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Title: Ginkgo Biloba Post by: Jitendra Hydonus on Jun 03, 2024 01:01 am I’m thinkin that with so many brain supporters I’ll actually be able to remember where I put things like keys.
ginkgo biloba ginkgo biloba 12 Benefits of Ginkgo Biloba 1. Contains Powerful Antioxidants 2. Can Help Fight Inflammation 3. Improves Circulation and Heart Health 4. Reduces Symptoms of Psychiatric Disorders and Dementia 5. Improves Brain Function and Well-Being 6. Can Reduce Anxiety 7. Can Treat Depression 8. Can Support Vision and Eye Health https://www.bing.com/search?q=ginkgo+biloba+health+benefits&qs=SS&pq=ginkgo+biloba+health&sc=6-20&cvid=4E86BC9B492D4B188C61E7ADEFE76319&FORM=QBRE&sp=1&ghc=1&lq=0 Title: Re: Ginkgo Biloba Post by: mccoy on Jun 08, 2024 11:27 pm Ginko biloba, like Ginseng, is another classic of traditional herbal medicine, studied among other things for its benefits to the central nervous system, as Steve says.
Title: Re: Ginkgo Biloba Post by: mccoy on Jun 09, 2024 03:09 pm From the treatise 'Nutraceuticals', Elsevier 2016 - (But in this field research updates at least every year....) Common commercial formulations of G. biloba include capsule or tablet forms. Standardization of the leaf extracts can vary significantly in quality and quantity, but it is important that they are standardized on the basis of the active ingredients. The United States Pharmacopeia (USP) 32 and the European Pharmacopoeia 6.1 also published monographs for G. biloba extract and formulations, providing standards for herbal preparations. The USP 32 has monographs for Ginkgo, powdered Ginkgo extract, and Ginkgo capsules and tablets, and the European Pharmacopeia 6.1 has a monograph for G. biloba extract. Both of the pharmacopeias list the standardized dry extracts that are produced with acetone 60% and a drug/ extract ratio of 35:37:1, such as EGb 761 and Li 1370, both of which have a defined composition. Variations in the levels of the active ingredients are likely due to the multistep extraction and concentration process used (Heinonen and Wilhelm, 2015). These authors also stated that G. biloba is used to treat cognitive impairment in various types of dementia, peripheral arterial diseases, ischemic stroke, tinnitus, macular degeneration, and autism, and to moderate the undesirable effects of some cancer therapies. EGb 761 has been shown to have antistress effects, which supports its use in preventing or impeding the development of psychiatric disorders in which stress is a pathogenic factor (Montes et al., 2015). In Gurley et al. (2012) the therapeutic uses were listed as being used for insufficient blood flow, memory deficits, cognitive disorders, Alzheimer’s disease (AD), depression, vertigo, tinnitus, and intermittent claudication. Dugoua et al. (2006) states additional uses that include memory enhancement, asthma, varicose veins, mountain sickness, idiopathic cyclic edema, sexual dysfunction secondary to the use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, and connective tissue disorders. They also stated that the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended G. biloba for Raynaud’s disease. The WHO has also accepted the standardized extracts such as EGb 761 and Li 1370 as antidementia drugs based on the pharmacological studies done in vitro and in vivo and the numerous clinical studies supporting the efficacy of EGb 761 in the central nervous system (CNS) when taking a 240-mg daily dose. Chan et al. (2007) described current uses in medical applications, including improving brain function, strengthening the cerebrovascular and cardiovascular systems by the inhibition of platelet aggregation and the increase of blood flow and oxygen supply, neutralizing free radicals, stabilizing cellular energy production, and suppressing hemorrhoids, inflammation, migraines, allergies, and asthma. |