If you take ginkgo for memory or focus, stop. The two largest independent trials gave it to thousands of older adults for years and it didn't beat a sugar pill. Ask yourself one screening question: do you have a dementia diagnosis being managed by a clinician? If no, save your money.
Ginkgo's selling point is that it thins the blood a little and nudges circulation, on the theory that more blood flow means a sharper brain. But "more blood flow therefore better memory" is a guess, and it was tested directly in thousands of people over years. The blood-thinning is real. The memory boost never showed up.
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The world's best-known "brain" supplement. The biggest trials ever run tested whether it works. Here's what they found.
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If you take ginkgo for memory or focus, stop. Ask yourself: do you have a dementia diagnosis a clinician is treating? If no, save your money.
The two largest independent trials gave thousands of older adults ginkgo for years and it didn't beat a placebo for memory or dementia prevention.
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The Protocol
| Who | Dose | Form | Timing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy adults (memory/focus) | No effective dose | — | Don't bother |
| Diagnosed dementia (clinician-led) | 240 mg/day | EGb 761 only | Daily with food; judge at 22 weeks |
| Mild cognitive impairment | Not established | EGb 761 | Weak signal at best |
| Intermittent claudication (leg pain) | 120-160 mg/day | Standardized extract | Superseded by exercise/medication |
Absorption tip: Take with food. The fraction that matters is the terpene lactones, and that's exactly what cheap products skimp on, so form and third-party verification matter far more than timing. There's no "absorption hack" that rescues a low-quality extract.
Safety & Interactions
Increased bleeding risk, with hemorrhage case reports. Avoid.
Additive platelet inhibition. Avoid.
Additive bleeding risk. Monitor or avoid.
Stop ginkgo at least 1 to 2 weeks before any procedure.
Ginkgotoxin may lower the seizure threshold. Avoid if you have a seizure disorder. Never eat raw ginkgo seeds (genuinely toxic).
Upper limit: No formal safe ceiling is established; 240 mg/day of EGb 761 is the tested dose, not a defined safety threshold. Side effects at standard doses are mild and near placebo (occasional GI upset, headache, dizziness). The bleeding interactions are the real story.
Conviction
For healthy adults, the memory and prevention claims are debunked by the two largest independent trials. The only real signal is modest, leans heavily on the extract's manufacturer, and lives inside diagnosed dementia under clinician care.
An independent (non-manufacturer-funded), placebo-controlled trial of 300+ healthy adults aged 50-70 with no dementia, using a third-party-verified standardized extract at 240 mg/day for a year or more, with a pre-registered objective memory endpoint, showing a real benefit, would move healthy-adult cognition from debunked to low. A large independent replication of the behavioral-symptom signal in diagnosed dementia would raise that one indication to moderate. A biomarker-based trial in mild cognitive impairment is currently enrolling and could shift that verdict either way.
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