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The acute effects of kava and oxazepam on anxiety, mood, neurocognition; and genetic correlates: a randomized, placebo‐controlled, double‐blind study
Author(s) -
Sarris J.,
Scholey A.,
Schweitzer I.,
Bousman C.,
LaPorte E.,
Ng C.,
Murray G.,
Stough C.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
human psychopharmacology: clinical and experimental
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.461
H-Index - 78
eISSN - 1099-1077
pISSN - 0885-6222
DOI - 10.1002/hup.2216
Subject(s) - oxazepam , anxiety , mood , kava , placebo , neurocognitive , medicine , double blind , clinical psychology , psychology , psychiatry , cognition , benzodiazepine , alternative medicine , pathology , receptor
Rationale Kava ( Piper methysticum ) is a psychotropic plant medicine with history of cultural and medicinal use. We conducted a study comparing the acute neurocognitive, anxiolytic, and thymoleptic effects of a medicinal dose of kava to a benzodiazepine and explored for the first time specific genetic polymorphisms, which may affect the psychotropic activity of phytomedicines or benzodiazepines. Methods Twenty‐two moderately anxious adults aged between 18 and 65 years were randomized to receive an acute dose of kava (180 mg of kavalactones), oxazepam (30 mg), and placebo 1 week apart in a crossover design trial. Results After exposure to cognitive tasks, a significant interaction was revealed between conditions on State–Trait Anxiety Inventory‐State anxiety ( p  = 0.046, partial ŋ ² = 0.14). In the oxazepam condition, there was a significant reduction in anxiety ( p  = 0.035), whereas there was no change in anxiety in the kava condition, and there was an increase in anxiety in the placebo condition. An increase in Bond–Lader “calmness” ( p  = 0.002) also occurred for the oxazepam condition. Kava was found to have no negative effect on cognition, whereas a reduction in alertness ( p  < 0.001) occurred in the oxazepam condition. Genetic analyses provide tentative evidence that noradrenaline (SLC6A2) transporter polymorphisms may have an effect on response to kava. Conclusion Acute “medicinal level” doses of this particular kava cultivar in naive users do not provide anxiolytic activity, although the phytomedicine also appears to have no negative effects on cognition. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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