Cognition/Hormonal/Immunity

Ginseng

Herbal Panax root that may modestly reduce mental fatigue and support focus in adults under stress or with age-related slowing.

Ginseng

Ginseng

46
score
C
evidence
Caution
risk
Quick Take

Reasonable for mild mental fatigue or focus, but expect modest effects and buy only standardized Panax extracts.

Ginseng usually refers to roots from Panax species, especially Asian/Korean ginseng and sometimes American ginseng, used as teas, powders, and extracts. Its ginsenosides affect neurotransmitters, nitric oxide, stress signaling, glucose handling, and immune-cell activity. Human trials suggest modest benefits for mental fatigue, some attention or memory tasks, and possibly blood sugar, sexual function, or cold risk. It fits best for adults wanting a mild, non-caffeine daytime herb.

Proven Benefits

01
Reduces mental fatigue
02
May improve attention and memory
03
May improve erectile function
04
May lower fasting glucose
05
May reduce common cold risk

Protocol

Amount
200-400 mg
Frequency
Once daily or split into 2 doses
When
Morning or early afternoon with food; avoid near bedtime if it feels stimulating.

Onset Time

1-3 hours for acute mental effects; 2-8 weeks for fatigue or glucose.

Who Should Consider

Adults with recurring mental fatigue
People under prolonged work or study stress
Older adults noticing mild cognitive slowing
Adults wanting a mild daytime option besides caffeine
Adults who get frequent colds

How It Works

Ginsenosides appear to modulate cholinergic and dopaminergic signaling in the brain, increase nitric oxide availability, and influence HPA-axis, immune, and insulin signaling. These effects can slightly reduce perceived fatigue and may modestly affect cognition, glucose handling, and vascular or sexual function.

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