Panax ginseng — "true ginseng" — has been used in Chinese and Korean medicine for over 2,000 years. It's arguably the most studied herbal medicine in the world. And yet the research, read carefully, produces a more nuanced picture than most ginseng marketing would suggest.
Ginsenosides: The Active Compounds
Ginseng's active compounds are a family of steroidal saponins called ginsenosides. There are over 40 identified ginsenosides, and they don't all work the same way — some are stimulating, some have opposing effects. This complexity is partly why ginseng research produces variable results: the ratio of ginsenosides varies considerably by root age, preparation method, and extract standardisation. Older roots (6+ years) and standardised extracts provide more predictable effects than cheap, undifferentiated supplements.
Key Facts
- Active compounds: ginsenosides (look for standardised extracts, minimum 5–7%)
- Studied dose: 200–400mg of standardised extract daily
- Onset: some acute effects within hours; cumulative effects over weeks
- Korean Red Ginseng has the strongest evidence base among preparations
- Mild stimulating effect — not recommended for those with hypertension
Cognitive and Energy Effects
The strongest evidence for Panax ginseng is in working memory and mental arithmetic performance. A series of studies from Northumbria University found that 200–400mg of Panax ginseng significantly improved accuracy on cognitive tasks and reduced mental fatigue. The effect was acute — measurable within hours — which distinguishes it from slower-acting adaptogens like ashwagandha.
For physical energy, the evidence is more mixed. Some trials show improved fatigue scores and exercise capacity; others show no significant effect. The variability likely reflects differences in extract quality and individual metabolic differences in how ginsenosides are processed.
Korean Red Ginseng — steamed and dried before extraction — has a different ginsenoside profile than white ginseng and generally shows stronger effects in research. If you're choosing a ginseng supplement, this distinction matters.
Where It Fits in a Functional Stack
Panax ginseng is an interesting complement to the mushroom-based nootropics and plant adaptogens that dominate most functional coffee formulas. Its acute cognitive effects via a different mechanism — primarily acetylcholine modulation and anti-fatigue properties — add a dimension that lion's mane and rhodiola don't cover as directly. At effective doses (200mg+ of standardised extract), it earns its place in a serious functional formula.