Clinical glossary
Acetyl-11-keto-beta-boswellic acid
(AKBA)triterpenoid (boswellic acid)
Context
Boswellia serrata resin contains several boswellic acids: beta-boswellic acid, acetyl-beta-boswellic acid, 11-keto-beta-boswellic acid, and acetyl-11-keto-beta-boswellic acid (AKBA). Of these, AKBA is by a wide margin the most potent 5-LOX modulator in vitro and in vivo. Standardized extracts target 65% AKBA because that concentration delivers the active compound at levels associated with clinical effect in human trials.
Whole-resin boswellia extracts typically contain 1-7% AKBA by weight, far below the therapeutic range. This is why standardization matters in supplement labeling: a generic boswellia label without AKBA disclosure is a black box.
Why it matters for joint health
AKBA is the molecular reason boswellia has a different clinical profile than NSAIDs. By modulating 5-LOX selectively, AKBA reduces leukotriene-driven inflammation without touching the COX pathway, which means no gastric mucosa compromise and no cardiovascular signature associated with long-term NSAID use. The trade-off is slower onset (7-14 days) because modulating a chronic inflammatory signaling enzyme takes days, not hours.
Related terms
References
- Ammon HP. Boswellic acids in chronic inflammatory diseases. Planta Medica. 2006. PMID 17024588
- Sengupta K, Alluri KV, Satish AR, et al. A double blind, randomized, placebo controlled study of 5-Loxin for osteoarthritis of the knee. Arthritis Research & Therapy. 2008. PMID 18667054