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Swertia chirayita ameliorates MAFLD by improving intestinal microenvironment and hepatic lipogenesis.

Gou X, Shen Y, Liu F, Wang Y, Zong Y

Medicinal Plants

Chirayita grows wild across Himalayan foothills and has been brewed as a bitter tonic tea for centuries — this study gives hard molecular evidence for what Tibetan, Indian, and Nepali herbalists have long observed about its liver-protective effects.

Researchers gave rats with fatty liver disease an extract of chirayita, a famously bitter herb used for generations in Himalayan traditional medicine. The herb helped restore the balance of microbes living in the gut, repaired the gut lining so fewer harmful substances leaked into the body, and shut down the liver's runaway fat-making machinery. The result was healthier liver tissue, better blood sugar control, and lower inflammation — all without drugs.

Key Findings

1

SC treatment significantly reduced liver fat accumulation and improved liver enzyme markers (AST and ALT) in rats fed a high-fat diet for 12 weeks

2

SC restored diversity across multiple kingdoms of gut microbiota (bacteria, fungi, archaea, and viruses) and increased beneficial short-chain fatty acids including butyric, acetic, and propionic acid

3

SC activated the FXR/FGF15 bile acid signaling pathway, which suppressed SREBP-1c protein expression and thereby inhibited hepatic fat synthesis

chevron_right Technical Summary

A traditional Himalayan herb called chirayita was shown to significantly reduce fatty liver disease in rats by rebalancing gut bacteria, strengthening the intestinal barrier, and blocking fat buildup in the liver through a chain of molecular signals triggered by bile acids.

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Abstract Preview

Metabolic-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD) is emerging as a very serious threat to human health. The search for effective remedies for MAFLD from natural herbs is gaining increasing attention...

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hub This connects to 12 other discoveries — Chirayita, Swertia medicinal-plants, ethnobotany, gut-microbiome +2 more 5 related articles

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