“…Currently, extracts from horse‐chestnut seeds are widely used to treat peripheral vascular disorders including chronic venous insufficiency, haemorrhoids and post‐operative oedema (Dickson, Gallagher, McIntyre, Suter, & Tan, ; Dudek‐Makuch & Studzińska‐Sroka, ; Facino, Carini, Stefani, Aldini, & Saibene, ; Gurel et al., ; Pittler & Ernst, ; Ruffini, Belcaro, Cesarone, & Dugall, ; Suter, Bommer, & Rechner, ; Underland, Sæterdal, & Nilsen, ), as a preventative of dental plaque and periodontitis in toothpaste (Aravind, Lakshmi, & Arun, ; Kim et al., ), and to counter male infertility by improving sperm quality (Fang et al., ). Saponin extracts have been used to prevent colon cancer in rats (Szabadosova et al., ) and may also reduce growth of tumours in a number of cancers in humans (Cheong et al., ; Geran, Greenberg, McDonald, Schumacher, & Abbott, ; Turkekul et al., ). Rat and mice models have been used to show that seed extracts also relieve diabetic nephropathy and thromboses (Ahmad et al., ; Elmas, Erbas, & Yigitturk, ), reduce ethanol absorption (Yoshikawa et al., ), reduce cholesterol in mice fed a high‐fat diet (Avcı, Küçükkurt, Akkol, & Yeşilada, ) and protect against bacterial endotoxemic injuries in mice livers (Jiang et al., ).…”