| Literature DB >> 28465709 |
Damiana Scuteri1, Luigi Antonio Morrone1, Laura Rombolà1, Pina Rosa Avato2, Anna Rita Bilia3, Maria Tiziana Corasaniti4, Shinobu Sakurada5, Tsukasa Sakurada6, Giacinto Bagetta1.
Abstract
The treatment of agitation and aggression, typical Behavioural and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia (BPSDs) of Alzheimer's Disease (AD), is one of the most complicated aspects of handling patients suffering from dementia. Currently, the management of these symptoms often associated with an increased pain perception, which notably reduces the patients' quality of life (QoL), relies on the employment of antipsychotic drugs. Unfortunately, the use of these pharmacological agents has some limits: in the long term, they do not result in being equally effective as in the first weeks of treatment and they present important side effects. Therefore, there is growing interest, supported by clinical evidence, in aromatherapy for the control of agitation, aggression, and psychotic symptoms. Some molecular mechanisms have been proposed to explain the behavioural effects of essential oils, as the whole phytocomplex or the single components, but important basic research effort is still needed. For this reason, rigorous preclinical studies are necessary in order to understand the pharmacological basis of aromatherapy in the treatment of BPSDs and to widen the cluster of effective essential oils in pharmacotherapeutic practice.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28465709 PMCID: PMC5390566 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9416305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Figure 1PubMed search on essential oils. An exponential growth of scientific production about essential oils is displayed in the figure from the 80s to 2016.
Main studies supporting the use of Melissa officinalis in aromatherapy.
| Study | Main characteristics |
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| Ballard et al., 2002. | Placebo-controlled trial, conducted on seventy-two demented resident in care facilities in the UK (seventy-one out of whom completed the trial), demonstrating that |
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| Akhondzadeh et al., 2003. | Parallel group, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, involving aged patients (from 65 to 80 years of age) suffering from mild-moderate AD, who were given 60 drops/day of lemon balm extract. Lemon balm exerted positive effects both on cognition (according to the ADAS-cog and the CDR-SB) and on agitation as side effect at 4 months. |
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| Dastmalchi et al., 2009. | Fractionation of the crude lemon balm hydroalcoholic extract, demonstrating anticholinesterase activity of most of the fractions, that resulted in being more active than the whole extract. The constituents of the most active fractions are |
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| Kennedy et al., 2003. | Two-phase study: preliminary evaluation of the AChE inhibition and of nicotinic and muscarinic receptor-binding properties for eight samples of lemon balm dried leaves in human postmortem occipital cortex tissue and subsequent administration to 20 healthy young participants of the sample that resulted to have the highest cholinergic activity. The effects on cognition and mood were examined in a multiple-dose, multiple time-point, double-blind, placebo-controlled, balanced crossover study. The obtained data supported the cholinergic receptor-binding properties of |
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| Guginski et al., 2009. | Study performed using the formalin test in mice, in which the |
Studies supporting the use of Lavandula officinalis in aromatherapy.
| Study | Main characteristics |
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| Barocelli et al., 2004. | In the hot plate test the lavender oil inhalation induced analgesic activity, which was inhibited by naloxone, atropine, and mecamylamine before treatment, thus supporting the involvement of both opioidergic and cholinergic pathways. |
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| Holmes et al., 2002. | A placebo-controlled trial including 15 demented patients affected with agitation, as assessed by the PAS, which reported some effectiveness of 2% lavender oil aromatherapy stream. |
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| Lin et al., 2007. | A cross-over randomized trial, conducted on 70 Chinese aged demented patients, which suggested the efficacy of lavender administered by inhalatory route as adjunctive therapy for the management of agitation. |
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| Jimbo et al., 2009. | A group of 28 demented old patients, 17 of whom suffering from AD, was exposed to the aroma of 0.04 mL lemon and 0.08 mL rosemary essential oil in the morning and to the aroma of 0.08 mL lavender and 0.04 mL orange essential oils in the evening, in order to improve concentration and memory in the morning and to make the patients quiet in the evening. The results obtained so far support the clinical use of aromatherapy in AD patients, also when performed using more than one single essential oil. |