Korean White Ginseng Improves Cognitive Performance in Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease

April 3, 2010 by  
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The Journal of the American Botanical Council

Issue: 82 Page: 32-33

Korean White Ginseng Improves Cognitive Performance in Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease

HerbalGram. 2009;82:32-33 American Botanical Council

Reviewed: Lee S-T, Chu K, Sim J-Y, Heo J-H, Kim M. Panax ginseng enhances cognitive performance in Alzheimer disease. Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord. 2008;22(3):222-226.

The modern pharmacologic effects of ginseng and its components, ginsenosides, have been demonstrated in the cardiovascular, endocrine, and immune systems.1 Also, ginseng has been reported to increase the cognitive performance of healthy persons.2-5 For Alzheimer’s disease, investigators have examined the neuroprotective and tropic effects of ginseng in experimental models. The authors of this study report on their investigation of Korean white ginseng (Panax ginseng, Araliaceae)* in enhancing the cognitive function in patients with Alzheimer’s disease.

They conducted a prospective, open-label study at the Seoul National University Hospital in South Korea from June 2004 until October 2005. Ninety-seven patients who met NINDS-ADRDA (National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Strokes, and Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders Association) criteria for probable Alzheimer’s disease were included (aged 47 to 83 years).

The authors excluded patients who had evidence of other neurodegenerative disorders or cognitive impairments resulting from acute cerebral trauma, dysthmia (a chronic mild state of depression), hypoxic cerebral damage, vitamin deficiency, infection, cerebral neoplasia (growth of new tissue, e.g., a tumor, in the brain), metabolic disease, mental retardation, oligophrenia (subnormal mental development), or a coexisting medical condition that could prevent them from completing the study.

The patients were randomly assigned to the ginseng group (n=58; 20 men and 38 women) or to the control group (n=39; 15 men and 24 women). The ginseng group was treated with Korean white ginseng powder (4.5 g/day of 6-year-old root powder from Hongcheon and Heongsung provinces in South Korea, powdered and encapsulated by Nonghyup Co., South Korea) for 12 weeks. According to the authors, the ginseng contained total 8.19% of ginsenosides† plus essential oils, diacetylenic compounds, acidic polysaccharides, phenolic compounds, peptidoglycans, amino acids, vitamins, and carbohydrates.

To evaluate possible dose-response effect, an additional 9 patients were administered a higher dose of ginseng (9 g/day).

After the 12-week period of ginseng treatment, all patients were monitored for another 12 weeks.

To evaluate cognitive functions, the authors used scores on the mini-mental state examination (MMSE) and Alzheimer’s disease assessment scale (ADAS), including the ADAS cognitive subscale (ADAS-cog) and noncognitive subscale (ADAS-noncog). Efficacy variables included changes of MMSE and ADAS from baseline scores at 4, 12, and 24 weeks after the start of treatment.

The efficacy analyses were primarily preformed on an intention-totreat (ITT) basis; a per-protocol analysis was also done. Intergroup comparisons for changes from baseline in ADAS and MMSE scores were performed using the Student’s t test. They used repeated measures analysis of variance to compare the raw MMSE and ADAS scores in addition to the comparison of changes from baseline. Statistical significance was accepted for P values less than 0.05.

At 4 weeks, 91 patients (54 in the ginseng group, 37 in the control group) were reevaluated and included in the efficacy analysis. Eighty-two patients (50 in the ginseng group, 32 in the control group) completed 12 weeks of treatment, and 58 patients (36 in the ginseng group, 22 in the control group) were reevaluated at 24 weeks after the treatment began.

Baseline characteristics including age, sex, ADAS-cog, ADAS-noncog, MMSE, and clinical dementia rating scale scores were similar between the 2 groups.

At 4 weeks, the ginseng group showed an improvement in MMSE score by 1.0 ± 2.4 points from baseline, according to efficacy analysis, whereas the control group changed by –0.58 ± 2.4 points (P = 0.033 between the 2 groups). At 12 weeks, the ginseng group improved by 1.8 ± 2.8 points, whereas the control group changed by only –0.03 ± 3.1 (P = 0.009 between the 2 groups). However, after the 12-week period of ginseng discontinuation, no difference was observed between the 2 groups (control = 0.88 ± 2.5, ginseng = 0.56 ± 3.6, P = 0.673).

ADAS-cog scores were also improved in the ginseng group at 4 weeks and at 12 weeks after the ginseng treatment compared with the control group on ITT basis. And, again, after the ginseng had been discontinued for 12 weeks, the differences between the ginseng and control groups disappeared. In contrast, say the authors, the ADAS-noncog scores, which represent neuropsychiatric symptoms, showed no significant difference between the ginseng and control groups on ITT basis at 4 weeks, 12 weeks, or at 24 weeks.

According to the authors, the repeated measures analysis of variance revealed that at 4 weeks, the ginseng group showed an improvement in ADAS-cog score compared with the control group, after adjusting the baseline values. At 12 weeks, the ginseng group showed improvements in both ADAS-cog and MMSE scores, after adjusting the baseline values.

The ADAS-cog and ADAS-noncog and MMSE changes for the 9 patients treated with 9 g/day of the ginseng powder for 12 weeks were not different compared with those treated with 4.5 g/day of ginseng.

Adverse events (reported by 7 of the 58 patients in the ginseng group and 6 of the 39 patients in the control group) were mild and transient.

Among the limitations of this study are the small number of patients involved, the short duration, and the fact that, because this was an open-label study, the effect of the ginseng was not relative to a placebo.

The authors report that these results suggest that Korean white ginseng is clinically effective in the cognitive performance of patients with Alzheimer’s disease and that longer-term, placebo-controlled, double-blind studies are warranted.

—Shari Henson

References

1. Attele AS, Wu JA, Yuan CS. Ginseng pharmacology: multiple constituents and multiple actions. Biochem Pharmacol. 1999;58:1685-1693.
2. Kennedy DO, Scholey AB. Ginseng: potential for the enhancement of cognitive performance and mood. Pharmacol Biochem Behav. 2003;75:687-700.
3. D’Angelo L, Grimaldi R, Caravaggi M, et al. A double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical study on the effect of a standardized ginseng extract on psychomotor performance in healthy volunteers. J Ethnopharmacol. 1986;16:15-22.
4. Sorensen HSJ. A double masked study of the effects of ginseng on cognitive functions. Curr Ther Res. 1996;57:959-968.
5. Kennedy DO, Scholeya AB, Wesnes KA. Dose dependent changes in cognitive performance and mood following acute administration of ginseng to healthy young volunteers. Nutr Neurosci. 2001;4:295-310.

* Korean white ginseng is the dry natural cultivated ginseng root, with the skin peeled or scraped, and usually ground into powder for use in capsules and tablets, or extracted with water and ethanol. It differs from Korean red ginseng root in that it is not treated by steaming the fresh white roots, a process that turns the roots a caramel color and causes changes in the ginsenoside profile. In Korea and China, Panax ginseng is widely termed Asian ginseng.

† This appears to be a relatively high concentration of ginsenosides; the normal range for Asian ginseng root is usually between 3-5%. Thus, the generalizability of the results of this trial may be limited by what appears to be about double the normal ginsenoside content in these ginseng roots.

Source: http://cms.herbalgram.org/herbalgram/issue82/article3408.html
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