CHAMGAP
APPROVEDReviewed and approved by the Chamgap Editorial Team (2026-07-10). The draft was written by AI, all 4 cited sources were opened and checked for existence, and the verdict passed blind grading and adversarial audit. Methodology v0.6.
Verdict No. 186 · Search date 2026-07-10 · Methodology v0.6

Lavender oil,
does it really help with Anxiety?

30-Second Summary
C
Evidence Grade C · 58 · Safety caution
The symptom-scale RCT signal for oral Silexan is strong, but the grade is C because of the rule for absence of independent replication.
What the
research shows
Standardized oral lavender oil Silexan has relatively clear RCT signals on anxiety symptom scales. In Kasper 2014 (539 people with GAD), Silexan 160 mg lowered HAMA more than placebo (-14.1 vs -9.5), and Woelk 2010 showed a reduction similar to lorazepam. However, the positive evidence is concentrated on a single product, Silexan, and its manufacturer, so the maximum grade is C.
What the
ads claim
Advertisements broadly mention 'lavender,' 'natural calming,' and 'anxiety/sleep.' The evidence that is relatively good is for standardized oral Silexan, not all lavender products.
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Useful facts when choosing a product

  • Research doses are mainly Silexan 80 mg/day, with some studies using 160 mg/day.
  • Common adverse reactions are belching, gastrointestinal symptoms, and lavender-smelling reflux.
  • Clinician confirmation is needed with sedatives, antidepressants, pregnancy/lactation, and pediatric use.
  • Drinking arbitrary essential oil carries poisoning risk and should be distinguished from the research product.
Gap Measurement · Verdict 186 · C 58
What advertising claims
What independent, higher-quality research supports
△ GAP
01

What the research actually shows

Kasper 2014 reported that in 539 people with GAD, Silexan 160 mg lowered HAMA more than placebo (-14.1 vs -9.5). Woelk 2010 reported that in 77 patients with GAD, HAMA reductions were similar with Silexan 80 mg/day and lorazepam 0.5 mg/day. Kasper 2010/2014 RCTs and meta-analyses summarize that Silexan lowers anxiety scores, but the evidence axis is concentrated on standardized oral Silexan and the manufacturer Dr. Willmar Schwabe, leaving the limitation of absent independent replication.

02

Why this is classified as C (58)

The direct symptom-scale RCT signal is strong, but the positive evidence is concentrated on a single Silexan product and manufacturer, so under methodology ②-b the grade is C, 58 points.

Counterpoint. This is adjunctive evidence for mild-to-moderate anxiety symptoms and should not be interpreted as evidence to replace mental-health treatment.

Rejudgment record. Draft — The direct symptom-scale RCT signal is strong, but the positive evidence is concentrated on a single Silexan product and manufacturer, so under methodology ②-b the grade is C, 58 points.

Cross-check — Codex and Claude

This verdict was drafted by Codex through literature review and source-existence checks, cross-checked through blind grading and adversarial audit, and settled by reapplying the methodology boundary rules. Cases with split grades were resolved through rejudgment.
03

Evidence Table

StudyDesignSampleFundingEndpointResultWeight
Woelk H & Schlaefke S 2010Double-blind randomized comparative trial77Manufacturer-relatedHAMAHAMA reductions with Silexan 80 mg and lorazepam 0.5 mg were similar.Core
Kasper S et al. 2014Randomized placebo- and active-controlled trial539Schwabe-relatedHAMA total scoreSilexan 80/160 mg lowered HAMA more than placebo.Core
Generoso MB et al. 2017Systematic review and meta-analysisSilexan RCTAcademicAnxiety scalesIt reported improvement in anxiety scores with Silexan.Core
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Receipt — 4 References

Every cited source was opened and checked against the live page on 2026-07-10.

Woelk H, Schlaefke S. A multi-center, double-blind, randomized study of the lavender oil preparation Silexan in comparison to lorazepam for generalized anxiety disorder. Phytomedicine. 2010;17:94-99. DOI: 10.1016/j.phymed.2009.10.006.
checked
Kasper S, Gastpar M, Mueller WE, et al. Lavender oil preparation Silexan is effective in generalized anxiety disorder: a randomized, double-blind comparison to placebo and paroxetine. Int J Neuropsychopharmacol. 2014;17:859-869. DOI: 10.1017/S1461145714000017.
checked
Kasper S, Gastpar M, Mueller WE, et al. Silexan, an orally administered Lavandula oil preparation, is effective in subsyndromal anxiety disorder: a randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled trial. Int Clin Psychopharmacol. 2010;25:277-287. DOI: 10.1097/YIC.0b013e32833b3242.
checked
Generoso MB, Soares A, Taiar IT, Cordeiro Q, Shiozawa P. Lavender oil preparation (Silexan) for treating anxiety: an updated meta-analysis. J Clin Psychopharmacol. 2017;37:115-117. DOI: 10.1097/JCP.0000000000000615.
checked
Draft and rewrite: Codex (AI) · Verification: Codex blind grading and adversarial audit · Final adjudication: Claude
Reviewed and approved: Chamgap Editorial Team · Approval date: 2026-07-10 · Corrections: none

Cite this verdict

Lavender Oil (Silexan) × Anxiety Evidence Grade C card
[Chamgap] Lavender Oil (Silexan) × Anxiety — Evidence Grade C·58. 4 cited sources checked. Source: https://health-receipt.pages.dev/en/verdicts/mood/lavender-silexan-anxiety/ · CC BY 4.0

CC BY 4.0 — free to use with attribution; do not distort grades, numbers, or verdict meaning.

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What this document does and does not do

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