anti-inflammatory activity.
The study of the biological activity of this product was undertaken
following two lines of work: (a) a study of the antioxidant activity and
(b) a study of the anti-microbial action.
Antioxidant properties
The antioxidant activity trials provided knowledge about the capacity
of the product under study (propolis) for neutralising free radicals.
These radicals represent damaged molecules, generated both in endogenous
and exogenous ways, capable of causing damage at cell level, and causing
the onset of future degenerative illnesses, such as
cancer, Alzeheimer,
and so on.
A diet rich in antioxidants minimises the risk of the onset of this kind
of illness, and so the evaluation of the antioxidant activity of a
product when establishing its preventative potential is of great
interest.
This type of trial involves the artificial generation of free radicals in
the laboratory and which are subsequently made to react with the sample
to which the antioxidant properties are attributed, in order to estimate
their capacity for neutralisation. To this end, three spectrophotometric
techniques were applied.
Antimicrobial properties
The test for anti-microbial action enables the evaluation of the
inhibition exercised on the growth of certain microorganisms by the
product under study. The MIC (Minimum Inhibitory Concentration)
methodology involved the diffusion of the substance under study in a
medium in which the growth of the microorganisms is optimum. If the
substance diffused has a capacity to impede the growth of the chosen
microorganism, a halo will appear around the central point where the
product has been deposited. Otherwise, the medium will remain
unaltered.
To carry out this trial the strains were activated in an optimum medium
containing the necessary nutrients for the growth/development of the
microorganism. When growth reached the Macfarlane index, close to 0.5,
agar was added and seeded in rectangular plaques. Once solidified, the
plaques were drilled and, by means of templates, various concentrations
of propolis (0.1-50%) were deposited. All the concentrations were tested
in triplicate. The plaques were incubated at 37 ºC and, after this, the
presence/absence of the halos of inhibition was detected and which
provided a visualised measurement of the inhibition exercised by the
propolis on the growth of the microorganism used. These halos of
inhibition were measured with calibres and the values obtained were
extrapolated using as a template a plaque seeded with various
concentrations of phenol (1-10%), which has a powerful biocide
activity.
The MIC trials were undertaken with the following
microorganisms:
--
Streptococcus mutans (dental caries)
--
Candida albicans (vaginal infections)
--
Salmonella tiphy (salmonellosis)
--
Helicobacter pylori (stomach ulcer)
--
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (opportunistic role in asepsis of Aids
sufferers, leukemia…)
The microorganisms selected were bacteria, yeasts and fungi responsible
for common and very heterogeneous complaints.
Antioxidant capacity
The antioxidant activity trials were carried out dissolving propolis
in two types of solvent: 70% ethanol and propylenglycol.
The results coincided with what was expected, as this product has a high
quantity of biologically active components, outstanding amongst these
being the flavonoids (known for their high antioxidant power). The
flavonoids are in fact most responsible for all the medicinal properties
attributable to propolis: antibacterial, antimycotic, antifungal,
antiviral, antitubercular, cytostatic, antiallergic, antioxidant,
antitoxic, hypotensor, haemostatic, immunogenetic and
antiparasitical.
The prepared ethanol extracts showed a high inhibition of the radicals
employed. The values were within the established ranges. Although there
were significant differences between them, these may have been due to the
location of the
hives as well as the
degree of impurities present in the same.
As can be seen from the results, there were small differences between the
different extracts (ethanol and propylenglycol), although these were not
significant. The values fluctuate and, in the case of propylenglycol,
they were less, but this variation did not appear to affect the
composition of the final product in any drastic manner.
To date, in the literature consulted, no antioxidant capacity values have
been found greater than those obtained for propolis, for any of the
products/foods analysed, using this type of methodology.
Antimicrobial capacity
The development and growth of all these microorganisms studied were
seen to be inhibited in the presence of different concentrations of
propolis. The minimum inhibitory concentrations were produced at very low
concentrations of the product, thus corroborating the high antimicrobial
potential of the product. These results show that propolis is made up of
compounds with high antimicrobiological activity, probably derived from
its high content of phenolic, flavonoid compounds … originating from the
vegetable kingdom.
Source: Elhuyar Fundazioa
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