Advances in Psychiatric Treatment (2007) 13: 312-316. doi: 10.1192/apt.bp.105.001735
© 2007 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Herbal remedies for depression and anxiety
Edzard Ernst
Edzard Ernst qualified as a physician in Germany, where he was Professor of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PMR) at Hannover Medical School. After a period as Head of the PMR Department at the University of Vienna (Austria) he came to the University of Exeter in 1993 to establish the first Chair in Complementary Medicine. He is Editor-in-Chief of the journal Focus on Alternative and Complementary Therapies (FACT) and founding editor of Perfusion. His work has been awarded 12 scientific prizes/awards and two Visiting Professorships. Professor Ernst served on the Medicines Commission of the British Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (19942005) and on the Scientific Committee on Herbal Medicinal Products of the Irish Medicines Board. He is currently Director of Complementary Medicine at Peninsula Medical School (Universities of Exeter and Plymouth, 25 Victoria Park Road, Exeter EX2 4NT, UK. Email: Edzard. Ernst{at}pms.ac.uk).

Abstract
Herbal remedies are used by many people suffering from anxiety
or depression. It is therefore important to know whether they
generate more good than harm. A systematic review of the published
literature revealed trial data for
Ginkgo biloba,
Lavandula angustifolia,
Hypericum perforatum,
Valeriana officinalis,
Crataegus oxyacantha,
Eschscholzia californica, Matricaria recutita,
Melissa officinalis,
Passiflora incarnate and
Piper methysticum. Only
two of these herbal remedies are supported by sound evidence:
Hypericum perforatum (St Johns wort) for mild to moderate
depression and
Piper methysticum (kava) for anxiety. Neither
is free of risks. Our knowledge of herbal remedies is incomplete
and the subject merits rigorous study.
Complementary therapies have become hugely popular. A colleague
and I estimated that, in 1999, the total expenditure for such
treatments in the UK was £1.6 billion (
Ernst & White, 2000).
There is reason to believe that the usage of complementary medicine
in the UK has increased since then (
Emslie et al, 2002). The
lions share of this amount is not covered by the NHS
by and large patients pay privately for complementary
medicine. Herbal medicine is among the most popular complementary
therapy: in the UK 34% of all users of complementary medicine
take such remedies (
Ernst & White, 2000). Depression and
anxiety are prominent indications for herbal medicines (
Eisenberg et al, 1998;
Kales et al, 2004;
Roy-Byrne et al, 2005) and the majority of
people with depression try complementary medicines (
Silvers et al, 2006).
Peoples reasons for trying herbal medicines are complex (Ernst et al, 2001). British consumers have been shown to expect symptom relief, information, a holistic approach, improved quality of life and self-help advice from consulting complementary therapists (Richardson, 2004). American survey data suggest that significant associations exist between the specific domain of personality, coping strategies and social support on the one hand and use of complementary therapies on the other. Openness and perceived friend support were positively, and extroversion was inversely, correlated with the use of complementary medicine (Honda & Jacobson, 2005). We should also not underestimate the lure of the popular media. About 41 million websites offer information on the subject, much of which is unreliable or outright dangerous (Ernst & Schmidt, 2004). The UK daily press tends to be less than critical about complementary medicine (Ernst & Weihmayr, 2000), and books for the layperson are frequently misleading: when colleagues and I extracted the recommendations from seven such texts, we found that the authors had recommended a total of 131 different treatments for anxiety and 87 for depression (Ernst et al, 2001).
In this article, I will review the evidence for or against herbal remedies as treatments for depression and anxiety. My assessment is based on a systematic review of the published literature (literature searches in Medline, EMBASE, the Allied and Alternative Medicine Database (AMED) and the Cochrane Library up to June 2005) with an emphasis on controlled clinical trials and systematic reviews (Ernst et al, 2006). Its focus is on herbal medicine; thus, non-herbal supplements are excluded even if the evidence is encouraging, as it is for omega-3 fatty acids (Freeman et al, 2006).

Depression
Ineffective remedies
Ginkgo biloba (maidenhair tree) was tested in a small (
n = 27)
trial involving people with winter depression.
The results did not suggest that this approach was superior
to placebo (
Lingaerde et al, 1999). It has, however, been shown
to be effective for conditions such as dementia (
Ernst et al, 2001).
Promising remedies
Lavandula angustifolia (common lavender) was compared with imipramine in a small randomised controlled trial (RCT) including 45 individuals with moderate depression (Akhondzadeh et al, 2004). Both treatments seemed similarly effective but the study had significant methodological shortfalls (e.g. it was not designed as an equivalence trial). Another trial designed along the same lines suggested that Crocus sativus (saffron crocus) and imipramine were similarly effective (Akhondzadeh et al, 2003). Unfortunately, the same limitations applied.
Effective remedies
The only herbal remedy that has been shown beyond reasonable doubt to be effective as a treatment for mild to moderate depression is Hypericum perforatum (St Johns wort). The active ingredients of this herbal medicine are probably hypericin and/or hyperforin. Its antidepressive activity seems to be due to inhibition of both serotonin reuptake and monoamine oxidase.
An authoritative systematic review and meta-analysis included 30 RCTs involving individuals mostly (but not exclusively) with mild to moderate depression (Roder et al, 2004). The methodological quality of these trials was variable but many scored highest marks. Twenty five of them, involving a total of 2129 patients, compared St Johns wort with placebo. The results strongly favoured the former over the latter (risk ratio = 0.66, 95% CI 0.570.78, number needed to treat = 42). Five trials, involving a total of 2231 patients, compared St Johns wort with conventional antidepressants (including selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs)). The risk ratio of 0.96 indicates equivalence of these approaches. A subsequent Cochrane Review (Linde et al, 2005) reported similarly encouraging results.
So why use this herbal remedy if it is not better than conventional drugs? One answer could be that many patients prefer natural treatments. A perhaps more convincing answer is that its adverse effects profile is preferable. In fact, St Johns wort is associated with similar frequency and severity of adverse effects as placebo. There are, however, two caveats. Extracts of St Johns wort powerfully interact with the cytochrome P450 enzyme system and thus increase the plasma level of a wide range of other drugs (Mills et al, 2005). It seems to follow that it is safe only for people who use no other medication. The second caveat is the suspicion that St Johns wort can trigger psychoses, particularly in patients who concomitantly take SSRIs (Izzo & Ernst, 2001).

Anxiety
Ineffective remedies
No anxiolytic effects of valerian (
Valeriana officinalis) extract
were noted in an RCT involving 66 people with generalised anxiety
disorder (
Adreatini et al, 2002).
Promising remedies
A large RCT found that a combination of Crataegus oxyacantha (hawthorn), Eschscholzia californica (Californian poppy) and magnesium was more effective than placebo in reducing anxiety in 264 individuals with generalised anxiety disorder (Hanus et al, 2004). There is some evidence for the efficacy of Matricaria recutita (German chamomile) in the treatment of anxiety (Wong et al, 1998), but the study was methodologically weak. Short-term anxiolytic effects were noted after administration of Melissa officinalis (lemon balm) to healthy volunteers (Kennedy et al, 2004). Passiflora incarnata (passion flower) generated encouraging anxiolysis in an RCT with 36 people who had generalised anxiety disorder (Akhondzadeh et al, 2001). Even though these results are encouraging they do require independent replication before firm recommendations can be made.
Effective remedies
The only herbal remedy that is demonstrably effective in reducing anxiety is Piper methysticum (kava). Our Cochrane Review included 11 RCTs, involving a total of 645 patients (Pittler & Ernst, 2003). The methodological quality of these studies was variable but some were excellent. Without exception, these trials showed anxiolytic effects of kava that were superior to placebo.
Despite these clearly positive efficacy data, kava cannot currently be recommended for clinical use. This is because it has been associated with (sometimes severe) hepatotoxicity (Ernst, 2004). Recently there has been much debate about whether this association is causal or not. At present, however, this herbal remedy remains banned from the UK market.

Comments
Most clinicians will find this summary of the trial data (Table
1

) less than encouraging: apart from St Johns wort, there
is hardly anything within the realm of herbal medicine that
can be recommended to patients suffering from anxiety or depression.
Some remedies might work but, at present, we cannot be sure.
Why is there still so much uncertainty in herbal medicine
after all, it is millennia older than pharmacology?
Research difficulties
Herbal medicines are mixtures of many active ingredients. They
differ from synthetic drugs in several ways (Table 2

). Often
it is more than one herbal active ingredient that brings about
the clinical effects we observe in patients. In many instances
we have not yet identified any or all of the active ingredients.
Moreover, the quality of herbal remedies varies considerably
(
Garrard et al, 2003) owing to a range of factors: plant species,
soil, climate, storage, extraction method, etc. This complexity
complicates research.
The clinical effects of herbal medicines are usually moderate
and often appear only after prolonged periods of administration.
Clinical trials therefore need to be large and long-term. These
facts tend to render clinical trials more expensive. Even though
the sector as a whole achieves a sizeable turnover (
Wright, 2005),
single herbal manufacturers are usually relatively small and,
compared with big pharma, they are typically not
financially powerful. To make things worse, normally there is
no patent protection of herbal extracts. Thus, there is little
money to support expensive trials and even less impetus to spend
it on research. This already bleak situation will be further
aggravated by recent legislation: the European Directive on
Traditional Herbal Medicinal Products, which came into force
in October 2005, does not require proof of efficacy through
clinical trials for registering herbal medicines under this
scheme. Thus the incentive to conduct such research approaches
zero.
Is there a way out of this dilemma? One solution would be to follow the American example and set aside ring-fenced public funds for supporting research into herbal medicine. Research that emerges from initiatives funded by the National Institutes of Health is usually of outstanding methodological quality. Perhaps the UK authorities should consider this approach and develop a strategy along similar lines.
Product safety
From a clinical perspective, we need to consider not just efficacy but also (and perhaps foremost) safety (Box 1
). Consumers often assume herbal medicines to be safe; a survey conducted in Israel, for instance, showed that 56% of them believed they cause no side-effects at all (Giveon et al, 2004). Unfortunately, this is not true. Most herbal remedies have been associated with (usually mild and transient) adverse effects (Ernst, 2000). In addition, a systematic review showed that herbal medicines taken for non-psychiatric indications can cause psychiatric adverse effects, including delirium, coma, confusion, hallucinations, mood disturbances and seizures (Ernst, 2003). Research also confirms that many herbal medicines have the potential to interact with prescribed drugs (Box 2
). The notion that natural equals safe can therefore be dangerously misleading.
Box 1 Major safety issues with herbal medicine- Inherent toxicity (e.g. liver damage after kava intake)
- Contamination (e.g. heavy metals in Ayurvedic preparations)
- Adulterations (e.g. sildenafil in herbal aphrodisiacs)
- Interactions (e.g. St Johns wort lowers the plasma level of about half of prescription drugs)
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Box 2 Examples of interactions between herbal and synthetic medicines- St Johns wort can increase the effects of conventional SSRIs
- Kava can interact with levodopa and alprazolam, causing extrapyramidal symptoms or lethargy
- Valerian can interact with loperamide and fluoxetine, causing delirium
- Evening primrose oil can interact with phenothiazide, causing epileptic seizures
Data from Johne & Roots (2005)
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In conclusion, the scientific knowledge about the potential benefits or harms of herbal treatments for anxiety or depression is incomplete and the information patients receive can be highly misleading. Psychiatrists should be aware of the essential facts and advise their patients accordingly.

Declaration of interest
None.

MCQs
- In 1999 the total annual expenditure for complementary therapies in the UK was estimated to be:
- £16 billion
- £ 1.6 billion
- £ 1.6 million
- £ 0.16 million
- £160 billion.
- The number of websites currently informing patients about alternative medicine is about:
- 40 thousand
- 4 million
- 4 thousand
- 40 million
- 400 million.
- Efficacy of St Johns wort is best documented for:
- insomnia
- anxiety
- depression
- hay fever
- none of the above.
- Kava, used for anxiety, is associated with:
- memory loss
- liver problems
- kidney problems
- gastrointestinal problems
- impaired vision.
- The hypothesis that natural equals safe:
- is biologically plausible
- is false and misleading
- is a well-established fact
- is the subject of current research
- was first advanced by Samuel Hahnemann.
MCQ answers
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