A voice for
herbal medicine

We share traditional, scientific and practical insights written by experienced herbalists and health experts from the world of herbal medicine and natural health

← Back to Insights

Pyrrolizidine alkaloids: What you need to know

  • Thomas Brendler
    Thomas Brendler

    For the last 22 years, I have developed and managed projects for industry on the use of plants in medicine, food and cosmetics. As a consultant to the Millennium Challenge Corporation, the Centre for Development of Enterprise and the International Trade Centre I have been involved in the preparation, management and execution of various public funded research projects. In 2005 I co-founded the Association of African Medicinal Plants Standards. I currently serve as director of AAMPS and editor-in-chief of the AAMPS African Herbal Pharmacopoeia (2010). I have been author of Herb-CD®, a digital encyclopaedia of medicinal plants, and co-authored, edited and contributed to a wide range of publications on phytotherapy and natural product regulation, most notably “Physician’s Desk Reference for Herbal Medicines”, “Medicinal and Aromatic Plants of Indian Ocean Islands” and “A Practical Guide To Licensing Herbal Medicinal Products”.

    I am a member of the editorial board of Phytotherapy Research and a regular peer reviewer for Journal of Ethnopharmacology, Ethnobotany Research & Applications, Economic Botany and Herbalgram. I also contributed to the translation into English of the German Commission E monographs on medicinal plants. From 2009-2010 I spent one year as a visiting scholar at Rutgers University (NJ, USA), Department of Plant Biology and Pathology, Natural Product Research Group.

  • 8:18 reading time (ish)
  • Western herbal medicine

What are pyrrolizidine alkaloids, are they dangerous and what is being done to reduce the risk of contamination?

Recent news reported herbal products having been found to be contaminated with so-called pyrrolizidine alkaloids. One of these findings even led to a recall of six batches of an herbal product containing St John’s Wort in February this year (MHRA, 2016). What are pyrrolizidine alkaloids, why are they so dangerous and what is being done to reduce the risk of contamination?

What are pyrrolizidine alkaloids?

Pyrrolizidine alkaloids: What you need to know

Alkaloids are biologically active chemical compounds which may have some pharmacological activity, are often toxic, and, in many cases, have medicinal or ecological use. Alkaloids are generally non-toxic to the organisms producing them, making their toxicity selective and dependent on different organisms as well as the chemical structure of alkaloids themselves.

Chemically, pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs) are made up of two entities – a basic amino alcohol part, referred to as a necine (or the pyrrolizidine nucleus), and one or more acids (necic acids) that esterify the alcohol groups of the necines (Huxtable, 1980; Ober & Kaltenegger, 2009).

Thomas Brendler

For the last 22 years, I have developed and managed projects for industry on the use of plants in medicine, food and cosmetics. As a consultant to the Millennium Challenge Corporation, the Centre for... Read more

Sign up to our Newsletter

Sign up to our newsletter to receive the very latest in herbal insights.

Sign up to our newsletter