1 / 55

Integrating Herbs with Conventional Medicine

Integrating Herbs with Conventional Medicine. Linda Diane Feldt RPP, NCTMB Holistic Health Practitioner and Herbalist. Objectives. Identify the difference between nourishing and medicinal herbs Identify how nourishing herbs are provided Identify how medicinal herbs are provided

Download Presentation

Integrating Herbs with Conventional Medicine

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Integrating Herbs with Conventional Medicine Linda Diane Feldt RPP, NCTMB Holistic Health Practitioner and Herbalist

  2. Objectives • Identify the difference between nourishing and medicinal herbs • Identify how nourishing herbs are provided • Identify how medicinal herbs are provided • Know reasons to use nourishing or medicinal herbs • Learn about 9 popular herbs • Learn some of the problems with herbal marketing and preparations • Time for questions and individual concerns

  3. Nourishing herbs • Nutrient rich • Bio-available • Generally considered safe, side effects uncommon • Dosage and strength less important • Tend to be local, whole, and common • Large amounts used, in contrast to medicinal plants • Includes tonics • Supportive to body systems • Long term use is usually beneficial

  4. Nourishing Herbs con’t. • Internal use • Infusions • Water based • Vinegar based • Whole plant • Cooked • Raw (salad) • External use • Compress • Poultice • Salve

  5. Medicinal Herbs • Dosage and strength important or critical • Tend to utilize more toxic parts of plant • Stimulate or sedate • More likely to have side effects • Are often plants that are less common, or rare • Long term use is generally discouraged • More extensive knowledge is needed to use safely and effectively

  6. Medicinal Herbs con’t. • Tinctures • Alcohol based • Glycerin • Extracts • Capsules

  7. Case Study: Prophylactic Use of Echinacea angustifolia and purpurea Tincture for Management of a Recurrent Staphylococcus Infection

  8. Case Study con’t. • 46 yo female CHF • Heart cath age 53, followed by staph infection • Broad spec. antibiotics no effect • Echinacea ang. 30-40 drops every 3 hours • Symptom improvement within 2 hours • Two days both, stopped Ech. Symptoms returned within 4 hours • Ech and Antibiotic together, no symptoms

  9. Case Study con’t. • MD stopped antibiotics, pt. stopped Ech. Symptoms returned • Ech. as before - symptoms gone • One day without Ech, some symptoms • Ech 10 drops day no symptoms • For next 7 years, until death, two skipped days symptoms return -proven at least five times

  10. Significant points • Echinacea fought an antibiotic resistant infection • Low dose (nourishing) as effective as high dose (stimulating) • Low dose safe to use long term • Long term use was necessary • Mechanism of action for effect of low dose unknown

  11. Popular Herbs

  12. Ginkgo biloba St. John’s wort Garlic Echinacea Goldenseal Saw palmetto Milk thistle Black cohosh Ginger The Herbs

  13. Most ancient tree known Uses: cerebral insufficiency, Alzheimer’s Ds, intermittent claudication, tinnitis Powdered leaves Tincture or infusion Ginkgo biloba

  14. Ginkgo • Increases vascular flow • diabetic peripheral vascular disease • Raynauds syndrome • Other circulatory benefits fro varicose veins, hemorrhoids, eye disorders • Affinity for cerebral circulation • Inhibits platelet activity factor

  15. Ginkgo • Used to relieve tension, anxiety, elevate mood • Contains flavanoids, terpene lactones, ginkgolides A, B, and C, bilobalide, quercetin, and kaempferol. • ginkgolides control allergic inflammation, anaphylactic shock and asthma • antioxidant

  16. What to watch for • Can increase blood flow • Discontinue before surgery • Do not use with menstrual flooding • Do not use with other bleeding problems (ulcer, bruising, etc.) • Not suggested with blood thinners, aspirin, etc.

  17. 52 week RCT, double blind, multi-center Outcomes in 309 pts (ITT): Pt cognition: tx no change, placebo worse (p=0.04) Caregiver assess: tx slight improve, placebo worse (p=.004) Dose: 120 mg/d of EGb 761 Safety: side effects equal Problems: high dropout rate (50% tx, 62% placebo) Gingko biloba & Dementia

  18. Ginkgo & Claudication • Meta-analysis of Egb 761 • 5 placebo controlled trials • Moderate to large effect (0.75 Cohen’s d) on pain-free treadmill walking distance Schneider B. Arzneimforsch 1992;42(4):428-436

  19. Ginkgo - Toxicology • Adverse events • GI complaints • bruising & spontaneous bleeding • Avoid if taking warfarin, heparin, or NSAIDs • Can increase insulin levels • May increase sedation with trazodone

  20. St. John’s Wort Hypericum Perforatum Used as tincture, extract in pill form, topically as oil or salve Popular as anti-depressant. Also used for muscle aches, nerve pain, nerve regeneration, for herpes outbreaks, bruising

  21. St. John’s Wort • P450 Cytochrome system • Can interfere with effectiveness of other medications • Possible rash from exposure to sun (sheep and cows) • Use with other mood altering drugs of concern • Use by people with manic depressive and other psychological conditions of concern

  22. St. John’s Wort & Depression • Meta-analysis: 23 studies, 1757 pts • Mild-mod depression • Superior to placebo, rrr =2.67 (1.78-4.01) • As effective as TCA’s , rrr=1.10 (0.93-1.31) • Fewer side effects than TCA’s • Dose: 0.4-2.7 mg Hypericin (standardized extract) • Multi-center trial vs. SSRI’s at Duke Linde K, et al. BMJ 1996;313:253-8

  23. St. John’s Wort and Zoloft • Randomized controlled trial • St. John’s wort vs. Zoloft vs. placebo • effects • Side effects • Placebo < SJW < Zoloft (p= 0.000

  24. St. John’s Wort - Toxicology • Side effects • Theoretical risk - sunburn • Herb-drug interactions • Studies - digoxin, protease inhibitors, TCAs • Case reports - cyclosporine, warfarin, oral contraceptives, theophylline, SSRIs • Theoretical - iron Facts & Comparisons Review of Natural Products, Dec 2000.

  25. Garlic (Allium sativum) • Uses • Lower cholesterol • anti-thrombotic • lower blood pressure • anti-microbial agent • Strengthen heart muscle • Reduce platelet clumping and clotting • Stabilize blood sugar levels

  26. Garlic • Some concern about use if bleeding is of concern • Odor • Large amounts can great gas • Potential decreased platelet aggregation

  27. Garlic • Contains alliin in intact garlic bulb • Alliin  allicin (crushed) • 600 – 900 mg of dried powder (1.3% allicin)

  28. Garlic - Evidence • German Commission E • elevated blood lipids • prevention of age-related vascular changes • 25 studies between 1979-1998 with 2,920 people • Mixed results highly dependent on type of garlic preparation

  29. Garlic - Evidence • 2 Meta-analyses • garlic lowered total cholesterol between 9-12% • Meta-analysis • Anti-hypertensive - 10% reduction • Double blind RCT - 152 subjects for 4 years • garlic reduced development of atherosclerosis

  30. Echinacea spp. • E. pallida purpurea angustifolia • Use: prevention and treatment of colds, flu • One of most popular herbs in US • German Commission E • supportive for colds, chronic URI, UTI • UK - GSL

  31. Echinacea • Stimulating dose not advised with autoimmune and some systemic diseases • Can interfere with immune suppression during chemotherapy treatment • Stimulating dose should be short term (3-4 days) only • No known side effects • Concern with steroid treatment - depends on use

  32. Echinacea - Human Evidence • 26 controlled trials (many open label) • 3 blinded RCT’s on URI • 1 showed dose dependent decrease in symptoms and duration of “flu” • 2 showed 13-20% relative risk reduction of acquiring URI • Dose: 30-60 gtts 1:5 (g/ml) tincture TID

  33. Echinacea Systematic Review • 16 randomized or quasi randomized trials • Echinacea preparation vs. no treatment or placebo • 8 trials on prevention, 8 trials on treatment • 3396 patients involved • Majority with positive results • Cannot say which preparation is best Melchart, D. et al. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2000;2.

  34. Goldenseal (Hydrastis canadensis) • Used in Native American medicine • Taken up by European immigrants • Deep forest dweller, endangered species • Part used is the root • Colds, flu, bacterial diarrhea, intestinal parasites, and ocular trachoma infections

  35. Goldenseal • Endangered herb • Internal use has antibiotic effect • concern for contributing to antibiotic resistant bacteria • Dose, duration, and strength important • Can be difficult to self-administer • Overused and misused by general public • Present in tooth paste, lip balm, herbal mixtures

  36. Goldenseal - Evidence • Antimicrobial activity vs. bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoans, helminths, and chlamydia • Active components: • berberine (anticholinergic, antisecretory, and antimicrobial) • beta-hydrastine (astringent) • In rats, Goldenseal increases IgM antibodies

  37. Hexane extract of dried berries Spasmolytic activity Inhibition of androgen Anti-inflammatory Not an inhibitor of 5-reductase Used for benign prostatic hypertrophy Saw Palmetto (Serenoa repens)

  38. Saw Palmetto - Evidence • 18 RCT’s, 16/18 double-blinded • 2939 men, duration 4-48 weeks • Decreased nocturia, improved symptom scores vs. placebo • Improved symptom score, improved peak urine flow vs. finasteride • Dose: 400 mg dry extract BID Wilt TJ, et al. JAMA 1998; 280:1604-1609.

  39. Saw Palmetto - Toxicology • Rats: 80x human dose for 6 months • No negative influences • Human trials, German Commission E • GI disturbances, headache • No significant adverse effects • Drug interactions • Theoretical - Estrogens, oral contraceptives, iron • German Commission E reports none

  40. Black Cohosh (Cimicifuga racemosa) • Fresh root tincture or dried root infusion • Remifemin, used in Germany since 1950’s • Used for hot flashes and night sweats • German Commission E: • Premenstrual discomfort • Dysmenorrhea • Menopausal neurovegetative symptoms

  41. Black Cohosh - Mode of action • Steroidal terpenes? isoflavones? others? • Methanol extracts bind estrogen receptors • Inhibits estrogen dependent breast tumor cell lines • Lowers LH in rats and women, no effect on FSHa • Stimulatory effect on endometriumb,c • Actein may be beneficial in hypercholesterolemia and peripheral arterial disease a. Duker 1991; b. Stoll 1987; c. Warnecke 1985

  42. Black Cohosh - Clinical Trials • 5 RCTs in literature • Randomized, head to head trial • 60 pts, < 40 yr. old with hysterectomies • Estriol vs. conjugated estrogens vs. estrogen-gestegen sequential vs. black cohosh extract • Outcome: Kupperman’s Menopausal Index • Black cohosh equal to other treatments Lehmann-Willenbrock, et al. Zentralblatt fur Gynakologie 1998;110:611-8 similar findings: Warnecke, 1985

  43. Black Cohosh Update • Recent RCT • 85 breast cancer survivors • 59 were on tamoxifen • 40 mg/d Remifemin vs. placebo x 2 months • No benefit for hot flashes • On-going trial at Columbia Univ • RCT, 1 year duration • hot flashes, endometrial thickness, bone metab, cognitive effects Jacobson JS, et al. J. Clin. Oncol 2001;19:2739-45.

  44. Black Cohosh - Toxicology • Overdose: nausea, dizziness, nervous system disturbance • Mice -  spread of breast CA • Large doses may cause miscarriage. Contraindicated in pregnancy • Long term safety unknown

  45. Ginger Zingiber officinale • Used for nausea • Helpful for colds and flu • Warming herb • Many other folkloric uses

  46. Ginger for Nausea & Vomiting of Pregnancy • 2 trials show efficacy compared to placebo • excess Yang (excess Qi) • N not in AM, N worse p eating, N improves p vomiting • ginger is too “hot”, use peppermint • excess Yin (deficient Qi) • N in AM, N better p eating, N worse p vomiting • ginger will be helpful Tiran D. Comp Ther Nursing & Midwifery. 2002;8:191-196

  47. How to take ginger • Dose 3-9 grams fresh (or dried) peeled ginger root • Tea made from grated fresh root • Commercially available capsules • NOT ginger biscuits or ginger beer Tiran D. Comp Ther Nursing & Midwifery. 2002;8:191-196

  48. 6-gingerol is mutagenic in vitro at high doses Other compounds in ginger are anti-mutagenic Widely used in Traditional Chinese Medicine No contraindication in Pharmacopoeia of the People’s Republic of China (1995) May increase miscarriage Contraindicated in German Commission E Ginger Root Safety?

  49. Protects liver Promotes hepatic cell growth Supports normal liver function Antioxidant Milk Thistle Silybum marianum

  50. Milk thistle • Hepatoprotective • antioxidant activity 1 • toxin blockade at the membrane level 1 • enhanced protein synthesis 1 • antifibriotic activity 1 • possible anti-inflammatory or immunomodulating effects 1 • Stimulates action of nucleolar polymerase A causing in ribosomal protein synthesis, stimulating regenerative ability and formation of hepatocytes 2 1 Milk Thistle: Effects on Liver Disease and Cirrhosis and Clinical Adverse Effects Summary, Evidence Report/Technology Assessment: Number 21 Sept. 2000. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville MD 2 German commission E monographs

More Related