Skip to main content
. 2023 Sep 29;15(19):4216. doi: 10.3390/nu15194216

Table 1.

Studies assessing various herbal remedies in IBS-C.

Author Study Design Participants Intervention Main Findings
Sallon et al. (2002) [11] Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial 61 patients with IBS-C Padma Lax vs. placebo for 12 weeks
2 tablets/day or 1 tablet/day if diarrhea or loose
stools occurred.
1 tablet (482 mg) contained:
Aloes standardized extract (12 mg)
Calumbae root (10 mg)
Condurango bark (10 mg)
Frangula bark (52.5 mg)
Gentian root (35 mg)
Elecampane rhizome (35 mg)
Tropical almond fruit (35 mg)
Long pepper (3.5 mg)
Cascara bark (52.5 mg)
Chinese rhubarb root (70 mg)
Nux vomica seed (1.75 mg)
Ginger root (70 mg).
It also contained 3 non-herbal elements:
Heavy kaolin (25 mg)
Sodium bicarbonate (15 mg)
Sodium sulfate (35 mg).
The excipients used were:
Silicium dioxide (2.4 mg)
Magnesium stearate (4.6 mg).
Statistically significant improvements were found in:
Constipation severity
Number of daily bowel movements
Abdominal pain affecting daily activities
Presence of moderate or severe pain
Abdominal distention severity
Incomplete evacuation
Flatulence.
There were no significant improvements in:
Abdominal distention prevalence
Abdominal pain severity.
10 patients complained of mild side effects:
Slight headache (1 patient)
Nausea (1 patient)
Hoarseness (1 patient)
Diarrhea or loose stools (7 patients) with rapid resolution when lowering dose from 2 tablets/day to 1 tablet/day.
Bensoussan et al. (2015) [12] Two-arm, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial 125 patients with IBS-C CHM vs. placebo for 8 weeks
10 capsules (4.2 g)/day, 5 in the morning and 5 in the night containing:
Paeonia lactiflora PALL., radix (23%)
Citrus aurantium L., Fructus immaturas (20%)
Magnolia officinalis REHD. and WILS., cortex (14.5%)
Citrus reticulata L., pericarpi-um (14.5%)
Glycyrrhiza uralensis FISCH., root (11%)
Rheum palmatum L., radix (10%)
Atractylodes lancea (THUNB.) DC, rhizome (7%).
There were statistically significant changes at 8 weeks in:
Adequate relief (PP)
Bowel habits
Frequency of hard lumpy stools
Bothersomeness of hard lumpy stools
Straining during bowel movement
Stool form
Physical functioning.
There were statistically significant changes at 16 weeks in:
Physical functioning.
There was no significant improvement at 8 weeks in:
Adequate relief (ITT).
There was no significant improvement at 16 weeks in:
Adequate relief (PP, ITT)
Bowel habits
Frequency of hard lumpy stools
Bothersomeness of hard lumpy stools
Straining during bowel movement
Stool form
Abdominal pain
Abdominal distension
Interference with life Overall quality of life
Depression
Anxiety
Stress
Work productivity.
6 patients complained of moderate side effects:
Diarrhea (3 patients)
Blood in urine (1 patient)
Increased bloating (1 patient)
Dizziness and headaches (1 patient).
Pazhouh et al. (2020) [13] Block-randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial 70 patients with IBS-C PHS vs. placebo for 6 weeks
5 mL every 8 h of the syrup prepared with:
Artemisia Absinthium (100 mg)
Cuscuta Campestris (100 mg)
Cassia Fistula (230 mg)
Echium Amoenium (270 mg)
Mellisa Officinalis (190 mg)
British Pharmacopoeia syrup to make the mixture 100 mL.
There was a significant improvement in:
Positive responses to treatment
Severity score
Bristol Stool Score.
There was no significant improvement in:
Anxiety score
Depression score.
4 patients complained of negligible side effects:
Headache (2 patients)
Drowsiness (1 patient)
Increase in menstrual bleeding (1 patient).
Pourmasoumi et al. (2019) [14] Single-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial 142 patients with IBS-C Flixweed vs. fig vs. placebo for 4 months
60 g flixweed and 90 g fig/day, half before breakfast and half before lunch.
Statistically significant improvements were found in:
IBS Severity Score System
Quality of life
Abdominal pain frequency
Interference of life
Dissatisfaction with bowel habits.
No significant difference was found in:
Abdominal pain severity
C-reactive protein levels.
There was no statistically significant difference between flixweed and fig.
No adverse effects were reported.
Brown et al. (2015) [15] Single-site, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial 16 patients with IBS-C Blended extract of Quebracho, Conker Tree, and M. balsamea Willd vs. placebo for 2 weeks
Extract consisting of:
Quebracho (150 mg)
Conker Tree (470 mg)
M. balsamea Willd oil (0.2 mL).
There was a significant improvement in:
Constipation
Bloating.
No side effects were reported.
Chang et al. (2010) [16] Restricted randomization (3:1), placebo-controlled clinical trial 76 patients, 60 with IBS-C and 16 healthy Kiwifruit vs. placebo for 4 weeks
2 Hayward green kiwifruits/day.
Statistically significant improvements were found in:
Defecation frequency
Colon transit time.
No significant improvement was found in:
Fecal volume change
Life stress
Post-defecation feelings.
No adverse effects were reported.
Yu et al. (2005) [17] Randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial 47 patients with IBS-C Modified Sinisan formula vs. Cisapride for 8 weeks
1 dose divided into 2 portions consisting of:
Thorowax root (10 g)
Immature bitter orange (10 g)
Aucklandia root (10 g)
Spice-bush root (10 g)
Bighead atractylodes rhizome (20 g)
White peony root (10 g)
Ligusticum chuanxiong rhizome (10 g)
Chinese angelica root (10 g)
Licorice (5 g)
water decocted.
Statistically significant differences were found in:
Efficacy
Symptom scoring
Recurrence rate
Rectal threshold feeling
Maximal tolerance volume
Rectum compliance.
No significant difference was found in:
Anal resting pressure
Anal systolic pressure
Anal diastolic pressure.
No side effects are mentioned.
Ricci et al. (2022) [18] interventional, prospective, multicentric, randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial 56 patients with IBS Geraniol vs. placebo for 4 weeks
1 capsule (470 mg)/day consisting of:
Palmrose EO high geraniol (90 mg)
Pulverized Zyngiber officinalis root (360 mg).
The excipients used were:
Vegetal magnesium stearate (10 mg)
Silicon dioxide (10 mg).
IBS-SSS
GM composition
Inflammatory markers
There was a statistically significant difference in:
Abdominal Pain
Days with abdominal Pain in the last 10
Bloating
Satisfaction bowel habits
IBS-SSS Score
IBSS-SSS Score variations
Responders (reduction 50 points IBS-SSS).
There was no difference in:
Interference with daily activities.
2 patients complained of side effects, 1 of which were unspecified gastric symptoms.
Significant reduction in IBS-SSS in the geraniol group.
Increase in the Ruminococcaceae and Oscillospira species and decrease in the Erysipelotrichaceae and Clostridiaceae families.
No changes when it comes to inflammatory biomarkers.

CHM: Chinese Herbal Medicine; IBS-SSS: IBS Symptom Severity Scale; PHS: Persian herbal syrup; GM: Gut Microbiota.