Anti-inflammatory properties of Dendrobium: A systematic review of pharmacological mechanisms.
Yang Bei-Qi, Tang Chun-Yan, Zhi Ting-Ting, He Tong-Tong, Luo Hua-Ling, Shi Zhan-Ming, Yang Shi-Yi, Tang Jing
Abstract
ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE: In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), Dendrobium species have long been used to alleviate various inflammatory conditions, particularly those characterized by Yin deficiency with internal heat and stomach deficiency-heat, including impaired fluid production, stomach Qi dysfunction, and poor appetite. The inflammatory response is regulated by multiple signaling pathways that drive disease pathogenesis, making these pathways promising targets for anti-inflammatory therapy. Medicinal Dendrobium, enriched with anti-inflammatory bioactive constituents, exhibits substantial systemic anti-inflammatory activity. Its growing research interest stems from favorable properties such as low toxicity, broad therapeutic efficacy, and minimal risk of drug resistance. AIM OF THE STUDY: Medicinal Dendrobium and its bioactive constituents have demonstrated significant anti-inflammatory properties, underscoring their pharmacological potential. Nevertheless, substantial efforts remain an urgent priority to advance the translation of basic research findings into clinical applications. Therefore, pharmacological studies published within the past six years were systematically reviewed to elucidate the mechanisms by which Medicinal Dendrobium and its bioactive constituents modulate inflammatory processes, thereby evaluating their potential as multi-targeted natural anti-inflammatories. This will facilitate the translation of anti-inflammatory research on medicinal Dendrobium from basic research to clinical investigation, thereby laying a solid foundation for its eventual clinical application in managing inflammatory diseases. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A literature search and screening strictly followed the PRISMA 2020 guidelines and employed a predefined Boolean strategy. A comprehensive search was conducted across Web of Science, PubMed, Elsevier, ScienceDirect, Scopus, CNKI, Wanfang Data, Baidu Scholar, and Google Scholar. No language restrictions were applied; this review includes key findings from Chinese-language literature. The predefined keywords included "Dendrobium," "Shihu," "bioactive constituents," "anti-inflammatory," "cytokines," "signaling pathways," as well as their corresponding Chinese terms. Taxonomic validation was conducted using the World Flora Online (http://www.worldfloraonline.org) and the Medicinal Plant Names Services (http://mpns.kew.org) databases. RESULTS: Eight Medicinal Dendrobium species and their bioactive constituents-such as polysaccharides, alkaloids, flavonoids, bibenzyls, polyphenols and stilbenoids-exert anti-inflammatory effects by modulating multiple signaling cascades, including NF-κB, MAPK/NF-κB, TLR4/NF-κB, PI3K/AKT, Nrf2/HO-1, JAK/STAT, and AMPK/SIRT1 pathways, indicating their multi-target therapeutic potential for inflammatory diseases. This review further underscores the innovative role of Dendrobium in regulating these pathways and its potential for integration with conventional pharmacological treatments, supporting its synergistic use in precision medicine. CONCLUSIONS: Medicinal Dendrobium represents a promising ethnopharmacological resource, exhibiting broad-spectrum anti-inflammatory effects through multi-target, multi-pathway, and multi-organ mechanisms. To advance its modernization, therapeutic development, and clinical translation, future research should prioritize several key directions: establishing standardized quality control system and prioritizing the structures of core bioactive constituents; applying a multi-omics approach combined with artificial intelligence-assisted modeling, network pharmacology and advanced molecular imaging techniques to systematically map its systemic anti-inflammatory regulatory network; strengthening systematic pharmacokinetic and bioavailability studies; exploring precision and synergy delivery formulations; and conducting rigorous assessments of safety profiles and side-effect management. By focusing on these priorities, research can further elucidate the systemic anti-inflammatory mechanisms of medicinal Dendrobium, thereby bridging its traditional use with contemporary precision medicine, and supporting integrated interventions for complex inflammatory diseases.
Key Findings
- Medicinal Dendrobium species have significant anti-inflammatory properties relevant to conditions characterized by Yin deficiency and internal heat.
- Dendrobium's bioactive constituents modulate multiple inflammatory signaling pathways, contributing to systemic anti-inflammatory effects.
- The low toxicity, broad therapeutic efficacy, and minimal risk of drug resistance make Dendrobium a promising multi-targeted natural anti-inflammatory agent.
Clinical Significance
The anti-inflammatory mechanisms of Medicinal Dendrobium suggest its potential as a safe and effective natural therapy for managing inflammatory diseases, warranting further clinical investigation to translate these findings into therapeutic applications.
Citation
Yang Bei-Qi, Tang Chun-Yan, Zhi Ting-Tinget al.. Anti-inflammatory properties of Dendrobium: A systematic review of pharmacological mechanisms. Journal of ethnopharmacology. 2026-May-10.