|
Ginkgo Extracts Show Promise
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
Washington,
DC (October 22, 1997)- An extract of the plant Ginkgo biloba, long
used in Chinese medicine, appears to provide some benefit for some patients
with Alzheimer's disease, reported clinical researchers at the American
Medical Association's 16th Annual Science Reporters Conference.
Researchers from the New York Institute for Medical Research, Tarrytown,
N.Y., compared the effects of EGb 761, a particular extract of Ginkgo biloba,
and and placebo in a year-long, double-blind study of 309 demented patients
with mild to moderately severe cognitive impairment caused by Alzheimer
disease, vascular dementia or a combination of the two.
The results indicated that EGb had a measurable effect on cognitive
impairment and daily living and social behavior in patients with dementia.
Although the treatment effect could not be detected by the clinician's
global impression of change, it was demonstrated through objective tests
of cognitive performance and was strong enough to be noticed by caregivers.
A little more than one quarter of patients treated for at least six
months with EGb achieved at least a four point improvement on the commonly
used 70 point Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive subscale, compared
with 14 percent taking placebo. Another rating scale, the Geriatric Evaluation
by Relative's Rating Instrument (GERRI), showed improvement in daily living
and social behavior of 37 percent of the patients taking EGb, compared
with 23 percent taking placebo.
"Compared with the placebo group, the EGb group included twice as many
patients whose cognitive performance improved and half as many whose social
functioning worsened. In clinical terms, improvement on the ADAS-Cog of
four points may be equivalent to a six-month delay in the progression of
the disease. EGb appears to stabilize and, in an additional 20 percent
of cases (vs. placebo), improve the patient's functioning for periods of
six months to one year. Regarding its safety, adverse events associated
with EGb were no different from those associated with placebo," reported
Pierre L. LeBars, M.D., Ph.D.
"Although it has a reasonably modest effect, it could be meaningful
to caregivers. To have a plateau for six months and be able to interact
with the person when they're still at a relatively early stage is something
that many families would appreciate, I think," Marcelle Morrison-Bogorad,
an Alzheimer's disease researcher at the National Institute on Aging at
the National Institutes of Health, told the press.
Extracts from the Ginkgo biloba tree have long been used in China for
diseases associated with old age. The extract of Ginkgo biloba used in
this study , EGb 761, has recently been approved in Germany for the
treatment of dementia.
The researchers do not know how EGb exerts its neurological effects.
Ginkgo extracts contain antioxidants that may help to protect cells against
oxidative damage. Oxidative damage has been seen in the brain cells of
Alzheimer's patients. Ginkgo extracts also contains compounds that act
as vasodilators, increasing blood flow. They also contain substances which
exert strong anti-platelet effects.
|
|