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Herbal Treatments in Epilepsy

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Title: Herbal Treatments in Epilepsy


1
Herbal Treatments in Epilepsy
  • F.A.C.E.S. Evening Lecture Series
  • June 16, 2009
  • Siddhartha S. Nadkarni, M.D.

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  • and yes I said yes I will yes

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  • if it was out there we wouldnt be having this
    talk.

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  • Stone cutters were quacks in the middle ages who
    would do surgery to remove the stone that was
    causing sz. There would be a cross shaped
    incision made in the back of the head.

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Editorial
  • Randomized Controlled Blinded trials
  • Doctors and patients are both biased
  • Placebo effect is not nothing
  • RCTs are our best method to date to assess
    efficacy given how much we dont know about the
    brain
  • Double blind
  • Anecdote Vs. Parachute
  • The power of mind (placebo revisited)

12
Complimentary and Alternative
  • CAM
  • On the rise
  • 42 US
  • 65 Germany
  • 20 UK
  • 1/6 people taking Rx also take Herbal
  • gt 50 y.o. 2.66 herbals and 2.26 Rx

13
CAM
  • lt 40 share their use with Drs.
  • Legislation requiring regulation/licensing of
    Herbs in Germany, France, Sweden, Australia.
  • In US the Dietary Supplement Health and Education
    Act of 1994 removed these products from FDA
    jurisdiction

14
CAM and Epilepsy
  • Ohio study of 92 patients
  • 24 using CAM
  • Of which 41 used herbs
  • Nigerian study of 265 patients
  • 47.6 using only traditional African med.

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  • Herb
  • 1.) a seed producing annual, biennial, or
    perennial that does not develop persistent woody
    tissue but dies down at the end fo a growing
    season
  • 2.) a plant or plant part valued for its
    medicinal, savory, or aromatic qualities
  • 3.) slang

16
  • Qingyangsen roots open label study showing
    improved seizure control as adjunct treatment in
    9/32 patients
  • Postulated in one animal study that when used in
    combination with PTN may reduce early production
    of fos protein
  • 13 Herb mixture (100pt) compared to
    phenobarbital control (40 pt)- open label study,
    similar efficacy with decreased side effects
  • Zhenxiangling (main ingredients peach flower buds
    and human placenta)- open label study, gt75
    seizure reduction in 66 and gt 50 in another 30
  • (Tyagi et al, 2003)

17
  • Japanese Kampo medicine
  • TJ- 690 (mixture of 9 herbs)- small trial (26pt)
    showing improvement in seizure control and
    cognitive function
  • Indian Ayurvedic medicine
  • Ashwagandha, Brahmirasayan and Brahmigritham have
    been used for centuries to control seizures
  • Mentat (BR-16A) widely used in conjunction with
    AEDS in current Indian practice
  • Decreases Phenytoin metabolism and increases
    bioavailability of Carbamazepine

18
  • Vincent Van Gogh
  • Complicated birth history, family history, pip,
    etc.
  • Sorrow is eternal. His last words spoken to
    his brother on his deathbed.

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Van Gogh and Herbs
  • Wormwood (artemesia absinthium)
  • Used to distill alcohol
  • Contains terpene thujone, a proconvulsant
  • Had Hallucinatory convulsions

20
Herbal Therapies
21
Herbs for Epilepsy
  • Valerian root
  • Skullcap
  • European Mistletoe
  • Marijuana
  • Black cohosh
  • Lobelia
  • Kava
  • Hyssop
  • Blue vervain
  • Yarrow
  • Geranium
  • Kelp
  • Bupleurum
  • Passion flower
  • Carline thistle
  • Elderberry
  • Mugwort
  • Ladys slipper
  • Aloe
  • Betony
  • European Peony
  • Ginseng
  • Flax seed oil
  • Ginger
  • Linden
  • Chrysanthemum
  • Forskolin
  • Behen
  • Burning bush
  • Calotropis
  • Gotu Kola
  • Groundsel
  • Lily of the Valley
  • Tree of Heaven
  • Yew

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How often do people take herbs?
  • Overall use of complementary and alternative
    medicines (CAM) in U.S. 1990-1997.
  • Herbal product use increased 4x
  • In 1997, adults - 33 million office visits
    regarding herbal products high-dose vitamins
    spent 8 billion
  • In 1997, 15 million adults took prescription
    medications with herbs and/or high-dose vitamins

Eisenberg et al. JAMA 19982801569-75.
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How often do people take herbs?
Top 10 selling herbs and dietary supplements 2002
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How often do persons with epilepsy take herbs?
  • U.S. and England studies
  • Up to 1 in 3 persons with epilepsy use CAM
  • Most do not discuss their CAM use with doctors
  • Herbs taken include ginseng, St. Johns wort,
    melatonin, gingko biloba, garlic and black cohosh
  • Treat seizures (lt10), other symptoms (20), and
    general health (gt70)

Peebles et al. Epilepsy Behav 2000174-7 Easterfo
rd et al. Epilepsy Behav 2005659-62
25
Case Presentation
  • 35-year-old woman with epilepsy for 18 years, on
    carbamazepine and an oral contraceptive.
  • For several months, feeling depressed, though
    functions well day to day.
  • Hasnt mentioned symptoms to doctor.
  • St. Johns wort is an herb for mild depression.

26
Case Presentation, cont.
  • You go to a health foods store and look at
    different bottles of St. Johns wort.

27
Case Presentation, cont.
  • What do the disclaimers on the labels mean?
  • What about the quality of the products
  • Does the FDA control the manufacturing and
    testing of St. Johns wort, as it does for the
    testing and manufacturing of prescription drugs?

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Federal regulation of herbs
  • Herbal products are classified by the government
    as dietary supplements.
  • Dietary supplements are regulated by the 1994
    Dietary Supplement and Health Education Act
    (DSHEA) prescription drugs - much more rigorous
    requirements of the Federal Food, Drug, and
    Cosmetic Act.

29
Federal standards by DSHEA
  • Claim -- an effect on bodily structure or
    function, not against a specific disease.
  • Label must include a disclaimer that FDA has not
    evaluated the product

30
Federal regulation of herbs
  • Not required to be produced under Good
    Manufacturing Process standards, like drugs
  • No government agency (eg, FDA) independently
    verifies the quality/production
  • Could be contaminated with microbes, pesticides,
    toxic metals, or adulterated (eg, herbs or drugs)
  • Potency and amount per pill/capsule may vary
    significantly within the same bottle or from
    batch to batch, or from one branded product to
    another

31
Federal regulation of herbs
  • Standards set forth by the DSHEA
  • Manufacturers are responsible for the
    truthfulness of labeling claims
  • No government agency independently reviews and
    verifies the claims and supporting evidence
  • Only manufacturers control product quality and
    verify safety

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Case Presentation, cont.
  • What do the disclaimers mean?
  • What about their quality, whether the FDA
    controls the testing of St. Johns wort?, how is
    it manufactured?
  • What about the amount of active ingredients?

33
Standardization
  • How much of the active ingredient?
  • For example, bottle says carbamazepine 200 mg
  • This is a major problem for herbal products
    because
  • the active ingredient (s) are usually not known
  • the amount of the assumed active ingredient may
    vary from pill to pill and product to product
  • it is usually not possible to measure levels in
    the blood to guide dosage

34
? The active ingredient
  • St. John's wort standardized by its content of
    hypericin (typically to 0.3 hypericin)
  • Hypericin not confirmed as the active ingredient

35
Case Presentation, cont.
  • You wonder whether St. Johns wort could affect
    your carbamazepine or birth control pill, and
    whether it is safe and actually helps depression

36
Herbal Anticonvulsants Mechanisms
  • Sedative effect/improved sleep Valerian, Kava,
    Lobelia, passion flower.
  • Increase in brain GABA/GABA receptors (Valerian,
    Kava)
  • Agonist of benzodiazepine receptors (Passion
    flower).
  • Antioxidants (TJ-960)

37
Herb/AED Interactions
  • Dont use Valerian or Kava with alcohol,
    barbiturates, benzos- sedation/coma.
  • Hemorrhagic complications with Gingko and St.
    Johns wort.
  • St. Johns wort can lower carbamazepine levels.
  • Shankapulshpi (Ayurvedic formula) decreases 1/2
    life of phenytoin and decreases its efficacy.
  • Tell your physician about herb use anticipate
    potential for interactions.

38
Herbs and Seizure Medications
  • Increase Side effects
  • Valerian Root
  • Kava Kava
  • Passion Flower
  • Chamomile

39
Herbs that cause Seizures
  • Kava Kava GTC from toxicity and withdrawal.
  • Marijuana intoxication or withdrawal.
  • Skullcap confusion and convulsions with high
    doses.
  • Ma Huang has ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, lowers
    threshold.
  • Gamolenic acid lowers seizure threshold evening
    primrose oil, borage (starflower).
  • Goldenseal hydrastine lowers threshold.
  • Ginseng lowers threshold.
  • Ginkgo biloba GTCs reported. Neurotoxin
    4-o-methylpyridoxine.
  • Thujone-containing herbs wormwood, sage lower
    threshold.

40
Herbs and seizures
  • Worsen seizures
  • Ephedra
  • Ma Huang
  • Mate
  • Guarana
  • Borage oil
  • ? Ginkgo
  • ? Ginseng

41
Side-Effects of Herbs
  • Natural doesnt equal safe!
  • Herbs and herbal preparations contain many
    compounds.
  • Black cohosh, Valerian, green tea have tannins -
    can affect absorption of Ca, Cu, Fe, Mg.
  • Black cohosh can cause miscarriage via uterine
    stimulation.
  • Lobelia - respiratory paralysis and death.

42
Herbal Therapies
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Traditional Chinese Herbal Medicine (TCHM)
  • Epilepsy therapy since 770 B.C.
  • Principles of Yin Yang Wu Xing
  • No well controlled studies
  • Numerous laboratory studies show antiepileptic
    effects for many
  • Many preparations are compound

44
Melatonin
  • Natural hormone
  • Promotes sleep
  • Used in various neurological conditions
  • Antiseizure properties reported clinically in
    humans (small series, anecdotes) and dogs
    (nocturnal seizures) and experimentally in rodents

45
Melatonins Effects
  • Anti-oxidant
  • Blocks effects of glutamate (neuroprotective)
  • Enhances GABA actions

46
Clinical Use of Melatonin in Epilepsy Patients
  • Given orally 30-60 minutes before bedtime
  • Dose ranges from 1-10 mg

47
Herbal Issues
  • Good
  • Bad
  • Ugly

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Good
  • Our bias in Western Medicine is entrenched and
    should always be in front of our eyes
  • Ancient traditions often survive for the efficacy
    of their system and treatments
  • Ayurveda
  • Chinese Medicine

49
Bad
  • Effects on Serum Concentration of AEDs
    (Herb-Drug interactions) P450 enzymes
  • St. Johns wort
  • Garlic
  • Echinacea
  • Pine bark extract
  • Pygenol
  • Milk thistle
  • American hellebore
  • Gingko
  • Mugwort
  • Pipissewa

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Samuels et al, 2008
51
Ugly
  • Many herbs have been reported to be
    pro-convulsants
  • These are both in laboratory/mice models and in
    case reports in humans

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Samuels et al, 2008
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Samuels et al, 2008
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Data
  • As of 2005
  • 3 randomized controlled trials
  • 5 non-randomized controlled trials
  • 6 case control studies
  • 57 observational studies, case reports
  • Only one since 2005 of herbs in epilepsy
  • 135 herbs
  • Poorly done studies

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Case Study
  • 27 y.o. woman with frequent auras and monthly
    complex partial seizures who is exquisitely
    sensitive to medication asks her doctor about
    Marijuana. She says her father had refractory
    seizures until he moved to Toronto where he could
    get it freely and has been seizure free since
    taking it regularly.

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  • Canada
  • Alaska
  • Arizona
  • California
  • Colorado
  • Hawaii
  • Maine
  • Nevada
  • Oregon
  • Rhode Island
  • Vermont
  • Washington

Alfred Nobel
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  • Contains approximately 60 active substances
  • Primary active chemicals
  • Delta 9 tetrahydrocannibinol
  • Delta 8 tetrahydrocannibinol
  • Cannabidiol

Edgar Allen Poe
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  • G-protein coupled cannabinoid CB1 receptors
  • Abundantly distributed in the BG, cerebellum,
    limbic system and cortex
  • Endocanabinoids act as retrograde messengers at
    many central synapses causing inhibition of
    neurotransmitter release

63
  • Evidence that endocannabinoid system facilitates
    neuroprotective activity at baseline
  • The system appears to be upregulated in response
    to various brain insults.

Neil Young
64
  • ? THC beneficial in partial epilepsy and
    detrimental in generalized epilepsy
  • ? CBD more of anticonvulsant
  • One epidemiologic study of drug use and new onset
    seizures found that marijuana may be protective
    against first seizures in men

65
  • Long term effects of cannaboids?
  • Impaired memory
  • Marijuana amotivational syndrome

Lenin
66
Marijuana
  • First used as antiepileptic in 19th century.
  • Cannabinoid receptors in brainstem, limbic
    system, cortex.
  • Mixed results
  • THC has anti- or proconvulsant affects depending
    on dose and epilepsy model.
  • Many cannibiols - variable effects
  • Epidemiologic study- may be protective against
    first seizures in men
  • Has other potentially negative health
    consequences (e.g., cardiovascular, pulmonary).
    ?? withdrawal seizures.
  • Illegal and therefore cannot be prescribed except
    for states with medical marijuana

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Gross et al, 2004
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Gross et al, 2004
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  • There are likely some who will benefit from THC
  • There are likely some who will have worsening
    seizures from THC
  • Other effects of THC most likely outweigh
    benefits in most cases

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Take Home
  • In any given person herbs may be helpful, but in
    most they likely are not
  • In any given person herbs may worsen epilepsy
  • Herbs definitely can effect AED levels
  • No good studies
  • Communication between doctors and patients is
    crucial
  • Perspective
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