Saturday, April 9, 2011

Passion Flower Boosts Sleep Quality!

Passion Flower May Boost Sleep Quality Reports Study


Drinking a cup of herbal tea with passion flower may assist sleep quality accordingto a new study.

The research, published in the journal Phytotherapy Research, tested one cup of passion flower tea against a control tea made from parsley, finding that when volunteers consumed passion flower they reported an increase in sleep quality of around five percent.
The Passion Flower

"The finding that Passiflora incarnata improved perceived sleep quality appears to be the first evidence for the efficacy of the herb on subjective sleep quality in humans. This suggests that Passiflora incarnata may be a viable alternative for managing mild sleep quality complaints," said the researchers from the School of Psychology and Psychiatry at Monash University, Australia.

Passion For Sleep
Around one-third of the worldwide population suffer from varying degrees of insomnia.
The researchers noted the use of traditional sedative herbs, such as passion flower as an alternative treatment for insomnia symptoms is increasing. They said this may be because herbal products are readily accessible over the counter and are generally perceived to be safe.

Passion flower is a traditional folk anti-anxiety agent (anxiolytic) and sedative that is widely used in the treatment of anxiety and insomnia symptoms.

They explained that the new study aimed to investigate whether passion flower has a positive effect on aspects of human sleep relative to placebo of parsley tea. The researchers explained that such effects would be evident from better subjective sleep reports from a sleep diary and from polysomnography testing (PSG - a diagnostic test that records the biophysiological changes that occur during sleep).

Study Details
The researchers recruited 41 healthy volunteers, aged between 18 and 35 years.

The volunteers answered questions concerning their health and sleeping patterns, and were asked to keep a sleep diary throughout the course of the trial.

Passion flower teabags (containing 2 grams of dried Passiflora incarnate) and parsley teabags (containing 2 grams dried Petroselinum crispum) were specifically used for the study.

All 41 participants were given each treatment for one week; they consumed one cup of either the passion flower or parsley tea and completed a sleep diary for seven days. All of the volunteers also completed an anxiety inventory survey on the seventh day, whilst ten participants also underwent overnight PSG on the final night of each treatment.

Conduit and colleagues reported that sleep quality showed a significantly better rating for the passion flower compared to the placebo. However passion flower produced no significant changes in any of the PSG parameters.

"These initial findings suggest that the consumption of a low dose of Passiflora incarnata, in the form of tea, yields short-term subjective sleep benefits for healthy adults with mild fluctuations in sleep quality," they said.

They added that the possible sedative effects of passion flower "should now be investigated in a sample of clinically diagnosed primary insomnia patients."

Source: Phytotherapy Research (Published online)
"A Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Investigation of the Effects of Passiflora incarnata (Passionflower) Herbal Tea on Subjective Sleep Quality"

Editor's Note: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.

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