| Literature DB >> 22969831 |
J Sarris1, S Moylan, D A Camfield, M P Pase, D Mischoulon, M Berk, F N Jacka, I Schweitzer.
Abstract
Use of complementary medicines and therapies (CAM) and modification of lifestyle factors such as physical activity, exercise, and diet are being increasingly considered as potential therapeutic options for anxiety disorders. The objective of this metareview was to examine evidence across a broad range of CAM and lifestyle interventions in the treatment of anxiety disorders. In early 2012 we conducted a literature search of PubMed, Scopus, CINAHL, Web of Science, PsycInfo, and the Cochrane Library, for key studies, systematic reviews, and metaanalyses in the area. Our paper found that in respect to treatment of generalized anxiety or specific disorders, CAM evidence revealed current support for the herbal medicine Kava. One isolated study shows benefit for naturopathic medicine, whereas acupuncture, yoga, and Tai chi have tentative supportive evidence, which is hampered by overall poor methodology. The breadth of evidence does not support homeopathy for treating anxiety. Strong support exists for lifestyle modifications including adoption of moderate exercise and mindfulness meditation, whereas dietary improvement, avoidance of caffeine, alcohol, and nicotine offer encouraging preliminary data. In conclusion, certain lifestyle modifications and some CAMs may provide a beneficial role in the treatment of anxiety disorders.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22969831 PMCID: PMC3434451 DOI: 10.1155/2012/809653
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Domains and individual interventions reviewed.
| Lifestyle | Herbal medicine | Nutrient | Mind-body | CAM modality |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical activity | Kava | Multi-vitamins | Meditation | Naturopathic medicine |
| Exercise | Passion flower | Omega-3 | Mindfulness | Massage |
| Diet | Scullcap | Magnesium | Yoga | Acupuncture |
| Caffeine | Bacopa | Inositol | Tai chi | Homeopathy |
| Nicotine | Ginkgo | Aromatherapy | ||
| Alcohol | Lemon balm | |||
| St John's wort |
Summary of nutraceuticals reviewed.
| Nutraceutical | Study references∗ | Study type | Evidence level | Outcomes | Duration | Sample | Mechanisms |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Herbal medicine | |||||||
| Bacopa ( | Stough [ | 2 | Limited | STAI | 3 months | Healthy | 5HT2c, metal chelation, |
| Chamomile ( | Amsterdam [ | 2 | Limited | HAM-A | 8 weeks | GAD | GABA receptor binding and |
| Ginkgo ( | Woelk [ | 2 | Limited | HAM-A | 4 weeks | GAD or | Antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, |
| Kava ( |
Pittler [ | 1 | Positive | HAM-A | Various | Various | Blocks calcium and sodium |
| Lemon balm ( | Kennedy [ | 2 | Limited | Self-rated | Acute | Healthy | Inhibition of GABA-T and MAO- |
| Passion flower ( | Movafegh [ | 2 | Limited | Numerically | Acute, | Surgery patients, GAD | Binds to GABA-A receptors and |
| Scullcap ( | Wolfson [ | 2 | Limited | Self-designed | Acute | Healthy | Possible bindings to the |
| St John's wort ( | Kobak [ | 2 | NonSignificant | HAM-A, | 6 weeks | Depression, | Modulation of monoamine, serotonin, dopamine, and |
|
| |||||||
| Nutrients | |||||||
| Combined nutrients | Carroll [ | 2 | Mixed | State anxiety, | 28 days–12 months | Healthy, healthy | Antioxidant effects and |
| Inositol | Benjamin [ | 2 | Limited | Severity and frequency of | 4–6 weeks | Panic disorder with or without agoraphobia, OCD | Precursor in the |
| Aromatherapy | Lee [ | 1 | Limited | Various. | Various | Various | Possible effect on the GABA |
∗First author, 1: metaanalysis or systematic review, 2: double-blind randomised controlled trial, STAI: state trait anxiety inventory, GAD: generalized anxiety disorder, GABA: gamma-aminobutyric acid, HADS: hospital anxiety and depression scale, HAM-A: hamilton anxiety rating scale, LSA: liebowitz social anxiety scale, YBOCS: yale-brown OCD scale, OCD: obsessive compulsive disorder, ADWAM: adjustment disorder with anxious mood, MAO-A: monoamine oxidase A.