Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine ›› 2013, Vol. 33 ›› Issue (01): 119-124.DOI: 10.1016/s0254-6272(13)60112-0

Previous Articles     Next Articles

Microbial and heavy metal contamination in commonly consumed traditional Chinese herbal medicines

Adelinesuyien Ting, Yiingyng Chow, Weishang Tan   

  1. School of Science, Monash University Sunway Campus, Jalan Lagoon Selatan, Bandar Sunway, 46150 Petaling Jaya, Selangor, Malaysia;
  • Accepted:2013-02-15 Online:2013-02-15 Published:2013-02-15

Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The increasing popularity and widespread use of traditional Chinese herbs as alternative medicine have sparked an interest in understanding their biosafety, especially in decoctions that are consumed. This study aimed to assess the level of microbial and heavy metal contamination in commonly consumed herbal medicine in Malaysia and the effects of boiling on these contamination levels. METHODS: Four commonly consumed Chinese herbal medicine in Malaysia-"Eight Treasure Herba Tea", "Herbal Tea", Xiyangshen (Radix Panacis Quinquefolii) and Dangshen (Radix Codonopsis) were evaluated in this study. Herbal medicines were prepared as boiled and non-boiled decoctions, and their microbial enumeration and heavy metal detection were conducted with plate assay and atomic absorption spectroscopy, respectively. RESULTS: Findings revealed that herbal medicines generally had 6 log10cfu/mL microbial cells and that boiling had significantly reduced microbial contam-inants, where no Bacillus spp., Staphylococcus spp. and Clostridium spp. were recovered. Heavy metals such as Mn, Cu, Cd, Pb, Fe and Zn were also detected from all the samples, generally in low concentrations (

Key words: Decoction processing, Drug contamination, Heavy metal poisoning, nervous system, Microbial consortia, Drugs, Chinese herbal

Cite this article

Adelinesuyien Ting, Yiingyng Chow, Weishang Tan. Microbial and heavy metal contamination in commonly consumed traditional Chinese herbal medicines[J]. Journal of Traditional Chinese Medicine, 2013, 33(01): 119-124.