Yohimbe

Purported Benefits, Side Effects & More

Yohimbe

Purported Benefits, Side Effects & More
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Yohimbe

Common Names

  • Yohimbe bark
  • Yohimbine
  • Johimbe
  • Aphrodine
  • Corynine
  • Quebrachine

For Patients & Caregivers

Tell your healthcare providers about any dietary supplements you’re taking, such as herbs, vitamins, minerals, and natural or home remedies. This will help them manage your care and keep you safe.


What is it?

Yohimbe is not recommended for treating erectile dysfunction.



Yohimbe is a tree native to West Africa. Yohimbine, an alkaloid derived from the bark of the tree, has been used for many years as an aphrodisiac.

Although widely used to treat erectile dysfunction before the approval of newer drugs, current guidelines do not recommend its use. In addition, yohimbine can cause many side effects, interact with many prescription drugs, and is not recommended for individuals with certain medical conditions.

What are the potential uses and benefits?
  • To improve athletic performance

    Evidence is lacking to support this claim.
  • To treat sexual dysfunction

    Several research bodies concluded that proof supporting yohimbine was based on weak evidence. Yohimbine is not currently recommended to improve sexual dysfunction.
  • As a stimulant

    Although yohimbine stimulates the nervous system, clinical data do not support its use.
  • For weight loss

    There are no data to support this use and yohimbe products are reported to have serious side effects and drug interactions.
What are the side effects?

High blood pressure, anxiety, nervousness, nausea, dizziness, rapid heartbeat, irregular heartbeat, heart muscle damage, sleeplessness, urinary problems, diarrhea, psychiatric symptoms

Case reports

  • 6 Unrelated deaths caused by yohimbine overdose that could not be explained by any other condition.
  • Severe pain and persistent erection in a 42-year-old man with complex medical history after taking yohimbe extract. A surgical procedure was necessary.
  • Palpitations and severe high blood pressure in a 49-year-old man who used an herbal supplement containing yohimbine.
  • Toxic effects including malaise, vomiting, loss of consciousness, and repeated seizures in a 39-year-old bodybuilder after taking a large amount of yohimbine.
  • Skin eruption, kidney failure, and lupus-like syndrome in a 42-year-old man following treatment with yohimbine for impotence.
What else do I need to know?

Patient Warnings:

  • Yohimbine can interact with numerous drugs and cause serious adverse effects.
  • Do not use if you have high blood pressure, heart disease, arrhythmias, Parkinson's disease, seizures, kidney, thyroid, or liver disease, sexual organ inflammatory disorders, ulcers, or psychiatric disorders.
  • Do not take with antidepressants or foods high in tyramine such as cheese, red wine, and liver, or with decongestants, diet aids, or phenylpropanolamine-containing products.
  • An analysis of 49 yohimbine supplement brands sold in the US showed that only 4% provided accurate information about the quantity of yohimbine and known adverse effects.

Do Not Take if:

  • You take antianxiety agents: Yohimbine may reduce their effectiveness.
  • You take antidepressants: Yohimbine may increase their side effects.
  • You take blood pressure medications: Yohimbine may lessen their effects.
  • You take CYP2D6 substrate drugs: Yohimbine may affect how these drugs are metabolized.
  • You take bupropion: Coingestion with yohimbe products can result in toxic effects.
  • You take opioids: Yohimbine may cause withdrawal and anxiety symptoms.
  • You are pregnant or nursing: Yohimbine may cause serious side effects.
  • You have cardiovascular, liver, or kidney disease: Yohimbine may cause serious side effects.
  • You have high blood pressure: Yohimbine can raise blood pressure so taking it may compound the problem.
  • You have psychiatric conditions including PTSD, anxiety, bipolar disorder, depression, mania, schizophrenia: Yohimbine may make your condition worse.
  • You have an enlarged prostate or sex organ inflammation: Yohimbine may make your condition worse.

For Healthcare Professionals

Scientific Name
Pausinystalia yohimbe, Corynanthe johimbe
Clinical Summary

Yohimbe is derived from the bark of the yohimbe tree, an evergreen native to West Africa. It has been used as an aphrodisiac for several centuries. Yohimbe is marketed as a steroid substitute, to enhance athletic performance, and for weight loss and energy support.

The active component, an alkaloid called yohimbine, has been tested in clinical studies to treat sexual dysfunction (1) (2) (3) (4). It was prescribed as an oral treatment for erectile dysfunction prior to the approval of PDE5 inhibitors, but there is a lack of direct evidence on its efficacy and safety (5) (6).

Data are also limited on the use of yohimbine for PTSD (7) (31), orthostatic hypotension (8) (9) (10), athletic performance (11), and xerostomia (12).

It is important to note that yohimbe products are among supplements with the largest number of documented contraindications (13), toxic effects (14), and severe events requiring hospitalization (15).

Purported Uses and Benefits
  • Athletic performance
  • Sexual dysfunction
  • Stimulant
  • Weight loss
Mechanism of Action

Effects on erectile dysfunction may result from inhibition of presynaptic-α1-adrenoceptor activity in cavernous smooth muscle cells and impact on NO and cGMP formation involving endothelium and endothelial NO synthase activity, which is testosterone-dependent (6) (17). Yohimbe also has dilatory effect on genital blood vessels, enhanced genital tissue sensation, and increased reflex excitability in the sacral region (4).

The active constituents are indole alkaloids including yohimbine (16), which possesses endothelin-like actions and affects NO production in renal circulation (18), and exerts anxiogenic effects through the noradrenergic pathway, which activates the HPA stress axis (19). As an α2-adrenoreceptor antagonist, yohimbine enhances norepinephrine release, increases parasympathomimetic activity, and reduces sympathetic activity (15) (20) (21). Blocking of α2-adrenoreceptors also results in increased blood supply to cavernous body tissue and increased plasma levels of noradrenaline by increasing its release from the sympathetic nervous system (4) (21). In patients with orthostatic hypotension, yohimbine produces a pressor effect by engaging residual sympathetic tone (8).

Warnings
  • Yohimbine can potentially interact with numerous drugs causing severe adverse effects.
  • Do not use if you have high blood pressure, heart disease, arrhythmias, Parkinson’s disease, seizure disorders, kidney, thyroid, or liver disease, sexual organ inflammatory disorders, ulcers, or psychiatric disorders.
  • Do not take with antidepressant medications or with foods containing high amounts of tyramine such as cheese, red wine, liver, or with decongestants, diet aids, or phenylpropanolamine-containing products.
  • An analysis of 49 yohimbine supplement brands sold in the US showed that only 4% provided accurate information about the quantity of yohimbine and known adverse effects (32).
Contraindications

Cardiovascular disease, hypertension, liver disease, kidney disease, PTSD, anxiety, bipolar disorder, depression, mania, schizophrenia, benign prostate hypertrophy, pregnancy (6) (7) (13).

Adverse Reactions

Hypertension, anxiety, nervousness, nausea, dizziness, tachycardia, palpitations, insomnia, urinary frequency, diarrhea, manic symptoms, cardiotoxicity (1) (6) (15) (33) (34)

Case reports
Severe poisoning and death: Attributed to quantified yohimbine concentrations in 6 cases, and in the absence of death from trauma, previous illness, or other common toxic components (23) (35).

Hypertensive urgency: In a 49-year-old man who presented to the emergency department with palpitations and severely elevated blood pressure that was not responding to treatment. The patient later admitted to using an herbal supplement containing yohimbine (36).

Acute neurotoxic effects: Malaise, vomiting, loss of consciousness, and repeated seizures in a 39-year-old bodybuilder following ingestion of yohimbine 5g and requiring orotracheal intubation and other treatment (24).

Erythrodermic skin eruption, renal failure, and lupus-like syndrome: In a 42-year-old black man following treatment with yohimbine. Patient required hospital admission and aggressive treatment as well as subsequent readmission (25).

Severe priapism: In a 42-year-old man with complex medical history after ingestion of yohimbe extract. Treatment required included a surgical procedure (26).

Herb-Drug Interactions
  • Antianxiety agents: Yohimbine may reduce their therapeutic effects (27).
  • Antidepressants: Yohimbine may augment side effects (28).
  • Antihypertensives: Yohimbine may diminish their effects (8).
  • Bupropion: Coingestion with yohimbe products resulted in toxic effects (14).
  • CYP2D6 substrate drugs: Yohimbine inhibits CYP2D6 and may therefore affect the intracellular concentration of drugs metabolized by these enzymes (29).
  • Opioids: Yohimbine may induce withdrawal and anxiety symptoms (30).
Dosage (OneMSK Only)
References
  1. Riley AJ. Yohimbine in the treatment of erectile disorder. Br J Clin Pract. May-Jun 1994;48(3):133-136.
  2. Ernst E, Pittler MH. Yohimbine for erectile dysfunction: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials. J Urol. Feb 1998;159(2):433-436.
  3. Kunelius P, Hakkinen J, Lukkarinen O. Is high-dose yohimbine hydrochloride effective in the treatment of mixed-type impotence? A prospective, randomized, controlled double-blind crossover study. Urology. Mar 1997;49(3):441-444.
  4. Montorsi F, Strambi LF, Guazzoni G, et al. Effect of yohimbine-trazodone on psychogenic impotence: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Urology. Nov 1994;44(5):732-736.
  5. Montague DK, Jarow JP, Broderick GA, et al. Chapter 1: The management of erectile dysfunction: an AUA update. J Urol. Jul 2005;174(1):230-239.
  6. Porst H, Burnett A, Brock G, et al. SOP conservative (medical and mechanical) treatment of erectile dysfunction. J Sex Med. Jan 2013;10(1):130-171.
  7. Morgan CA, 3rd, Grillon C, Southwick SM, et al. Yohimbine facilitated acoustic startle in combat veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder. Psychopharmacology (Berl). Feb 1995;117(4):466-471.
  8. Shibao C, Okamoto LE, Gamboa A, et al. Comparative efficacy of yohimbine against pyridostigmine for the treatment of orthostatic hypotension in autonomic failure. Hypertension. Nov 2010;56(5):847-851.
  9. Sharabi Y, Imrich R, Holmes C, et al. Generalized and neurotransmitter-selective noradrenergic denervation in Parkinson’s disease with orthostatic hypotension. Mov Disord. Sep 15 2008;23(12):1725-1732.
  10. Sharabi Y, Eldadah B, Li ST, et al. Neuropharmacologic distinction of neurogenic orthostatic hypotension syndromes. Clin Neuropharmacol. May-Jun 2006;29(3):97-105.
  11. Ostojic SM. Yohimbine: the effects on body composition and exercise performance in soccer players. Res Sports Med. Oct-Dec 2006;14(4):289-299.
  12. Bagheri H, Schmitt L, Berlan M, et al. A comparative study of the effects of yohimbine and anetholtrithione on salivary secretion in depressed patients treated with psychotropic drugs. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 1997;52(5):339-342.
  13. Tsai HH, Lin HW, Simon Pickard A, et al. Evaluation of documented drug interactions and contraindications associated with herbs and dietary supplements: a systematic literature review. Int J Clin Pract. Nov 2012;66(11):1056-1078.
  14. Haller C, Kearney T, Bent S, et al. Dietary supplement adverse events: report of a one-year poison center surveillance project. J Med Toxicol. Jun 2008;4(2):84-92.
  15. Kearney T, Tu N, Haller C. Adverse drug events associated with yohimbine-containing products: a retrospective review of the California Poison Control System reported cases. Ann Pharmacother. Jun 2010;44(6):1022-1029.
  16. Chen Q, Li P, Zhang Z, et al. Analysis of yohimbine alkaloid from Pausinystalia yohimbe by non-aqueous capillary electrophoresis and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. J Sep Sci. Jul 2008;31(12):2211-2218.
  17. Filippi S, Luconi M, Granchi S, et al. Endothelium-dependency of yohimbine-induced corpus cavernosum relaxation. Int J Impot Res. Aug 2002;14(4):295-307.
  18. Ajayi AA, Newaz M, Hercule H, et al. Endothelin-like action of Pausinystalia yohimbe aqueous extract on vascular and renal regional hemodynamics in Sprague Dawley rats. Methods Find Exp Clin Pharmacol. Dec 2003;25(10):817-822.
  19. Zheng H, Rinaman L. Yohimbine anxiogenesis in the elevated plus maze requires hindbrain noradrenergic neurons that target the anterior ventrolateral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. Eur J Neurosci. Apr 2013;37(8):1340-1349.
  20. Murburg MM, Villacres EC, Ko GN, et al. Effects of yohimbine on human sympathetic nervous system function. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. Oct 1991;73(4):861-865.
  21. Kirkeby HJ, Forman A, Sorensen S, et al. Alpha-adrenoceptor function in isolated penile circumflex veins from potent and impotent men. J Urol. Nov 1989;142(5):1369-1371.
  22. Guthrie SK, Hariharan M, Grunhaus LJ. Yohimbine bioavailability in humans. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 1990;39(4):409-411.
  23. Anderson C, Anderson D, Harre N, et al. Case study: two fatal case reports of acute yohimbine intoxication. J Anal Toxicol. Oct 2013;37(8):611-614.
  24. Giampreti A, Lonati D, Locatelli C, et al. Acute neurotoxicity after yohimbine ingestion by a body builder. Clin Toxicol (Phila). Sep 2009;47(8):827-829.
  25. Sandler B, Aronson P. Yohimbine-induced cutaneous drug eruption, progressive renal failure, and lupus-like syndrome. Urology. Apr 1993;41(4):343-345.
  26. Myers A, Barrueto F, Jr. Refractory priapism associated with ingestion of yohimbe extract. J Med Toxicol. Dec 2009;5(4):223-225.
  27. Mattila M, Seppala T, Mattila MJ. Anxiogenic effect of yohimbine in healthy subjects: comparison with caffeine and antagonism by clonidine and diazepam. Int Clin Psychopharmacol. Jul 1988;3(3):215-229.
  28. Fugh-Berman A. Herb-drug interactions. Lancet. Jan 8 2000;355(9198):134-138.
  29. VandenBrink BM, Foti RS, Rock DA, et al. Prediction of CYP2D6 drug interactions from in vitro data: evidence for substrate-dependent inhibition. Drug Metab Dispos. Jan 2012;40(1):47-53.
  30. Stine SM, Southwick SM, Petrakis IL, et al. Yohimbine-induced withdrawal and anxiety symptoms in opioid-dependent patients. Biol Psychiatry. Apr 15 2002;51(8):642-651.
  31. Tuerk PW, Wangelin BC, Powers MB, et al. Augmenting treatment efficiency in exposure therapy for PTSD: a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial of yohimbine HCl. Cogn Behav Ther. 2018 Sep;47(5):351-371.
  32. Cohen PA, Wang YH, Maller G, DeSouza R, Khan IA. Pharmaceutical quantities of yohimbine found in dietary supplements in the USA. Drug Test Anal. 2016 Mar-Apr;8(3-4):357-69.
  33. Brown AC. Heart Toxicity Related to Herbs and Dietary Supplements: Online Table of Case Reports. Part 4 of 5. J Diet Suppl. 2018 Jul 4;15(4):516-555.
  34. Rao N, Spiller HA, Hodges NL, et al. An Increase in Dietary Supplement Exposures Reported to US Poison Control Centers. J Med Toxicol. 2017 Sep;13(3):227-237.
  35. Zhu L, Han X, Zhu J, et al. Severe acute intoxication with yohimbine: Four simultaneous poisoning cases. Forensic Sci Int. Mar 2021;320:110705.
  36. Prescott A, Smereck J. Hypertensive Urgency: An Undesirable Complication of a “Male Performance” Herbal Product. J Emerg Med. Jul 2019;57(1):43-46.
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