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Current Drug Metabolism

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1389-2002
ISSN (Online): 1875-5453

St. Johns Wort Components and the Brain: Uptake, Concentrations Reached and the Mechanisms Underlying Pharmacological Effects

Author(s): Silvio Caccia and Marco Gobbi

Volume 10, Issue 9, 2009

Page: [1055 - 1065] Pages: 11

DOI: 10.2174/138920009790711878

Price: $65

Abstract

Hypericum perforatum L. (St. Johns wort) extracts have gained popularity as an alternative to conventional antidepressant drugs for mild to moderate forms of depressive disorders. New potential psychiatric uses for extracts in obsessive-compulsive disorder, generalised anxiety disorder and alcohol dependence have also been suggested on the basis of animal studies. The neurochemical mechanisms of these central actions are still debated but several components have antidepressant-like and anxiolytic-like effects in animals, or interact with neurotransmitter systems believed to be causally involved in depression, anxiety and in psychiatric illness generally. However, these data should interpreted taking account of the pharmacokinetic data on the main components, particularly those of their brain distribution and concentrations and the relationships with blood concentrations; the (scant) data so far suggest that the acylphloroglucinol hyperforin, the flavonol quercetin and its glycosylated forms and their metabolites, the biflavones amentoflavone and its I3,II8-analog biapigenin and the naphthodianthrones hypericin and pseudohypericin pass the blood-brain barrier poorly in animals. The brain concentrations of all these high-molecular weight, poorly water-soluble compounds after pharmacologically effective doses of the extracts are therefore far below those effective on neurotransmitter receptors and the mechanisms which are obviously important in the central effects of conventional, pharmacologically related drugs. Additional pharmacokinetic data on the brain concentrations of these and other constituents and their metabolites are therefore required for a more meaningful interpretation of the central effects of St. Johns Wort extracts.

Keywords: Acylphloroglucinols, flavonoids, naphthodianthrones, pharmacokinetics, brain-to-blood distribution, neurochemical effects


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