Symptom → Plant Sources
Panax Ginseng (Panax ginseng) as a tool for helping with Memory
inferred from neuroprotective action
This review of preclinical and clinical evidence summarises the neuroprotective potential of Panax ginseng against Alzheimer's disease, supporting its cognitive-function and memory benefits.
Panax ginseng Meyer has been widely used as a tonic in traditional Korean, Chinese, and Japanese herbal medicines and in Western herbal preparations for thousands of years. In the past, ginseng was very rare and was considered to have mysterious powers. Today, the efficacy of drugs must be tested through well-designed clinical trials or meta-analyses, and ginseng is no exception. In the present review, we discuss the functions of ginseng described in historical documents and describe how these functions are taken into account in herbal prescriptions. We also discuss the findings of experimental pharmacological research on the functions of ginseng in ginseng-containing prescriptions and how these prescriptions have been applied in modern therapeutic interventions. The present review on the functions of ginseng in traditional prescriptions helps to demystify ginseng and, as a result, may contribute to expanding the use of ginseng or ginseng-containing prescriptions.
Ginseng is a highly valued herb in the Far East and has gained popularity in the West during the last decade. There is extensive literature on the beneficial effects of ginseng and its constituents. The major active components of ginseng are ginsenosides, a diverse group of steroidal saponins, which demonstrate the ability to target a myriad of tissues, producing an array of pharmacological responses. However, many mechanisms of ginsenoside activity still remain unknown. Since ginsenosides and other constituents of ginseng produce effects that are different from one another, and a single ginsenoside initiates multiple actions in the same tissue, the overall pharmacology of ginseng is complex. The ability of ginsenosides to independently target multireceptor systems at the plasma membrane, as well as to activate intracellular steroid receptors, may explain some pharmacological effects. This commentary aims to review selected effects of ginseng and ginsenosides and describe their possible modes of action. Structural variability of ginsenosides, structural and functional relationship to steroids, and potential targets of action are discussed.
4 sources supporting Panax Ginseng for Memory. Includes scientific publications, books, monographs and traditional-use references.
Mechanistic basis
This use is associated with the plant's neuroprotective / cognition support action. Further evidence for that pharmacology:
This review of Asian ginseng (Panax ginseng) and American ginseng summarises their ginsenoside pharmacology and toxicology, covering antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, immunomodulatory, neuroprotective and metabolic effects and their safety.
Ginsenoside Rb1, a major constituent of Panax ginseng, inhibited astrocyte activation and promoted transfer of astrocytic mitochondria to neurons against ischemic stroke, demonstrating a neuroprotective mechanism of ginseng.
This Cochrane review evaluated ginseng (including Panax ginseng) for cognition, finding some evidence of improved cognitive performance in healthy participants while noting the need for higher-quality trials.