We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

Features Partner Sites Information LinkXpress hp
Sign In
Advertise with Us

Download Mobile App




Naturally Derived Plant Compounds Protect Skin during Cancer Radiotherapy

By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 06 Aug 2014
Plant-derived natural compounds may provide protection to the skin from the damaging effects of gamma radiation during cancer radiotherapy, according to new research.

Radiotherapy for cancer involves exposing the patient or their tumor more directly to ionizing radiation, such as X-rays or gamma rays. The radiation irreparably injures the cancer cells. Regrettably, such radiation is also harmful to healthy tissue, in particular, the skin over the site of the tumor, which is then at risk of hair loss, skin problems, and even skin cancer. Because of these disadvantages, finding ways to protect the overlying skin are being actively sought.

Writing in the August/September 2014 issue of the International Journal of Low Radiation, Dr. Faruck Lukmanul Hakkim, from the University of Nizwa (Oman) and Nagasaki University (Japan), and colleagues from Macquarie University (Sydney, NSW, Australia), Bharathiar University (Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India) and Konkuk University (Seoul, Republic of Korea), explained how three abundant and well-evaluated natural products derived from plants can protect the skin against gamma radiation during radiotherapy.

Dr. Hakkim and colleagues discussed in their article the benefits of the organic, antioxidant compounds caffeic acid (CA), rosmarinic acid (RA), and trans-cinnamic acid (TCA) used at nontoxic concentrations. They assessed the radio-protective effect of these compounds against gamma-radiation in terms of reducing levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated in skin cells by clinical relevance dose of gamma ray in the laboratory and in terms of the damage to the genetic material DNA, specifically double strand breaks in laboratory samples of human skin cells (keratinocytes).

The investigators discovered that treating the human skin cells with CA, RA, and TCA can protect the cells by 40, 20, and 15%, respectively, from gamma ray toxicity. The scientists suggested that the protective effect occurs because the compounds soak up the ROS and chemically deactivate them as well as enhancing the body’s natural DNA repair processes.

The investigators suggested that these compounds would be well-suited to be used as skin protectants during combination chemo- and radiotherapy. Further research is ongoing to study the clinical potential of mixtures of the three natural products.

Related Links:

University of Nizwa
Nagasaki University
Macquarie University


Floor‑Mounted Digital X‑Ray System
MasteRad MX30+
Digital Radiographic System
OMNERA 300M
Mobile X-Ray System
K4W
Digital Intelligent Ferromagnetic Detector
Digital Ferromagnetic Detector

Channels

Imaging IT

view channel
Image: Researchers develop a vision-language model trained on large-scale data to generate clinically relevant findings from chest computed tomography images through visual question answering (Ms. Maiko Nagao from Meijo University, Japan)

Interactive AI Tool Supports Explainable Lung Nodule Assessment

Lung cancer is a leading cause of cancer mortality, and timely characterization of pulmonary nodules on chest computed tomography (CT) is essential for directing care. Interpreting nodule morphology demands... Read more

Industry News

view channel
Image: MIM KineticID is 510(k)-pending software for dynamic PET imaging and kinetic modeling, enabling time-based radiotracer analysis for clinical and research decisions (Photo courtesy of GE Healthcare)

GE HealthCare Showcases AI-Enabled Nuclear Medicine Portfolio at SNMMI 2026

Nuclear medicine is expanding rapidly as health systems adopt theranostics and broaden access to radiopharmaceuticals, increasing demand for scalable operations and consistent diagnostic confidence.... Read more
Copyright © 2000-2026 Globetech Media. All rights reserved.