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St. Johns Wort

herb Verified

Specifically for Trigeminal Neuralgia

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Why it works for Trigeminal Neuralgia:

Proposed mechanisms (preclinical): Extracts and constituents (notably hypericin and hyperforin) have antinociceptive actions in animal models of neuropathic pain, including inhibition of protein kinase C γ/ε signaling and possible opioid-pathway involvement; anti-inflammatory/antioxidant and monoamine-reuptake effects are also described. These are mechanistic rationales, not clinical proof. Europe PMC

How to use for Trigeminal Neuralgia:

Typical standardized extract dose (for depression, not TN): Many commercial studies and monographs use 900 mg/day of standardized extract (e.g., 300 mg three times daily), often standardized to 0.3% hypericin and/or 2–4% hyperforin. These regimens are for mood disorders and are commonly cited as an upper bound for short-term use; they are not TN-specific. Drugs.com

Topical oils/creams: St. John’s wort oil is sometimes used topically for musculoskeletal pain, but data are sparse and not TN-specific; recent nursing literature calls for more trials even in osteoarthritis. There’s no clinical evidence for topical St. John’s wort in TN. painmanagementnursing.org

Quality matters: Content of active constituents varies widely between products; this variability is one reason interactions/effects are unpredictable. Prefer products with clear standardization and third-party testing, and involve your pharmacist/clinician. Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)

Scientific Evidence for Trigeminal Neuralgia:

Single case report: A 2017 peer-reviewed case report described a patient with TN who self-treated with an over-the-counter St. John’s wort preparation and reported pain relief. A case report can suggest a hypothesis, but it does not prove efficacy. Europe PMC

Systematic evidence in neuropathic pain (not TN-specific):

  • Cochrane review of herbal products for neuropathic pain: concluded there is insufficient evidence that St. John’s wort provides meaningful benefit in neuropathic pain conditions. Cochrane
  • Randomized clinical trial in painful polyneuropathy: a placebo-controlled study found no effect of St. John’s wort on pain. ScienceDirect
Specific Warnings for Trigeminal Neuralgia:

St. John’s wort has major drug–drug interaction potential—principally via CYP3A4, CYP2C9, other CYPs and P-glycoprotein induction—and can also raise serotonin to dangerous levels when combined with serotonergic agents.

  • Serotonin syndrome risk: Avoid combining with SSRIs/SNRIs, MAOIs, TCAs, triptans, some cough medicines (dextromethorphan), linezolid, or lithium without specialist oversight. NCCIH
  • Reduced effectiveness of other drugs (enzymatic induction): Can lower levels/effects of oral contraceptives, anticoagulants (warfarin, DOACs), immunosuppressants (cyclosporine, tacrolimus), HIV meds (PIs, NNRTIs), antiseizure drugs, statins, digoxin, and many others—sometimes with serious consequences (e.g., transplant rejection, unintended pregnancy, clotting). Mayo Clinic
  • Photosensitivity: Can increase sun sensitivity; risk may add to other photosensitizing medicines. Use sun protection; consider avoiding if you are on photosensitizing drugs. Mayo Clinic
  • Pregnancy & breastfeeding: Generally avoid—safety not established. Mayo Clinic
  • Psychiatric cautions: May precipitate mania in bipolar disorder and interact dangerously with antidepressants; do not self-treat significant mood symptoms. WebMD
  • Product variability/labeling: Constituents and potency vary; check with a pharmacist and disclose use to all clinicians. Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)

General Information (All Ailments)

Note: You are viewing ailment-specific information above. This section shows the general remedy information for all conditions.

What It Is

St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum) is a yellow-flowering herb native to Europe that has been used in traditional medicine for centuries, especially for mood and nervous-system complaints. In modern integrative care it is most commonly taken as capsules, tablets, tinctures, or tea for mild to moderate depressive symptoms, anxiety, sleep disturbance, and somatic stress symptoms.

How It Works

Its activity appears to be multi-mechanistic rather than “one target”:

  • Neurotransmitter modulation — Hyperforin and hypericin in the plant appear to inhibit reuptake of serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine, modestly increasing synaptic availability (pharmacologically overlapping with SSRIs/SNRIs, but generally weaker per-dose).
  • Neuroendocrine effects — Some evidence suggests down-modulation of the HPA stress axis and possible circadian influences.
  • Anti-inflammatory and antioxidant actions — In vitro and in-vivo work shows reduced pro-inflammatory cytokines and oxidative stress, both relevant to depression biology in some patients.
  • Neuroplastic effects — Emerging evidence suggests increases in brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and related pathways that support synaptic remodeling, a mechanism shared by several antidepressants.

Why It’s Important

For selected patients with mild to moderate depressive symptoms, St. John’s wort can achieve clinically meaningful mood improvement comparable to low-dose conventional antidepressants in several randomized trials — often with better subjective tolerability (less sexual dysfunction and weight gain, especially). It provides an accessible, inexpensive, non-scheduled option that gives some people an on-ramp to treatment when they wish to avoid or delay prescription antidepressants, or as a bridge while arranging formal care. Its demonstrated biologic activity also helps dispel the misconception that “herbal” means “biologically trivial.”

Considerations

  • High-risk drug–drug interactions — St. John’s wort induces CYP3A4, CYP2C9, P-glycoprotein and other pathways. It can lower blood levels and effectiveness of oral contraceptives, anticoagulants (e.g., warfarin), calcineurin inhibitors (e.g., cyclosporine, tacrolimus), chemotherapy, antiretrovirals, anti-epileptics, some cardiovascular drugs, and many others.
  • Serotonin-related risk when combined — Combining with SSRIs, SNRIs, MAOIs, triptans, MDMA, or other serotonergic substances can precipitate serotonin toxicity.
  • Inconsistent potency — Over-the-counter preparations differ markedly in hyperforin/hypericin content; clinical-trial-grade extracts are standardized.
  • Not first-line for severe depression — Evidence is strongest for mild to moderate symptoms; severe or psychotic depression, bipolar depression, suicidality, and complex comorbidity warrant supervised medical care.
  • Photosensitivity and tolerability — Can increase sun sensitivity at higher doses; other adverse effects include GI upset, restlessness, insomnia, and headache.
  • Reproductive considerations — Induction of drug metabolism can reduce oral contraceptive effectiveness; unintended pregnancy risk should be explicitly addressed.

Helps with these conditions

St. Johns Wort is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

Depression 0% effective
OCD 0% effective
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome 0% effective
Seasonal Affective Disorder 0% effective
Trigeminal Neuralgia 0% effective
5
Conditions
0
Total Votes
19
Studies
0%
Avg. Effectiveness

Detailed Information by Condition

Depression

0% effective

Active constituents: St. John’s wort extracts contain several biologically active compounds, chiefly hyperforin and hypericin, plus flavonoids and oth...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 5 studies cited

OCD

0% effective

St. John’s wort is well-studied for mild–moderate depression, but the evidence for treating OCD is limited and mixed. A few small open-label studies s...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 5 studies cited

Anti-inflammatory activity (theoretical): Extracts of St John’s wort can down-regulate inflammatory mediators (e.g., COX-2 and iNOS) in cell and anima...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 1 studies cited

St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum) contains active constituents (notably hyperforin and hypericin) that appear to increase levels of neurotransmit...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 5 studies cited

Proposed mechanisms (preclinical): Extracts and constituents (notably hypericin and hyperforin) have antinociceptive actions in animal models of neuro...

0 votes Updated 1 month ago 3 studies cited

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