Healthy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Serotonin Transporter Availability and Mood State in Normal Volunteers Taking Hypericum Perforatum (St. John's Wort)
St. John's Wort is a popular dietary supplement that many people take to elevate mood or
relieve stress. This study will test in normal volunteers whether this preparation may alter
mood and if so, by what means. Animal studies suggest that St. John's Wort may work
similarly to some antidepressants that affect levels of the chemical serotonin in the brain.
Participants in this study must also be enrolled in NIMH protocol #98-M-0094 (SPECT Imaging
of Dopamine and Serotonin Transporters in Neuropsychiatric Patients and Normal Volunteers)
and protocol #91-M-014 (MRI Imaging of Neuropsychiatric Patients and Controls). Separate
consent forms are required for each study. Candidates will undergo medical and psychiatric
evaluations that may include blood and urine tests, electroencephalogram and
electrocardiogram.
Normal volunteers will have a mood assessment at the beginning of the study. They will then
be randomly assigned to take either placebo (a pill with no active ingredient) or St. John's
Wort 3 times a day for 2 weeks, and will be told what they are taking. After an 11-week
hiatus, they will again start treatment on the same schedule, but will not be told which
preparation they are receiving. Each evening during the 2-week treatment periods, subjects
will complete a brief self-rating mood assessment questionnaire. At the end of each
treatment period, they will undergo SPECT brain imaging (a type of CT scan) to determine
dopamine and serotonin distribution and density in the brain.
For this procedure, study subjects take three drops of potassium iodide solution within 24
hours before the scan and two drops nightly for 3 days following the procedure. About 10 ml
(less than two teaspoons) of blood are drawn before a radioactive tracer is injected. SPECT
imaging is done the next day. After about 1 hour of imaging, subjects are given either a
placebo or St. John's Wort, and then imaging continues for another 2 hours. During the
procedure, up to five blood samples of 6 ml each may be drawn. At some point during the
study, a MRI scan of the brain will be done.
Extracts of hypericum perforatum (St. John's wort) have become increasingly popular for the treatment of mood disorders. Hypericum extracts have been approved in Germany for the treatment of mild to moderate depression and are now available in standardized preparations. In the United States, hypericum extracts are frequently purchased as over the counter preparations. Inhibition of the serotonin transporter, similar to clinically used selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), has been suggested as a possible mechanism of action for the antidepressant properties of hypericum extracts. We propose to study the effects of hypericum extracts on mood states in normal volunteers who are concurrently volunteering under NIMH protocol 98-M-0094 for SPECT imaging of serotonin and dopamine transporter availability with [I-123] Beta-CIT. A placebo-controlled, double-blind, within-subject design will be employed with two two-week periods of drug/placebo administration, clinical assessment and SPECT imaging separated by eleven weeks. We plan to test three hypotheses: 1) that hypericum alters mood state, 2) that hypericum reduces serotonin transporter availability, and 3) that these actions are quantitatively associated with one another. ;
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