The impact of herbal drug use on adverse drug reaction profiles of patients on antiretroviral therapy in Zimbabwe

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Abstract

Background. The main objective was to determine the impact of herbal drug use on adverse drug reactions in patients on antiretroviral therapy (ART). Methodology. Patients receiving first-line ART from the national roll-out program participated in this cross-sectional study. Participants were interviewed and a data collection sheet was used to collect information from the corresponding medical record. Results. The majority (98.2%) of participants were using at least one herbal drug together with ART. The most common herbal remedies used were Allium Sativum (72.7%), Bidens pilosa (66.0%), Eucalyptus globulus (52.3%), Moringa oleifera (44.1%), Lippia javanica (36.3%), and Peltoforum africanum (34.3%). Two indigenous herbs, Musakavakadzi (OR = 0.25; 95% CI 0.076-0.828) and Peltoforum africanum (OR = 0.495; 95% CI 0.292-0.839) reduced the occurrence of adverse drug events. Conclusions. The use of herbal drugs is high in the HIV-infected population and there is need for pharmacovigilance programs to recognize the role they play in altering ADR profiles. © 2012 Tinashe Mudzviti et al.

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Mudzviti, T., Maponga, C. C., Khoza, S., Ma, Q., & Morse, G. D. (2012). The impact of herbal drug use on adverse drug reaction profiles of patients on antiretroviral therapy in Zimbabwe. AIDS Research and Treatment, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/434171

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