Acute mania and psychosis potentially triggered by St John's wort
Daisuke Yoshioka, Takehiko Yamanashi, Masaaki Iwata

TL;DR
A young man with no significant psychiatric history developed acute mania and psychosis after taking St John's wort, suggesting it can trigger severe psychiatric reactions.
Contribution
This case report highlights that St John's wort can cause severe psychiatric symptoms even in individuals with no prior psychiatric issues.
Findings
A young man developed acute manic and psychotic symptoms after taking standard doses of St John's wort.
Discontinuation of St John's wort and treatment with aripiprazole led to rapid improvement and remission.
The patient remained stable for two months after stopping antipsychotics, suggesting a possible link between SJW and symptom onset.
Abstract
St John's wort (SJW) is widely used as an herbal supplement for depressive symptoms and is generally regarded as safe. However, although extremely rare, manic and psychotic reactions have been reported, typically in individuals taking high doses, using psychotropic agents, or having a psychiatric history. We report a case of a Japanese male in his early twenties with only one prior psychiatric visit for interpersonal stress, who developed acute manic and psychotic symptoms while taking standard doses of SJW. Shortly after returning to a university training program following COVID‐19 infection, he developed emotional instability, prominent grandiose and persecutory delusions, reduced sleep, and dangerous behavior. Blood tests, cerebrospinal fluid analysis, brain imaging, and cerebrospinal fluid antibody testing were normal. Upon admission, we provisionally diagnosed him with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNatural Compound Pharmacology Studies · Alkaloids: synthesis and pharmacology · Medicinal Plant Extracts Effects
