| Literature DB >> 27713311 |
Dana Ekstein1, Steven C Schachter2.
Abstract
More efficacious and better tolerated treatments for epilepsy are clearly needed. Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) has a long history of use in certain parts of the world and has gained increasing interest over the last decades in Western countries. In countries with a Western-based type of medical system, people with epilepsy (PWE) take natural products or engage in other forms of CAM mainly to enhance general health, but also to prevent seizures or to alleviate symptoms of comorbidities or side effects of antiepileptic medications. In other countries, well developed medical systems, such as traditional Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda, are often the basis for treating PWE. Based on anecdotal reports of efficacy in PWE, natural products from these and other traditions are increasingly being studied in animal models of epilepsy, and candidates for further clinical development have been identified. It is likely, therefore, that natural products will be further evaluated for safety, tolerability and efficacy in PWE with drug-resistant seizures.Entities:
Keywords: botanicals; complementary and alternative medicine (CAM); epilepsy; natural products
Year: 2010 PMID: 27713311 PMCID: PMC4033990 DOI: 10.3390/ph3051426
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Publications reporting on use of CAM in countries with western style medical system.
| Publication | Studied population | % using CAM | Associations | Doctor’s knowledge | Most used CAM (in descending order, where known) | Reason for use | Outcome measures | Most used non-vitamin, non-mineral natural products (in descending order, where known) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gidal
| 465 adults with epilepsy from 9 regions in the US | 31%, within previous year | Associated with high-school education or less. No influence of age, gender, seizure type. | 33% | 13% epilepsy (relaxation, vitamins, herbals, homeopathy); 28% general health/cold prevention; 11% mood difficulties; 5% cognition; 4% fatigue. | NA | Gingko biloba (81% of users; 63% used it for cognition), ginseng (44% of users), St. John’s wort (used by 7% of pts.; 53% for mood and 24% for fatigue) | |
| Peebles
| 92 adults with epilepsy in Ohio (US) | 24% | No significant association with education level, sex, ethnicity, age | 31% | Massage (50%), herbs/supplements (41%), music therapy, meditation, art therapy, aromatherapy, acupuncture | 2% epilepsy (massage, acupuncture and meditation); pain; muscle tension; stress; low energy; cold; depression. | NA | 4 Ginseng, 3 St. John’s wort, 3 melatonin, 3 Ginkgo biloba,1 garlic, 1 black cohosh |
| Waaler
| 198 children with active epilepsy in Norway | 11.60% | Additional neurological deficits | NA | Homeopathy | NA | NA | NA |
| Gross-Tsur
| 115 children with epilepsy in Israel (compared with children with ADHD and control) | 32% | In general - higher education, prior use for current use; for epilepsy and ADHD - longer disease duration, less satisfaction with conventional therapy | NA | Dietary interventions most and also homeopathy, biofeedback, acupuncture, Reike, reflexology, Shiatsu, chiropractice (in all groups) | NA | NA | NA |
| Sirven
| 425 adults with epilepsy in Arizona (US) | 44% for epilepsy, 42% for other conditions | No association with education level | 93% would tell | Prayer, stress management, botanicals, chiropractic (specifically for epilepsy) | 44% epilepsy, 42% other conditions | Stress management, yoga and botanicals subjectively most beneficial. 43% using botanicals for epilepsy had increased seizure frequency; 3 had major side effects (intracranial hemorrhage with ephedra). | General/epilepsy use: 76/13 Garlic, 157/12 gingko, 64/10 soy, 40/11 melatonin, 22/10 kava, 159/8 ginseng, 147/9 St. John’s wort, 89/9 Echinacea, 68/3 cranberry, 40/5 goldenseal, 24/7 grapeseed, 21/4 black cohosh, 33/4 valerian, 14/3 saw palmetto, 7/7 evening primrose, 12/2 licorice, 7/4 hops,3/2 black haw |
| Plunkett
| 187 adults with epilepsy in San Francisco area (US) | 56% | No association with seizure frequency or with having adverse events from AED. | 68% | Vitamins or minerals supplements | 3% epilepsy or AED adverse events; general health; supplementing diet; physician’s recommendation. | NA (19% used products wit cyp450 activity and 14% - potentially epileptogenic agents.) | Garlic, echinacea, St. John’s wort, ephedra, ginseng, gingko, evening primrose |
| Yuncker
| 350 children with neurological conditions (60% had epilepsy) in Pennsylvania (US) | 28% of children with epilepsy (37% of all conditions) | Diagnosed for less than one year | 69% | NA | NA | 87% overall felt CAM was effective and similar to conventional therapy. 40% knew possible side effects. | NA |
| Easterford
| 377 adults with epilepsy in Manchester, UK | 34.60% | Higher education | 37% | NA | 11.1% epilepsy | No significant effect on seizure frequency. CAM was cheap. | NA |
| Liow
| 228 adults with epilepsy in mid west US | 39% | No association with education level | 49% | Prayer/spirituality, megavitamins, chiropractic, stress management | 57 (25%) epilepsy: 33 prayer/spirituality; 14 megavitamins; 11 chiropractic; 11 stress management | Subjective benefit of 74% of 57. Only few side effects. Increased szs in diet pills, chiropractic, ketogenic diet, atkin’s megavitamins. | 10 Cranberry, 8 black cohosh, 7 Echinacea, 6 melatonin, 4 garlic, 4 grape seeds, 4 soy, 4 St. John’s wort, 4 valerian, 3 evening primrose, 2 Ginkgo biloba, 2 ginseng, 1 black haw |
| Murphy
| 671 adults with neurological conditions in Ireland (189 with epilepsy) | 47.6% of patients with epilepsy (63.3% of all conditions) | NA | 25% for all conditions | massage, acupuncture, vitamins, reflexology, yoga, evening primrose/starflower oil, chiropractic, homeopathy (for all conditions) | NA | Most had subjective benefit. Annual cost was 1170.32 euro. | 97 evening primrose/starflower oil, 24 marijuana, 16 St. John’s wort, 16 Gingko biloba, Udo’s oil, fish oil, black cohosh, echinacea, bonemeal, coenzyme Q-10 |
| Kaiboriboon
| 187 adults with epilepsy at UCSF medical center (US) | 56% (current use) | Partial epilepsy and Caucasian race. No association with gender, age, level of education, income, duration of epilepsy or seizure frequency. | 71% | Multivitamins and minerals, folic acid, ginseng,
| 6 epilepsy (kava, skullcap, valerian, folic acid, vit. B6, vit. E, multivitamins, minerals); 35 general health; 13 physician’s recommendation; 13 improve bone density; 10 increase energy; 10 boost immune system; 7 improve memory. | 9 patients reported adverse events that they attributed to these products. None reported aggravation of seizures. 88% of patients spent less than $50 a month and only 5% spent more than $100. | 4 Ginseng, 4 Ginkgo biloba, 4 glucosamine and chondroitin, 3 St. John’s wort, 2 black cohosh, 2 Echinacea, 2 evening primrose, 2 ephedra, 2 caffeine, 2 melatonin, 2 milk thistle, 2 omega 3, 1 kava, 1 skullcap, 1 valerian, 1 grapefruit juice, 1 glutamine, 1 clover/nettles, 1 parsley leaf, 1 DHEA, 1 Coenzyme Q10, 1 ginger, 1 fish oil, 1 garlic, 1 grape seed, 1 L-lysine |
CAM—complementary and alternative medicine; NA—not available; AED—anti-epileptic drug.
Characteristics of natural products used by patients with epilepsy in countries with western based type of medical system.
| Product | Main current medical uses | Main adverse events & interactions | Overall estimated extent of use in PWE* | Possible effects in epilepsy | Potential risks for PWE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Black cohosh ( | Ameliorates menopausal symptoms | Possible hepato-toxicity | 4% | NR | NR |
| Black haw ( | Spasmolytic, sedative, anti asthmatic | NR | <1% | NR | NR |
| Bonemeal [ | Calcium supplementation (not used recently) | Possible prion infection | NR | NR | |
| Seizures secondary to lead poisoning | |||||
| Caffeine [ | Stimulant, antinociceptive | Sympathomimetic and GI symptoms | <1% | NR | Associated with seizures. May interact with CBZ. |
| Chondroitin [ | Anti arthritis & arthralgia | GI symptoms, hypersensitivity, possible anticoagulation (increased INR with Warfarin) | <1% | NR | NR |
| (Red) clover ( | Ameliorates menopausal symptoms | Possibly inhibits aromatase and extrahepatic CYP1A1, 1B1. May increase INR when taken with Warfarin | <1% | NR | NR |
| Coenzyme Q10 [ | Antioxidant, ameliorates CHF and neurodegenerative disorders | May increase risk of bleeding in Warfarin users | <1% | May improve seizures in neurological mitochondrial diseases | NR |
| Cranberry [ | Prevents UTI, cardioprotector, anti-cancer, antioxidant | GI intolerance, weight gain, possibly thrombocytopenia and increase in INR in combination with Warfarin | 9% | NR | NR |
| Inhibited P450 system | |||||
| DHEA
[ | Hormonal replacement therapy in elderly women and men | No adverse events. Induces CYP2B6 | <1% | NR | Possibly associated with seizures |
| No effect in animals | |||||
| Echinacea [ | Enhances immune system functions | Hypersensitivity, GI disturbance, hepatotoxicity with prolonged use; mild effect on CYP3A4 and CYP1A2 | 11% | NR | NR |
| Ephedra [ | Induces weight loss, stimulant | HTN, tachycardia, stroke | <1% | NR | Associated with seizures |
| Evening primrose ( | Ameliorates menopausal symptoms | NR | 2% | Anti-seizure effects (animals) | Possibly associated with seizures |
| Garlic [ | Antioxidant, cardiovascular, cancer prevention, immune stimulant | GI disturbance, dizziness. Possible increase in INR, HTN, arrhythmia. Possible influence on CYP3A4 and inhibitor of CYP2C9/19 | 10% | NR | NR |
| Ginger [ | Prevents cardiovascular disease and cancer, ameliorates GI symptoms, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory | May increase risk of bleeding in warfarin users. Possible inductor of CYP1A2 and 3A4 | <1% | May have antiepileptic effects | NR |
| Ginseng [ | Anxiety, depression, concentration problems, DM, stimulant, menopausal symptoms, sexual dysfunction in men | Possible hepatotoxicity & increased INR, lethargy | 17% | May have anticonvulsive properties | May exacerbate seizures |
| Ginkgo biloba [ | Cognitive enhancer, prevents cardiovascular disease, antioxidant | GI discomfort, anti-coagulant. May inhibit CYP2B6 and induce CYP3A & 1A2, 2C19. | 16% | Leaves and stems may be anticonvulsive | Seeds may be toxic and pro-convulsive. May increase metabolism of AED (PHT, VPA, PB) |
| Glucosamine [ | Anti-arthritis & arthralgia | May increase INR in warfarin users. | <1% | NR | NR |
| Glutamine [ | Enhances healing after injury, especially GI, promotes muscle building | NR | <1% | NR | NR |
| Goldenseal ( | Anti-inflammatory, anti-microbial | Possible hypernatremia, HTN, edema. Strong inhibitor of CYP2D6 & CYP3A4/5, CYP2E1 | 5% | NR | NR |
| Grapefruit juice
[ | Prevents cardiovascular disease and cancer, antioxidant | Inhibits enteric CYP3A4, possibly increases risk of breast cancer | <1% | NR | Increases bioavailability of CBZ, BDZ |
| Grape seeds [ | Prevents cardiovascular disease and cancer, antioxidant | Hypersensitivity, HA, dizziness, nausea. May inhibit CYP2E1 | 4% | NR | NR |
| Hops ( | Ameliorates anxiety, insomnia and menopausal symptoms, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant | Sedation. Possibly inhibits CYP2C9, 1A1/2, 1B1 | <1% | NR | Possibly exacerbates seizure |
| Kava kava ( | Ameliorates depression, anxiety and insomnia, induces local anesthesia | Possibly psychosis, choreoathetosis, hepatotoxicity, dermopathy, lymphopenia, GI disturbances, potential for addiction. Inhibitor of CYP2E1, 1A2, induction of 1A1. | 4% | May benefit | Possibly exacerbate seizures |
| L-lysine [ | Precursor of carnitine, promotes protein building, anti-cancer, anti-viral | NR | <1% | NR | NR |
| Licorice (liquorice or | Expectorant, anti-viral, anti-spasmodic, ameliorates gastric & duodenal ulcers, and menopausal symptoms | In overdose - hypokalemia and increase in BP, decrease testosterone in men. May increase INR when taken with warfarin. Possibly inhibits CYP3A4, 2B6, 2C9. | 2% | NR | NR |
| Marijuana ( | Antinociceptive, ameliorates glaucoma, anti-nausea, muscle relaxant, promotes bone health | Tachycardia, dry mouth, red eyes, euphoria, anxiety, psychosis, memory deficit. Possibly induces CYP2E1 | May benefit | May exacerbate seizures | |
| Melatonin [ | Ameliorates insomnia, circadian rhythm abnormalities, depression, and anxiety | HA, nausea, somnolence | 7% | May benefit | Associated with increased seizure frequency |
| Milk thistle [ | Ameliorates hepatotoxicity and DM, anticancer | Possible downregulation of CYP3A4, 2C9 | <1% | NR | NR |
| Nettles ( | Antinociceptive, anti-arthritis, antioxidant, diuretic, ameliorates BPH | Uterine stimulant | <1% | NR | NR |
| Omega 3/fish oil [ | Cardioprotective, ameliorates depression, dementia, ADHD | Anti-coagulant | <1% | May be beneficial (SUDEP) | NR |
| Parsley leaf [ | Diuretic, ameliorates constipation, promotes bone health | May increase INR when taken with warfarin. Possibly downregulates p450. Possibly stimulates uterine contractions. | <1% | NR | NR |
| Saw palmetto (Serenoa repens) [ | Ameliorates UTI and BPH | GI disturbance, HA, decreased libido. Inhibition of CYP3A4, 2D6, 2C9. | 2% | NR | NR |
| Skullcap (Scutellaria) [ | Sedative, anti-epileptic, hypnotic, anxyolytic, anti-cancer | NR | <1% | May benefit | NR |
| Soy [ | Source of Omega 3 & 6 fatty acids. Ameliorates menopausal symptoms, prevents prostate cancer, and promotes bone health | May increase risk of developing breast cancer. Possibly inhibit CYP2A6, 1A1, 1B1, 3A4. | 8% | NR | NR |
| St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum) [ | Ameliorates depression, pain, ADHD | Possibly hepatotoxicity, visual disturbances, paresthesia, myalgia, GI disturbances, sedation, photosensitivity. Inducer of CYP3A4, 2E1, 2C19, P-glycoprotein. Possible inhibition of CYP2C9/19, 2D6, 3A4, 1A2. Avoid MAO inhibitors and SSRIs. | 13% | Possible benefit | Possibly associated with seizures |
| Valerian [ | Ameliorates anxiety, insomnia, and epilepsy, nociceptive | GI disturbance, drowsiness, HA. Avoid barbiturates. Possibly inhibits CYP2D6, 3A4 | 5% | May benefit | NR |
* The overall extent of use was calculated by combining data from the publications that provided numerical data for the use of specific products. For Ginseng, Gingko biloba and St. John’s wort, the information was taken from the publications by Gidal, Peebles, Sirven, Liow, and Kaiboriboon (on a total of 1407 PWE) and for all other products from the publications by Peebles, Sirven, Liow, and Kaiboriboon (on a total of 942 PWE) (see last column of Table 1 for enumeration of use of natural products). $This reference reports on neurological conditions in general, including epilepsy. PWE—people with epilepsy; NR—not reported; GI—gastro-intestinal; CHF—congestive heart failure; UTI—urinary tract infection; HTN—hypertension; BHP—benign hypertrophy of prostate; SUDEP—sudden unexplained death in epilepsy patients; HA—headache; AED—anti-epileptic drugs; PHT—phenytoin; VPA—valproic acid; PB—phenobarbital; CBZ—carbamazepine; BDZ—benzodiazepines.