SleepCited

A single-blinded, randomized pilot study evaluating the aroma of Lavandula augustifolia as a treatment for mild insomnia.

George T Lewith, Anthony Dean Godfrey, Philip Prescott
RCT Journal of alternative and complementary medicine (New York, N.Y.) 2005 105 citas

Diseño del estudio

Tipo de estudio
Randomized Controlled Trial
Tamaño de muestra
10
Población
Volunteers with defined insomnia (PSQI >5) treated on a domiciliary basis; 5 male and 5 female
Duración
4 weeks
Intervención
A single-blinded, randomized pilot study evaluating the aroma of Lavandula augustifolia as a treatment for mild insomnia. Lavandula augustifolia aroma delivered via Aromastream device
Comparador
Sweet almond oil aroma (placebo)
Resultado primario
Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) score change
Dirección del efecto
Positive
Riesgo de sesgo
High

Resumen

BACKGROUND: Insomnia is the most common of all sleep complaints and is under-researched. The current treatments of choice are conventional hypnotics agents, but these have potential for serious adverse reactions. Uncontrolled and anecdotal evidence suggests that lavender oil is an effective treatment for insomnia, but this has not been formally investigated. OBJECTIVES: The aims of this study were to evaluate the proposed trial methodology and the efficacy of Lavandula augustifolia (lavender) on insomnia. INTERVENTIONS: INTERVENTIONS consisted of Lavandula augustifolia (treatment) and sweet almond oil as placebo/control. The aroma was supplied via an Aromastream device (Tisserand Aromatherapy, Sussex, UK). DESIGN: This was a pilot study with randomized, single-blind, cross-over design (baseline, two treatment periods, and a washout period, each of 1 week duration). SUBJECTS AND SETTING: Volunteers with defined insomnia treated on a domiciliary basis participated in the study. OUTCOME MEASURES: Outcomes were assessed with the following: Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) indicating insomnia (score > 5 at entry); Borkovec and Nau (B&N) Questionnaire evaluating treatment credibility; and Holistic Complementary and Alternative Medicine Questionnaire (HCAMQ) assessing attitudes to CAM and health beliefs. RESULTS: Ten (10) volunteers (5 male and 5 female) were entered and completed the 4 week study. Lavender created an improvement of -2.5 points in PSQI (p = 0.07, 95% CI - 4.95 to - 0.4). Each intervention was equally credible and belief in CAM did not predict outcome. Women and younger volunteers with a milder insomnia improved more than others. No period or carry-over effect was observed. CONCLUSION: The methodology for this pilot study appeared to be appropriate. Outcomes favor lavender, and a larger trial is required to draw definitive conclusions.

TL;DR

A pilot study evaluating the proposed trial methodology and the efficacy of Lavandula augustifolia (lavender) on insomnia found outcomes favor lavender, and a larger trial is required to draw definitive conclusions.

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