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Submitted on November 1, 2005
From the Risk Factor Modification Centre (P.M.S., L.A.L., J.L.S., V.V.) and Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism (M.W., L.A.L.), St Michael’s Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and Departments of Medicine (M.W., L.A.L, V.V.) and Nutritional Sciences (P.M.S., L.A.L., T.F.H., V.V.), Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: v.vuksan{at}utoronto.ca.
Abstract--Ginseng is consumed by 10% to 20% of adults in Asia and by up to 5% in Western countries. Despite observational evidence suggesting a link between its intake and the development of hypertension, there remains no long-term scrutiny for its effect on blood pressure (BP). We therefore undertook a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded, crossover trial in 52 hypertensive individuals to determine the effect of 12-week North American ginseng intake on 24-hour BP; we also measured serum cystatin C as a marker of renal function. After a 4-week placebo run-in, we randomly assigned 52 participants to 3 g/day of ginseng or placebo for 12 weeks. This was followed by an 8-week washout and a subsequent 12-week period in which the opposite treatment was administered. At run-in and at weeks 0 and 12 of each treatment period, participants were fitted with an ambulatory BP monitor to assess 24-hour BP. The primary outcome was the treatment difference at week 12 in mean 24-hour systolic BP. Secondary outcomes were treatment differences at week 12 in other ambulatory BP parameters and serum cystatin C. Forty participants (77%) completed the trial, with 3 removed from main analysis (n=2, antihypertensive drug changes; n=1, incomplete ambulatory monitoring). In the remaining 37, 12-week ginseng treatment was associated with a neutral effect on all ambulatory BP parameters compared with placebo; an intention-to-treat analysis supported this. Ginseng did not affect serum cystatin C level. Overall, long-term ginseng use had no effect on 24-hour BP and renal function in hypertensive individuals.
Revised on November 5, 2005
Long-Term Intake of North American Ginseng Has No Effect on 24-Hour Blood Pressure and Renal Function
P. Mark Stavro;
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