kava-kava and anxiety

From: Doug Skrecky (oberon@vcn.bc.ca)
Date: Sun Jul 26 1998 - 20:43:25 MDT


Authors
  Volz HP. Kieser M.
Institution
  Department of Psychiatry, Jena University, Germany.
Title
  Kava-kava extract WS 1490 versus placebo in
  anxiety disorders--a randomized placebo-controlled 25-week outpatient trial.
Source
  Pharmacopsychiatry. 30(1):1-5, 1997 Jan.
Abstract
  101 outpatients suffering from anxiety of non-psychotic origin (DSM-III-R
  criteria: agoraphobia, specific phobia, generalized anxiety disorder, and
  adjustment disorder with anxiety) were included in a 25-week multicenter
  randomized placebo-controlled double-blind trial with WS 1490, a special
  extract of kava-kava. In the main outcome
  criterion, the Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAMA), there was a significant
  superiority of the test drug starting from week 8 on. WS 1490 was also found
  to be superior with respect to the secondary outcome variables. HAMA
  subscores somatic and psychic anxiety, Clinical Global Impression,
  Self-Report Symptom Inventory-90 Items revised, and Adjective Mood Scale.
  Adverse events were rare and distributed evenly in both groups. These results
  support WS 1490 as a treatment alternative to tricyclic antidepressants and
  benzodiazepines in anxiety disorders, with proven long-term efficacy and none
  of the tolerance problems associated with tricyclics and benzodiazepines.



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