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Ginseng Panax extract

Min. Order: 1 Kilogram
Payment Terms: T/T, WU
Supply Ability: 1000kg/week

Company Profile

Location: China (Mainland)
Business Type: Manufacturer

Product Detail

Means of Transport: Air
Production Capacity: 1000kg/week
Packing: 25kg/drum or1kg/bag
Delivery Date: within 5 days after payment
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Product Description

 
Ginseng Panax extract
Active Ingredient: Ginsenosides
Specification: 80%
Test Method: UV-VIS
Look at the nutrition label on your orange juice or multivitamin and you may notice that ginseng has been added. That's because smart marketers have caught on to this herb's 2,000-year-old reputation as a "feel good" tonic that can boost energy, combat the physical effects of stress, empower the immune system, improve concentration, and provide antioxidant actions. Its legendary properties, particularly as an aphrodisiac, were once so prized in China that only the emperor was allowed to gather the herb. Today some men still take it to treat impotence and infertility although it's unclear whether it actually improves these conditions.
The healing ingredients in Panax ginseng are concentrated in the root, or what traditional Chinese healers call the "man root" because it's shaped like a person. This classic form of ginseng, also known as Asian, Chinese, or Korean ginseng, is the most widely available and extensively studied form.
Siberian ginseng (Eleutherococcus senticosus) and American ginseng (Panax quinquefolius) are botanical cousins with different effects. A growth period of four to six years is necessary for full maturity of the herb's complex mixture of energizing compounds known as ginsenosides, panaxans (substances that reportedly lower blood sugar), and polysaccharides (complex sugar molecules that enhance the immune system).
High-quality ginseng root is expensive and must be properly cured to be of any therapeutic value. A recent analysis of products on the market revealed that some so-called ginseng supplements are devoid of active ingredients. Other examinations have found that the amount of active ginsenosides in different brands varies widely. Such ginseng products as chewing gum and soft drinks probably contain little if any of the root.
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