51st Annual American Academy of
Family Physicians Scientific Assembly
[Medscape, 1999. © 1999 Medscape, Inc.]
Herbal Therapies
Steven B. Tamarin, MD
Complementary and alternative medicine are of keen interest to patients, who often come to
their physicians with questions about the effectiveness of a broad range of
"natural" remedies. Several presentations at this year's AAFP Scientific
Assembly addressed this topic, including 2 seminars on medicinal herbs.
One presentation, by Ellen Hughes, MD,[1] associate professor of medicine and interim
director of the Oscher Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of California,
San Francisco, was canceled
because of Hurricane Floyd. However, her handout was made available to attendees. The
other presentation was by Raul Zimmerman, MD,[2] a clinical assistant professor of family
medicine at the University of
South Florida College of Medicine.
A Long History
Plants have been used for their medicinal value for thousands of years. Most early
medications and approximately 25% of our current
prescriptions are plant-based. Botanicals have been used as medication in this country,
although their use has been confined to rural and other discrete areas. In Europe, notably
in the United Kingdom, Germany, and Japan, naturopathy, or the treatment of diseases using
plant-based therapies, has achieved the status of an accepted discipline. In these
countries, students are formally trained in the discipline and the
quality of herbal medications is regulated as much as we monitor pharmaceuticals in this
country.
Scope of Use
Americans spent more than $4 billion on herbal medications in 1997.[3,4] It is estimated
that in 1993, 60 million Americans used alternative
therapies at a cost of $13.7 billion. Many of these patients use herbal preparations in
addition to prescription drugs; approximately 70% never
mention it to their physicians.
Whether or not physicians believe that herbals have value, patients are using them. The
AAFP presentations underlined the need, therefore, to be
informed about the risks, benefits, interactions, and science related to the use of these
substances.
Are Herbal Therapies Safe?
A question raised in both presentations was whether herbal preparations are safe and
effective. Prior to 1994, herbs were in a "nether" category
between medication, which is regulated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for
safety and efficacy, and food, which is regulated for manufacturing standards and safety.
Herbals were not
consistently in either category and so the FDA proposed to regulate food supplements
including herbals.
A public relations campaign by the supplement industry followed, which included deluging
Congress with 4 million letters and faxes and commercials portraying FDA supplement policy
as overly harsh. Thus, the
Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 was passed. This law classifies
vitamins, minerals, herbs, and amino acids as dietary supplements and frees their
manufacturers from having to test for or
prove safety, efficacy, or standards of manufacturing.
In fact, the FDA must prove that a product is unsafe. This has led to several examples of
how consumers have been put at risk by use of certain supplements. One example was the
contaminated L-tryptophan that
caused fatalities related to the eosinophilic-myositis syndrome.[5]
There also have been reports of intentional contamination by analgesics, steroids, and
sedatives and other undeclared prescription medications
for a more dramatic effect.[6,7]
What Now?
So where does that leave the physician who would like to recommend botanical remedies to
patients that prefer them to medications with known adverse effects?
It has been widely assumed that there is no science to support the use of herbals as
medications. Until recently, the literature indeed has been scarce, particularly with
regard to solid clinical studies. In
fact, now there is a large body of European and Japanese literature that assesses the
medical use of a number of herbals.
One of the most useful compilations is the Report of the German E Commission, recently
translated, and now published in English by the American Botanical Council 1997.[8] This
commission included physicians,
pharmacists, toxicologists, and botanists, who wrote approximately 400 monographs between
1978 and 1994. They evaluated the available data and
determined whether there was reasonable certainty of the safety and efficacy of the
medicinal use of the plants studied. They also established standard preparations and
doses.
In the US, Congress has created the National Center for Complementary and Alternative
Medicine,[9] which is translating data and coordinating study centers throughout the
United States to review a variety of areas. Another useful source of information is the US
Department of Agriculture's phytochemical and ethnobotanical database.[10] Increasingly,
studies of herbal preparations and their effectiveness --
or lack thereof -- are being published in peer-reviewed medical journals.
Clinical Applications
The speakers at the AAFP meeting reviewed the clinical use of the most popular herbs with
data supporting their use as well as underscoring the
need for caution.[11,12]
Dr. Zimmerman discussed some well-documented drug-herb interactions. Nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs may negate feverfew, for example,
echinacea can potentiate the toxicity of hepatotoxic drugs, and ginkgo, ginger, and
ginseng should not be used with coumadin due to their anticoagulant effects.[13,14]
Citing a poll in Good Housekeeping Magazine and data from herbal manufacturers, Dr.
Zimmerman cited the most popular herbs now in use:
ginseng, garlic, ginkgo biloba, echinacea, St. John's wort, goldenseal, saw palmetto,
aloe, Siberian ginseng, pycnogenol/grapseed extract, and evening primrose oil.
One of the most popular and widely used herbs is St. John's wort, which is reported to be
effective for mild to moderate depression and to have few adverse effects. The dose is 300
mg 3 times daily as .3%
hypericin.[15]
Ginkgo biloba has recently become popular following reported modest improvement of
cognitive functioning in some people with dementia caused
by Alzheimer disease or cerebrovascular disease. In addition, ginkgo is used for sexual
dysfunction caused by selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and in peripheral vascular
disease. The dose range is 80 to
240 mg/day 2 or 3 times daily.[16]
Kava kava is used for anxiety, insomnia, and muscle tension, but there is concern
regarding drug and alcohol interactions, and a yellow scaly rash has been reported at high
doses (>9 g/day). The dose is 100 mg 3
times daily of kava extract WS 1490.[17]
Studies indicate that saw palmetto is safe and effective for the symptoms of benign
prostatic hyperplasia. The usual dose is 160 mg of standardized extract containing 85% to
95% fatty acids and sterols (Permixon) 3 times daily. The main adverse effects are
gastrointestinal.[18,19,20]
Echinacea is used for short-term treatment and prevention of respiratory infections. There
are numerous preparations and doses.[21,22]
Some data support the use of milk thistle as a liver protective in mild cases of alcoholic
cirrhosis.[23]
Garlic is used to improve lipids and hypertension.[24,25]
Feverfew is used for the prophylaxis of migraine and cluster headaches.[26]
Finally, ginger is used as an antiemetic, especially in pregnancy.[27]
Summary
As more data regarding the safety and efficacy of herbal preparations become available,
especially in the prestigious peer-reviewed literature, and as more standardized
preparations from reputable
manufacturers come to the market, perhaps physicians will be in a more comfortable
position to inform patients about the appropriate use of
botanical medicinals.
References
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Scientific Assembly of the American Academy of
Family Physicians; September 16-19, 1999; Orlando, Fla. Abstract 503.
Zimmerman RL. Herbal therapies: new for 1999. Programs and abstracts
from the 1999 Scientific Assembly of the American Academy of Family
Physicians; September 16-19, 1999; Orlando, Fla. Abstract 033.
Astin JA. Why patients use alternative medicine: results of a national study. JAMA.
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Johnston B. One-third of nation's adults use herbal remedies: market estimated at $3.24
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Ko RJ. Adulterants in Asian patent medicines. N Engl J Med.
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Slifman NR, Obermeyer WR, Aloi BK, et al. Contamination of botanical
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Blumenthal M, Busse WR, eds. Klein S, trans. German Commission E
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Available at: http://altmed.od.nih.gov.
Available at: www.ars-grin.gov/duke.
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Le Bars PL, Katz MM, Berman N, Itil TM, Freedman AM, Schatzberg AF, and
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Volz HP, Kieser M. Kava-kava extract WS1490 versus placebo in anxiety disorders: a
randomized placebo-controlled 25-week outpatient trial.
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Carraro, JC et al. Comparison of phytotherapy (Permixon) with finasteride in the treatment
of benign prostate hyperplasia: a randomized international study of 1,098 patients.
Prostate
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treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia: a systematic review. JAMA. 1998;280:1604-1609.
Lowe FC, Ku JC. Phytotherapy in treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia: a critical
review. Urology. 1996;48:12-20.
Melchart D, Linde K, Worku F, et al. Results of five randomized studies on the
immunomodulatory activity of preparations of echinacea. Altern Complement Med.
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Melchart D, Linde K. The Cochrane Collaboration Database of Systematic
Reviews. Jan 1999. Available at:
http://hiru.mcmaster.ca/cochrane/default.htm.
Flora K, Hahn M, Rosen H, Benner K. Milk thistle (Silybum marianum) for the therapy of
liver disease. Am J Gastroenterol. 1998;93:139-143.
Isaacsohn JL, Moser M, Stein EA, et al. Garlic powder and plasma lipids and lipoproteins:
a multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled trial.
Arch Intern Med. 1998;158:1189-1194.
Berthold HK, Sudhop T, von Bergmann K. Effect of a garlic oil preparation on serum
lipoproteins and cholesterol metabolism: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA.
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Murphy JJ, Heptinstall S, Mitchell JR. Randomised double-blind placebo-controlled trial of
feverfew in migraine prevention. Lancet.
1988;2:189-192.
Aikins Murphy P. Alternative therapies for nausea and vomiting of pregnancy. Obstet
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