Oat Straw
- What Is Oat Straw Used for Today?
- Dosage
- Safety Issues
- References
En Español (Spanish Version)
When the oat plant matures, it produces a fruit that becomes the grain “oats,” a heart-healthy, high-fiber food. This article does not address this form of oat. Rather, it describes products made from the green, unripe oat straw, sold under the names
Avena sativa
, green oats, and wild oat extract.
Traditionally, oat straw was considered a mild “nervine,” an herb thought to calm and heal nervous symptoms. On this basis, it was used to treat insomnia, stress, anxiety, and nervousness. In addition, oat straw tea was used for arthritis, and an alcohol extract of oat straw for the treatment of narcotic and cigarette addiction. However, there is no evidence that it is effective when used for any of these purposes.
Oat straw is widely marketed for enhancing
male sexual function
, and a combination of oat straw and
saw palmetto
is said to help
sexual dysfunction
in women. The same combination is supposedly helpful for
enlargement of the prostate
. However, the only evidence for these claims comes from unpublished studies conducted by the manufacturer of oat straw products. Because these studies are not available in full, it is not possible to judge their validity.
For example, one double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of 75 men and women reportedly found that use of an oat straw product enhanced sexual experience for men, but not for women.
1
Unfortunately, it is not clear whether the results were statistically significant or exactly how the researchers arrived at their conclusions. Another study discussed on the same web page supposedly found that oat straw combined with
saw palmetto
produced similar benefits for women, but it is not clear whether this trial was double-blind.
It has been claimed that oat straw works by increasing the amount of free testosterone in the blood. Many oat straw websites state that, with advancing age, testosterone in the body tends to become bound up and inactivated, that this leads to numerous problems including failing sexual function, and that oat straw reverses this process. However, none of the parts of this argument are fully substantiated: the argument is speculation piled on speculation.
Oat straw has also been advocated as a stop-smoking treatment. However, despite promising results in one rather informal study, reported in a letter to the journal
Nature
in 1971,
2
the balance of the evidence suggests that alcohol tincture of wild oats is
not
helpful for
quitting smoking
.
3-5
Oat straw extract should be taken according to the manufacturer's directions. Alcohol tincture of oat straw is typically used at a dose of 1/2 to 1 teaspoon three times per day.
There are no known or suspected health risks with oat straw. However, comprehensive safety studies have not been reported.
References
Vigorex.
Avena sativa
(green oats). Available at:
http://www.vigorex.uk.com/avena_sativa.asp
. Accessed May 22, 2005.
Anand CL. Effect of
Avena sativa
on cigarette smoking.
Nature
. 1971;233:496.
Bye C, Fowle AS, Letley E, et al. Lack of effect of
Avena sativa
on cigarette smoking.
Nature
. 1974;252:580-581.
Gabrynowicz JW. Letter: treatment of nicotine addiction with
Avena sativa
.
Med J Aust
. 1974;2:306-307.
Schmidt K, Geckeler K. Pharmacotherapy with
Avena sativa
—a double blind study.
Int J Clin PharmacolBiopharm
. 1976;14:214-216.
Last Reviewed August 2011