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Stress-induced insomnia treated with kava and valerian: singly and in combination.

David Wheatley
Other Human psychopharmacology 2001 52 citations
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Type d'étude
Controlled Clinical Trial
Taille de l'échantillon
24
Population
Patients with stress-induced insomnia
Durée
12 weeks
Intervention
Stress-induced insomnia treated with kava and valerian: singly and in combination. Kava LI-150 120mg/day, then valerian 600mg/day
Comparateur
Baseline comparison
Critère de jugement principal
Stress, insomnia, social functioning (BAI, ISI)
Direction de l'effet
Positive
Risque de biais
High

Abstract

Kava and valerian are herbal remedies that are claimed to have anxiolytic and sedative properties respectively, without dependence potential or any appreciable side effects. In this pilot study, 24 patients suffering from stress-induced insomnia were treated for 6 weeks with kava (LI-150), 120 mg daily. This was followed by a 2-week 'wash-out' period off treatment, and then, five patients having dropped out, 19 received valerian (LI-156), 600 mg daily, for another 6 weeks. Then there was a further 2-week period off treatment, and a final 6 weeks of treatment of these 19 patients with the two compounds combined (kava + valerian). Stress was measured in three areas: social, personal and life events; insomnia in three areas also: time to fall asleep, hours slept and waking mood. Total stress severity was significantly relieved by both compounds individually (p < 0.01), with no significant differences between them; and there was also improvement with the combination, significant in the case of insomnia (p < 0.05). On direct questioning, 16 patients (67%) reported no side effects on kava, 10 (53%) on valerian and 10 (53%) on the combination. The 'commonest' effect was vivid dreams with kava + valerian (4 cases (21%)) and with valerian alone (3 cases (16%)), followed by gastric discomfort and dizziness with kava (3 cases each (3 %)). These results are considered to be extremely promising but further studies may be required to determine the relative roles of the two compounds for such indications. Copyright 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

En bref

The results of this pilot study are considered to be extremely promising but further studies may be required to determine the relative roles of the two compounds for such indications.

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