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News--
Ginkgo extract doesn't slow cognitive decline
(Also see New ginkgo study flawed, say experts)
Reuters December 29, 2009
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The widely used herbal supplement Ginkgo biloba does not appear to slow the rate of cognitive decline in healthy older people or those with mild cognitive impairment, U.S. researchers said on Tuesday.
Their study involved 3,069 people age 72 or older from four U.S. communities who were tracked for an average of six years. Half of them took twice-daily doses of 120 milligrams of extract from the leaves of the ginkgo tree and half received a placebo.
Compared with study participants who received a placebo, the use of Ginkgo biloba did not slow cognitive decline in those with normal conditions or those with mild cognitive impairment, the researchers wrote in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The findings suggest that Ginkgo biloba -- one of the top-selling herbal supplements used with the aim of improving memory and preventing age-related cognitive decline -- had no effect on subtle changes associated with early symptoms of dementia or normal aging, the researchers said.
"The primary finding was no effect of the ginkgo extract over a relatively long period of time in older people in slowing down what we see as the normal changes of thinking function in aging," Dr. Steven DeKosky, dean of the University of Virginia School of Medicine and the study's leader, said in a telephone interview.
"If one thought that ginkgo might maintain cognition and prevent or delay decline in some thinking associated with aging, it did not do that," he said.
DeKosky and colleagues previously found that Ginkgo biloba was not effective in reducing the incidence of Alzheimer's dementia or dementia overall.
A supplements industry group, Council for Responsible Nutrition, said other studies suggest the herbal supplement can be effective in improving cognitive function.
"In an area where there are few other safe, affordable options, I would hate to see this study send the wrong message to consumers," Douglas MacKay, CRN vice president said in an email. "I would continue to recommend Ginkgo biloba to older adults as a safe, effective option for supporting cognitive health."
The ginkgo product used in the research was made by German-based Schwabe Pharmaceuticals.
| New ginkgo study flawed, say experts
Jan 5, 2010 Natural Food Merchandiser
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Ginkgo extract doesn't slow cognitive decline
Dec 29, 2009 Reuters
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Ginkgo No Help for Heart, but May Aid Leg Arteries
Nov 30, 2009 Reuters
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UCLA Researchers Find Gingko Biloba May Help Improve
Memory
Nov 10, 2003 UCLA News
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Struggling to Avoid Alzheimer's Legacy
Feb 23, 2003 Washington Post |
Ginkgo
Biloba May Help Skiers, Climbers Avoid Altitude Sickness
Dec 08, 2002 THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE
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Ginkgo Offers No Mental Benefit, Study Says
Aug 20, 2002 Reuters
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BUY IT NOW
product specification
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ActiveHerb Ginkgo Biloba Standardized Extract
(ginkgolic acid < 1ppm)
60 mg Tablet, 60 ct
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"Thank you once again for bringing such a
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-- Adam, Y., Milwaukee, WI, Aug. 2009
(The customer has been taking our ginkgo since January 2006)
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