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An Interview with Dr. Dan Wen, President of Honso®
USA, Inc. Part II. |
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| JG: Could you please elaborate
on the Japanese industry standard for manufacturing processes in creating
herbal granulated powders? |
DW: "Certainly. Crude extract
powder is manufactured in five processes. These are: 1) slicing and
compounding; 2) extraction; 3) solid-liquid separation; 4) condensation;
and 5) drying."
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| JG: OK. How exactly do
you accomplish slicing and compounding? |
DW: "Raw herbs what we call
"crude drugs" are sliced to predetermined sizes weighed
and compounded in quantities depending on what is needed for particular
formulas. Since the raw herbs differ from one to another in shape,
size and the way they should be sliced, particular slicing methods
are selected according to the characteristics of raw herbs involved.
We weigh and compound the raw herbs in quantities corresponding to
specified production units in accordance with the formulas blending
ratio, which is how many parts each herb gets in a particular
formula."
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| JG: All right. And the
extraction process itself? |
DW: "In the extraction process,
active constituents are extracted from raw herbs as herbalists have
traditionally done, by water decoction. As the extraction apparatus
we use a heat control system capable of precisely controlling a boiling
condition, for up to several hundred kilograms of herbs per run. We
add water 20 times the weight of the raw herbs and heat them to 100
°C in less than 20 minutes while stirring, and we then extract
the crude solution for 50 minutes after this temperature is reached."
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| JG: OK. Whats next? |
DW: "Then theres the
solid-liquid separation. This process separates the solid residue
of raw herbs from the liquid after extraction. A series of operations
ranging from water purging, heating, extraction and separation are
sequence-controlled with the aid of system features to predetermine
operating conditions and monitor performance to assure each run is
the same. We separate fluid fraction from solid fraction by first
80 and then 200 mesh sieves per the Japanese industry standard."
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| JG: So the next step is
condensation, I believe? |
DW: "Yes. In the condensation
process, water is purged off the extracted liquid before the liquid
goes into the drying process. In the case of, for example, Xiao Chai
Hu Tang (Sho-Saiko-To in Japanese), a low temperature vacuum extraction
method has been adopted. This method can evaporate water at low temperatures
of 30 to 40 °C. and minimize thermal deterioration of extracted
liquid constituents. We vacuum concentrate the extract to a five-percent
volume before spray-drying."
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| JG: And the drying process? |
DW: "This is the process
of dehydrating the condensed liquid for production of dry extract
powder. The spray-drying machine incorporates high-tech applied functions
because Sho-Saiko-To Extract in its liquid phase is like slurry, and
dry extract powder is highly moisture-absorbent."
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| JG: But you still havent
created granules yet, have you? |
DW: "No, thats the
final part. First we compressively mold and crush the dry extract
powder, and then we fill and pack the product containers."
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| JG: Please elaborate on
granulation. |
DW: "In the compressive molding
and crushing process, dry extract powder is blended with a binder
or excipient, usually rice starch and crystalline cellulose, then
temporarily compression-molded and finally crushed and filtered for
uniform size. This process uses a special molding machine which provides
uniform, stable and quick compression-molding and a crusher capable
of crushing the moldings into a desired particle size. Lastly, we
use an automatic weighing machine to assure filling the packets in
exact quantities."
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| JG: This all sounds pretty
thorough, but what about the quality control youre so proud
of? Could you walk us through the whole process a bit more precisely? |
DW: "Well, I believe what
you want is this. First the raw herbs are quality checked. Then they
are unpacked, graded and selected for use, then quality checked again.
The herbs are then sliced and again quality checked. After that, the
sliced herbs are weighed and mixed, then extracted, filtered and separated,
and another quality check is performed. Following the next step, condensation,
a quality check is again performed. Then the herbs are spray-dried
and formed into crude extract powder, and a quality check is done.
Then the herbs are sieved and weighed, blended and granulated, and
the last quality check is done. The granules are divided into proper
doses, and filling and packing create the final product."
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| JG: OK, all these quality
checks. Please elaborate. How do you quality check the raw herbs when
they first come in? |
DW: "According to Japanese
Importing GMP (IGMP) guideline, first we make sure we have what we
ordered by identifying the description of the raw herbs based on characteristic
appearance, taste, odor and color. We identify where the plant was
grown and harvested and choose the specific method of preparation
based on tissue and cell morphology, and differentiate it from similar
raw herbs."
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| JG: This involves laboratory
testing, doesnt it? |
DW: "Yes. The primary test
is for key compounds identification. Bio-markers such as the alkaloids,
saponins and flavonoids in Sho-Saiko-To show specific spots through
Thin-Layer Chromatography (TLC) testing. Then we assay the exact content
of bio-markers in raw herbs using High-Performance Liquid Chromatography
(HPLC). In the case of Sho-Saiko-To we assay for saikosaponin a and
d, baicalin and glycyrrhizin. Then we perform what we call the extract
content test to determine the content of ingredients soluble in water,
absolute ethanol or ether as overall content of the active ingredients.
This test is requested by the Japanese Ministry of Health and Welfare.
Then we perform the loss-of-drying test to determine water content
in the raw herbs as confirmation of proper production procedures and
storage stability. A total ash test is done to determine inorganic
content in the raw herbs. Then we do an acid-insoluble ash test to
identify the amount of earth and sand attached to the raw herbs. Finally
we perform a test to determine the content of essential oils in the
raw herbs."
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| JG: OK, Dan, I think thats
all the time we have now. Next time I want to learn more about quality
checking after the actual product preparation begins, and I want to
begin talking about the controversial subject of standardization. |
DW: "I look forward to it."
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