kavadude
❦ॐ tanuki tamer
This is a forum for fans of kava to discuss kava. It does not mean it is a place for us to be uncritical, assume that kava is safe under all circumstances, or take kava vendors at their word about their products. It is in our best interest to ensure that kava remains freely available to all, which means we are going to take a "better safe than sorry" approach when it comes to the safety of kava products.
Let's talk about liver safety. As you know there is some concern about whether kava can cause liver failure, due to being implicated in a number of cases of liver damage. Aqueous extracts of noble kava have been used in the Pacific Islands for thousands of years, without any increased incidence of liver damage.
When we try to figure out how, if at all, kava can cause liver damage, we have to look at what Westerners have done differently. There are a number of theories: use of tudei kava, use of nonpolar solvent extracts, microbial infection of poorly stored and processed root, perhaps some combination thereof.
None of these have been proven, and indeed it make take some confluence of multiple factors in order for kava to cause liver damage which will be difficult if not impossible to replicate in a lab setting.
The takeaway from all of this is that when you choose to go away from aqueous extracts of noble kava, you are going off the beaten track. You are turning your body into an experiment with a sample size of 1. If you are a vendor, you are turning your customers into an experiment.
Tudei kava might be safe, or it might not.
Alcohol extracts of kava might be safe, or they might not.
Aqueous extracts of noble kava are safe.
It's a free country and I can't stop vendors from selling tudei kava, I can't stop people from consuming whatever kava they please in whatever fashion they please and mixing it with whatever substances they want to.
I just don't want anybody to get hurt, especially since aqueous extracts of noble kava are extremely effective.
So, in the absence of solid clinical studies about the safety of these things, I am going to continue to recommend that you stick to aqueous extracts of noble kava (as defined by the Codex Alimentarius), that you get your kava from trustworthy vendors, and that you do not mix it with other botanical or pharmaceutical substances.
Let's talk about liver safety. As you know there is some concern about whether kava can cause liver failure, due to being implicated in a number of cases of liver damage. Aqueous extracts of noble kava have been used in the Pacific Islands for thousands of years, without any increased incidence of liver damage.
When we try to figure out how, if at all, kava can cause liver damage, we have to look at what Westerners have done differently. There are a number of theories: use of tudei kava, use of nonpolar solvent extracts, microbial infection of poorly stored and processed root, perhaps some combination thereof.
None of these have been proven, and indeed it make take some confluence of multiple factors in order for kava to cause liver damage which will be difficult if not impossible to replicate in a lab setting.
The takeaway from all of this is that when you choose to go away from aqueous extracts of noble kava, you are going off the beaten track. You are turning your body into an experiment with a sample size of 1. If you are a vendor, you are turning your customers into an experiment.
Tudei kava might be safe, or it might not.
Alcohol extracts of kava might be safe, or they might not.
Aqueous extracts of noble kava are safe.
It's a free country and I can't stop vendors from selling tudei kava, I can't stop people from consuming whatever kava they please in whatever fashion they please and mixing it with whatever substances they want to.
I just don't want anybody to get hurt, especially since aqueous extracts of noble kava are extremely effective.
So, in the absence of solid clinical studies about the safety of these things, I am going to continue to recommend that you stick to aqueous extracts of noble kava (as defined by the Codex Alimentarius), that you get your kava from trustworthy vendors, and that you do not mix it with other botanical or pharmaceutical substances.
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