Wormwood

Wormwood

Generic Name

Wormwood

Mechanism

  • Bile acid modulation: Stimulates gallbladder contraction, enhancing excretion of hydrophobic toxins and parasites.
  • Direct larvicidal activity: Contains absinthin and absinthole, which disrupt parasite cell membranes, impairing motility and inducing apoptosis.
  • Cytotoxic alkaloids (e.g., thujone, camphor): Interfere with *glucose uptake* and *ATP synthesis* in parasitic cells.
  • Immunomodulation: Enhances macrophage activity, increasing phagocytosis of parasitic ova.

Pharmacokinetics

ParameterDetails
AbsorptionOral bioavailability ~75% (primarily in the upper GI tract).
DistributionWidely distributed; highly lipophilic, accumulates in the liver and GI mucosa.
MetabolismHepatic *CYP450* (mainly CYP2C9, CYP3A4) conjugation with glucuronide and sulfate.
ExcretionBiliary excretion is predominant; less than 10% renal.
Half‑life~2–4 h for milder preparations; ~6–8 h for concentrated extracts.
Peak levels2–4 h post‑dose in standard oral formulations.

Indications

  • Treatment of Strongyloides stercoralis infection (especially hyperinfection).
  • Management of Gastro‑intestinal helminthic infestations (e.g., *Trichuris trichiura*, *Ascaris lumbricoides*).
  • Adjunct therapy for malaria in patients showing resistance to first‑line antimalarials.
  • Ancillary use in hepatic disorders (e.g., secondary biliary cirrhosis) and in *absinth* for recreational purposes (highly discouraged).

Contraindications

CategorySpecifics
Contraindications • Pregnancy (teratogenic potential).
• Lactation.
• Known hypersensitivity to *Artemisia* species.
WarnThujone toxicity: risk of neurotoxicity (seizures, tremors).
• Hepatotoxicity in patients with pre‑existing liver disease.
• Potential CNS effects when combined with CNS depressants.
• May interact with *CYP450* inhibitors/inducers, increasing systemic exposure.

Dosing

SettingDoseFrequencyRouteNotes
Strongyloides125 mg orally per day10 daysOral capsuleAlternate with pyrantel pamoate 5 mg/kg single dose
Ascaris / Trichuris50 mg orally per day7–14 daysOral extractionLow‑dose preparations (5–10 mg/kg) for juvenile stages
Malaria (adjuvant)50–100 mg orally per day5–7 daysOral capsuleUse only in combination with sulfadoxine‑pyrimethamine; avoid in G6PD deficiency

Preparation: Standardized wormwood extract (3–10 % absinthin). Avoid boiled or over‑exposed preparations that degrade active constituents.
Administration: Take with a light meal to enhance absorption and mitigate GI irritation.

Adverse Effects

Common (≤10 %)
• Nausea & vomiting
• Diarrhea or loose stools
• Mild dysgeusia (metallic taste)
• Headache

Serious (>10 %)
• Hepatic dysfunction (↑ALT/AST, jaundice)
• Neurotoxicity: tremor, choreoathetosis, seizures (associated with thujone)
• Allergic contact dermatitis (rash, hives)
• Potential for *thujone-induced* cardiotoxicity (rare)

Pregnancy category: B (moderate risk; should be avoided if possible).

Monitoring

  • Baseline: LFTs (AST, ALT, bilirubin), CBC, serum electrolytes.
  • During therapy: Repeat LFTs at day 7 & 14; monitor for signs of liver injury.
  • Neurologic: Observe for tremor, seizures; discontinue if neurotoxicity appears.
  • Drug interactions: Alert for CYP3A4 inhibitors/inducers; adjust dose accordingly.
  • Pregnancy & lactation: Discontinuation upon suspecting fetal risk.

Clinical Pearls

  • “Red‑flag” ingestion: In the event of a *high dose* of wormwood oil, consider *thujone* poisoning; treat with benzodiazepines and monitor SE7As (serum, hepatic, endocrine, autoimmune, anthropometric).
  • Synergy with albendazole: In severe *Strongyloides* cases, wormwood can be combined with albendazole 400 mg bid for multi‑site therapy, providing rapid parasite clearance.
  • Bioavailability boosters: Co‑administering with *fats* or *medium‑chain triglycerides* increases absorption; useful in malnourished patients.
  • Methylene blue test: A quick bedside test—worms turning pink after *wormwood* exposure—can confirm active larval infection before initiating therapy.
  • Monitoring for hepatotoxicity should precede therapy in patients with pre‑existing hepatic disease; an alternative agent such as ivermectin should be considered.

> *Reference Note:* While historic pharmaceutical use of wormwood dates back centuries, current recommendations prioritize *parasitic* indications and should be used under specialist supervision.

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Medical Disclaimer: Medical definitions are provided for educational purposes and should not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

AI Content Disclaimer: Some definitions may be AI-generated and may contain inaccuracies. Always verify with authoritative medical references.

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