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Saccade and cognitive impairment associated with kava intoxication.

Sheree Cairney, Paul Maruff, Alan R Clough, Alex Collie, Jon Currie et al.
Other Human psychopharmacology 2003 45 citations
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Study Type
Observational Study
Population
Heavy kava users
Intervention
Saccade and cognitive impairment associated with kava intoxication. Kava extract
Comparator
Healthy controls
Primary Outcome
Saccade and cognitive function
Effect Direction
Negative
Risk of Bias
Moderate

Abstract

Kava is an extract from the Piper methysticum Forst. f. plant that has social and spiritual importance in Pacific islands societies. Herbal remedies that contain kava are used for the psychiatric treatment of anxiety and insomnia. Laboratory studies have found only subtle, if any, changes on cognitive or motor functions from the acute effects of consuming small clinical doses of kava products. Intoxication from recreational doses of kava has not been studied. The performance of individuals intoxicated from drinking kava (n=11) was compared with a control group (n=17) using saccade and cognitive tests. On average, intoxicated individuals had consumed 205 g of kava powder each (approximately 150 times clinical doses) in a group session that went for 14.4 h and ended 8 h prior to testing. Intoxicated kava drinkers showed ataxia, tremors, sedation, blepharospasm and elevated liver enzymes (GGT and ALP), together with saccadic dysmetria, saccadic slowing and reduced accuracy performing a visual search task that only became evident as the task complexity increased. Kava intoxication is characterized by specific abnormalities of movement coordination and visual attention but normal performance of complex cognitive functions. Saccade abnormalities suggest disruption of cerebellar and GABAergic functions.

TL;DR

Intoxicated kava drinkers showed ataxia, tremors, sedation, blepharospasm and elevated liver enzymes (GGT and ALP), together with saccadic dysmetria, saccads slowing and reduced accuracy performing a visual search task that only became evident as the task complexity increased.

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