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Reishi - Ganoderma Lucidum:
Other Common Names: Ling chih, Ling zhi, Mannentake, Ganoderma Lucidum
As recorded in the oldest Chinese medical text, reishi is the "king of herbs",
the superior herb.
Western culture has often frowned on mushrooms, even fearing the small innocuous
forest growth. The French prize their truffles, but even truffles and other
edible fungi and mushrooms are not as highly valued or show as much potential as
a species of mushrooms called Ling Zhi or Reishi.
Reishi mushrooms are polypore mushrooms. Mushrooms are the fruiting body and
reproductive structure of a higher order fungus organism, much like an apple is
the fruit of an apple tree. The actual mushroom "tree" is a fine thread-like
network called mycelium. This mycelium is for the most part subterranean, living
in soil, logs and other organic litter.
Unlike green plants, which produce many of their own nutrients by
photosynthesis, mushrooms primarily get their nutrients from dead organic matter
or soil. Mushrooms and their mycelium are nature's original recyclers. Without
them, the planet surface would be piled high with dead, decaying material.
Mushrooms rise out of the mycelium when the right nutrients are amassed and the
right environmental conditions are present. Mushrooms release spores at
maturity. The wind spreads them and when they land on the right spot, the cycle
starts over again.
Reishi often is associated with health and recuperation, longevity, wisdom, and
happiness.Known as reishi or mannentake to the Japanese and Ling Zhi to the
Chinese, G. lucidum is renown for its medicinal properties. It is believed that
certain triterpenes and polysaccharides may account for the multiple activities
of Reshi. Thus, considerable time and effort has gone into the isolation and
characterization of these compounds.
Reishi is a basidiomycete, lamellaless fungus belonging to the family of
polyporaceae. In nature, it grows in densely wooded mountains of high humidity
and dim lighting. It is rarely found since it flourishes mainly on the dried
trunks of dead plum, guercus serrata or pasonia trees. Out of 10,000 such aged
trees, perhaps 2 or 3 will have reishi growth, therefore it is very scarce
indeed.
Relatively rare and undiscovered in the West, Reishi and other mushrooms have
been revered as herbal medicines for thousands of years in Japan and China.
Emperors of the great Chinese dynasties and Japanese royalty drank teas and
concoctions of the mushroom for vitality and long life. The ancient Taoists were
constantly searching for the elixir of eternal youth, and Reishi was believed to
be among the ingredients.
In ancient time, reishi in medicine was considered so auspicious that its
medical efficacy has been attested to in the oldest Chinese medical text
(presumed to be over 2,000 years old). The book, which is known in Japan as "Shinnoh
Honsohkyo", is now accepted as being the original textbook of Oriental medical
science. In it, 365 kinds of medicines are classified and explained. The
medicines are basically classified into 3 categories:
120 of them are declared to be "superior" medicines; another 120 are classified
as "average" medicines; and the remaining 125 are placed in the "fair" category.
The "superior" medicines are called "God's Herbs" and they are for perpetual
youth and longevity - the medicines of the legendary wizards. The "average"
category medicines are those which can be taken as a tonic, and those in the
"fair" category are taken to remedy specific ailments. One must be careful about
the volume taken of the "average" and "fair" category medicines, and should
never take them continuously. However, the book states that for "superior"
medicines, any amount can be taken as desired on a continuous basis with no
unfavorable effects. Of the superior medicines listed in the text, reishi was
rated number one.
Ganoderma and its derivatives are not pharmaceuticals and have not undergone
rigorous clinical trials.
References
- Linda McGlasson, Assistant Editor. Health Foods Business/January 1992 Consumer
Education Series. Reishi: Ancient Medicine Is Modern Hope
- Kim HS, Kacew S, Lee BM. Carcinogenesis 1999 Aug;20(8):1637-40. In vitro
chemopreventive effects of plant polysaccharides (Aloe barbadensis miller,
Lentinus edodes, Ganoderma lucidum and Coriolus versicolor).
- Kim KC, Kim IG. Int J Mol Med 1999 Sep;4(3):273-7. Ganoderma lucidum extract
protects DNA from strand breakage caused by hydroxyl radical and UV irradiation.
- Hijikata Y, Yamada S. Am J Chin Med 1998;26(3-4):375-81 Effect of Ganoderma
lucidum on postherpetic neuralgia.
- Wasser SP, Weis AL. Crit Rev Immunol 1999;19(1):65-96. Therapeutic effects of
substances occurring in higher Basidiomycetes mushrooms: a modern perspective.
International Centre for Cryptogamic Plants and Fungi, Institute of Evolution,
University of Haifa, Israel.
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