Ginkgo
heilzaam bij gevolgen Multiple Sclerose.*
Uit
een kleine studie blijkt dat Ginkgo geheugenproblemen bij MS-patiënten
duidelijk kan verminderen.
Het
verschil tussen met en zonder Ginkgo supplementatie is als het verschil in
cognitieve vaardigheden van iemand van 35 en iemand van 55 jaar.
OHSU
study finds ginkgo beneficial for MS symptoms
PORTLAND,
Ore. – When it comes to her health, Janice Winfield of Portland, Ore., does
her research.
That's
why the stay-at-home mom, who was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in July
2000, was willing to turn to popular, over-the-counter herbal supplements like
ginkgo biloba to deal with memory problems, fatigue and occasional muscle pain.
"I'm
definitely interested in alternative medicine," said Winfield, 49, whose
form of the neurological disease – relapsing-remitting MS – is characterized
by frequent symptom flare-ups. Ginkgo "is not only given to someone like me
with MS. There's benefit to anyone taking it."
Findings
by scientists in the Oregon Health & Science University School of Medicine's
Department of Neurology and the OHSU MS Center of Oregon appear to back up that
claim. A study presented this month at the American Academy of Neurology's 57th
Annual Meeting in Miami Beach, Fla., suggests that ginkgo may be effective in
improving attention in MS patients with cognitive impairment. Side effects also
were minimal.
The
study's lead author, Jesus Lovera, M.D., a research fellow and instructor in
neurology, OHSU School of Medicine, said those receiving ginkgo "performed
better on a test that measures a person's ability to pay attention and to sort
conflicting information."
Of
39 patients completing the study, 20 received ginkgo biloba and 19 received
placebo. Researchers found there were no differences in results between the two
groups in the areas of gender, education, type of MS, years since onset, or
baseline performance on a battery of neuropsychological tests.
But
the ginkgo group was four seconds – about 13 percent – faster than the
placebo group on a timed color and word test that measures attention and such
"executive functions" as planning, decision making, and controlling
goal-directed behavior and execution of deliberate actions.
During
the test, called a "Stroop," patients are shown colored boxes and
asked to name the colors. They are then shown the names of colors printed with
different-colored inks, such as the word "green" printed in red, and
asked to read the word. Finally, patients are asked to describe the ink used for
each word.
Lovera
said the differences in the Stroop result would be comparable to differences in
scores between healthy people ages 30 to 39 and those ages 50 to 59.
Ginkgo
appeared to be more beneficial for MS patients having specific problems in the
Stroop, so "we would like to do another study in which we choose patients
that are impaired in this particular test," Lovera said. "We would
also like to test it at higher doses."
Ginko
biloba is among several complementary and alternative medicine therapies being
investigated by OHSU's Department of Neurology for their effects on symptoms of
neurological disease. Studies have ranged from clinical trials of lactoferrin
for treating Alzheimer's disease to the use of yoga as a therapy for MS fatigue.
Ginkgo
is derived from the leaves of the ginkgo tree, one of the oldest species of
trees, and has been used for thousands of years by the Chinese as an herbal
remedy for a variety of ailments. It contains potent antioxidants called
flavoglycosides that have been shown to have neuroprotective effects in animal
models of spinal cord injury. It also has terpene-lactones that block a
substance known as platelet activitating factor, which is important in
regulating blood vessel function as well as the mediating inflammation and the
sticking of inflammatory cells to blood vessels.
Many
MS patients have long suspected that ginkgo improves disease symptoms. In a
recent survey of 1,913 patients in Oregon, 20 percent reported using the
supplement and 39 percent found it to be beneficial. However, until now, there
was no evidence the supplement had any effect on memory.
"It
has been shown to be of benefit in Alzheimer's, but we did not know if it would
work for MS," Lovera said. "We wanted to see if there was any
suggestion that it could help patients with MS that are having cognitive
problems."
Lovera
said the study results demonstrate that ginkgo shouldn't be discounted for
treating MS, but its safety and efficacy must be tested in much larger clinical
trials before doctors should recommend it to their patients.
"The
study suggests that for cognitive problems, it may only help a certain group of
patients," he said. "We need to study this further."
And
for MS sufferers like Winfield, who participated in the ginkgo study, the herbal
supplement will remain one of the many weapons in her arsenal for fighting the
disease.
"I
would do it again," she said of taking ginkgo. "It could have a
benefit for me that I didn't have before." But she emphasizes that
"every MS is different, so what might work for me may not work for anybody
else. But when it comes to alternative medicine, I'm all for that." (Mei
2005)