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Herbal
Supplements – New Technology for Better Products
Kwan H Lo
The use of new technology such
as supercritical extraction has enabled the production of superior
herbal supplements with higher potency, stability and no chemical
residues.
Herbal supplements have many health
benefits. Many of them are potent antioxidants. Some have
antiviral, antifungal, antibacterial, and antitumor properties.
Some improve general bodily functions such as digestion, mental
clarity, circulation, hormonal balance, etc. Many people also
consume herbal supplements to prevent and treat common ailments
and improve the overall well beings.
Herbal
supplements contain active constituents extracted from dry or fresh
herbs. These active constituents can be divided into two main groups based
on their chemical properties, hydrophilic (water loving) and lipophilic
(oil loving). Traditionally, hydrophilic compounds are extracted in water
and ethanol whereas lipophilic compounds are extracted in chemical
solvents such as acetone and hexane.
The use of chemical solvents in extracting
lipophilic compounds has raised some health, environmental and safety
concerns in recently years. First of all, there is a small amount of toxic
residues left after the extraction process, which can pose a health threat
to the consumers. Secondly, the disposal of organic solvents is
detrimental to the environment. And lastly, these chemical solvents are
toxic and highly volatile, handling of these chemicals require extreme
caution.
Unfortunately, the major active constituents
in many herbs such as ginger, St. John’s Wort, valerian, rosemary are
lipophilic. In the past, they were extracted by organic solvents such as
acetone and hexane. But the advance in new technologies has provided safer
alternative to the food industry. Supercritical fluid extraction is one of
these new technologies. It allows health food manufacturers to produce
cleaner, more potent and stable herbal products.
Supercritical fluid extraction (SFE) using
carbon dioxide (CO2) is an improved extraction method. Carbon dioxide is
non-toxic, non-explosive and can be readily removed from the finished
products and recycled. It does not pose any hazardous problems to the
environment. The extraction takes place without high temperature heating
and boiling so the extracted products are more stable. In addition, the
extraction yields a highly concentrated herbal extract.
In comparison, chemical extraction using
organic solvents leaves adsorbed chemical residues in the finished
products. The solvents may react with the active compounds and degrade
them. To remove the solvents from the extracted products, high temperature
heating is required, which may degrade the active constituents. As a
result, the quality of the extracted products is generally inferior to
that from supercritical fluid extraction.
The commercial application of supercritical
fluid technology is still limited to few high valued products due to high
investment costs and new operation.
New Chapter is one premium brand producing herbal and fatty acid
supplements using this new technology. With the increasing public demand
of purer, cleaner nutritional supplements, one may assume that more
companies would be applying this new extraction technology in the near
future.
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