Immunity/Inflammation/Weight

Chaga

Medicinal mushroom marketed for immunity and antioxidants, but human evidence is too limited to support clear benefits.

Chaga

Chaga

14
score
D
evidence
Caution
risk
Quick Take

Skip it for now — claims are mostly preclinical, with too little human evidence to justify routine use.

Chaga is a fungus that grows mainly on birch trees and is sold as tea, powder, or extract. It contains polysaccharides, polyphenols, and triterpenes with antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and immunomodulatory activity in lab studies. The main claims are lower oxidative stress, immune support, reduced inflammation, and possible glucose effects, but human trials are sparse and not conclusive. It is most relevant to people interested in traditional mushroom products.

Proven Benefits

01
May reduce oxidative stress
02
May modulate immune response
03
May reduce inflammatory markers
04
May improve glucose control

Protocol

Amount
500-1000 mg extract
Frequency
Once daily
When
Any time of day — consistency matters more than timing.

Onset Time

Unknown — no well-established human timeline

Who Should Consider

People specifically interested in traditional mushroom use

How It Works

Chaga contains beta-glucan-like polysaccharides, polyphenols, and triterpenes that can alter macrophage and NK-cell signaling and reduce oxidative stress in preclinical models. Those mechanisms may explain the immune and anti-inflammatory claims, but human confirmation is limited.

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