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Herbal
Remedies May Have Side Effects
NEW
YORK (Reuters Health) - While the jury is still out on whether
the popular supplement echinacea fights the common cold, it does
seem the innocent-sounding herb can pack drug-like side effects.
A 41-year-old man realized this while using echinacea for his
flu-like symptoms, according to Canadian researchers.
The case study,
published in the February issue of the Journal of the American
Academy of Dermatology, highlights the dangers of self-treating
and the common misconception that herbal remedies are harmless.
Tender nodules
formed under the skin of the man's legs 4 to 5 days after taking
the herb. And although the bumps disappeared after several weeks,
the man experienced three more episodes of the condition, called
erythema nodosum, before being taken off the herb.
Erythema nodosum
is a condition that affects the area beneath the skin and causes
tender, bruise-like sores, explained co-author Dr. Richard Crawford,
a dermatologist and pathologist at the University of British Columbia
in Vancouver.
``It's a condition
we call reactive. In other words, it is usually instigated by
another illness or by a medication. When that instigating agent
is taken away, usually the erythema nodosum goes away as well,''
he told Reuters Health.
``When we
had (the man) stop taking his echinacea, the episodes of erythema
nodosum stopped completely even when he was followed over a year
period,'' Crawford said.
Although the
use of alternative medicines such as echinacea and other herbs
has grown over the past decade, this case study demonstrates that
many herbal remedies still generate side effects, just as traditional
medical treatments do.
``(Patients)
should consider echinacea to be like a prescription medicine in
terms of the possibility of producing side effects,'' Crawford
noted. ``So if they have any unexplained reaction in their skin,
or elsewhere, they could consider herbal medications...along with
over-the-counter medications and prescription medications as possible
cause for the reaction.''
There is also
the possibility that herbal remedies can interact with prescribed
drugs. As a result, Crawford said, he encourages patients to report
their herbal or alternative medicines to their doctors.
``I think
we're at a level of knowledge now that we know that it is potentially
very important that traditional physicians know what herbal or
alternate medications their patients are taking, just as it would
be important for an (alternative) practitioner to understand the
traditional therapies that a patient is undergoing,'' he said.
SOURCE:
Journal of the American Academy of
Dermatology 2001;44:298-299.
Reference
Source 89
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