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Mixing
Herbal Supplements, Migraine Medications Can Be Dangerous
Excerpt
By
Susie
Morris, ABCNews.com
An extensive review of existing research has led University
of Utah researchers to conclude several popular herbal supplements
may cause adverse, even deadly, reactions when combined with certain
migraine medications.
More than 40 percent of Americans have used herbal remedies,
and 30 million suffer from migraines. It is not clear, however,
how many migraine sufferers use herbal remedies.
But the risks are real. The study, to be made public today,
found five of the 10 most popular herbal supplements may interact
adversely with medications commonly prescribed to alleviate migraine
and cluster headaches.
Among the herbal supplements that can interfere with the proper
metabolism of certain migraine medications, causing levels of
the drugs to reach toxic levels, are Gingko biloba, ginseng, echinacea,
St. John's wort, and large amounts of garlic.
The Risk of Drug-Drug
Enhancement
The risks of taking herbal medications for migraine sufferers
include "drug interactions and the fact that herbal supplements
can make people worse," notes Dr. Bob Kaniecki, director of the
Headache Center and assistant professor of neurology at the University
of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania.
Migraine headaches are a manifestation of a sensitive nervous
system. "Taking medications that stimulate an already sensitive
nervous system aggravates migraine," says Kaniecki. He specifically
implicated the herbal medications ephedra and ginseng as potential
risks for migraine sufferers.
"Gingko and garlic interact with certain antiplatelet agents
like aspirin, which results in increased frequency of bruising,"
explains Dr. Alan Towne, professor and chair of neurology at Virginia
Commonwealth University in Richmond.
One herbal substance, St. John's wort, is marketed as an antidepressant,
and is a mild version of an older class of antidepressants. The
danger surfaces when a migraine patient is taking both St. John's
wort and a prescription antidepressant for migraine relief, says
study lead author Dr. Carla Rubingh, clinical pharmacist at the
University of Utah Health Sciences Center in Salt Lake City.
The effects of taking medications with similar effects on the
body are dangerously multiplied, resulting in a phenomenon called
"drug-drug enhancement," warns Dr. Joel R. Saper, director of
the Michigan Head Pain and Neurological Institute in Ann Arbor.
"Patients go home and take them together. The result is often
low blood pressure, dizziness, and rapid heart rate. When patients
are advised to stop taking St. John's wort, these symptoms go
away," Kaniecki says.
In another example, the combination of certain herbal supplements
like feverfew with migraine medications, specifically the triptan
class of drugs, can result in a disease called serotonin syndrome,
in which elevated levels of serotonin result in increased blood
pressure, mental changes, severe cramps, and is potentially fatal,
Saper says.
"I don't want to create hysteria. I think there is a concern.
This study touches on an issue that warrants more attention,"
says Saper. "Patients must at least let their doctors know what
they are taking."
The Remedy
Part of the risk to migraine sufferers may be that the combination
of high costs for health care with the need for pain control drives
many sufferers to turn to natural remedies for relief, says Saper,
adding: "Desperate people do desperate things."
Too often, patients simply assume natural remedies are always
beneficial, says Kaniecki.
"This is an issue we face every day where headache patients
are taking herbal supplements.
Patients are unaware of
the consequences because they assume that because something is
marketed as natural, it is safe," he says. "Poison ivy is natural,
too, but I wouldn't take to alleviate a headache."
"Some herbals make migraines worse," Towne says. "Gingko and
valerian can make headaches worse. Even some of the medications
that we prescribe can make migraines worse. It depends on the
individual.
It is important for doctors to know exactly
what their patients are taking."
Kaniecki concurs: "The FDA needs to enact better and firmer
regulations on herbal medications, and I will call them medications
because they are natural medications."
Kaniecki recommends the herbal supplement industry be held to
the same regulations as prescription drug companies. "The herbal
industry should be held to the same standard if they are going
to make claims about their products."
Rubingh notes the Food and Drug Administration is considering
action on an internal proposal to increase regulations on herbal
supplement manufacturers. The proposal would force herbal industry
to print "more detailed labels that would state exactly what is
in each bottle. I think that the proposal would really improve
our information about herbal supplements," she says.
If the herbal industry was forced to report exact content of
each product, additional research could be facilitated, examining
the specific effects of herbal supplements on the body, Rubingh
adds.
Reference
Source 104
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