Om Shrooms High Potency Medicinal Mushrooms Extract 30 ml
33,00 €
Ingredients: Organic alcohol, demineralised water, Lion's Mane, Chaga, Reishi, Cordyceps dried powder.
NO additives, coloring, added sugar, gluten, soy or GMOs.
Keywords: Adaptogenic, anti-viral, anti-inflammatory, brain support, anti-oxydant, anti-fungal, lungs support, liver support, anti-bacterial, increase energy, reduces fatigue, Immune system.
Dosage
Intervention: 5 to 10 drops per day.
Treatment: 10-15 drops, 3 times per day max.
Directions for use:
Shake before using. Take directly on the tongue or in a half glass of water or tea, 15 to 30 minutes
before meals. For long-term treatment, use 6 days out of 7.
Primary Reishi Mushroom Medicinal Benefits:
Sleep aid and potent immunomodulator.
The polysaccharides in reishi mushroom are associated with immune function, and if taken over time, reishi can significantly support the immune system. It can also support restful sleep and a calm mind, reduce occasional stress and restlessness, can support lung and respiratory health, and support balanced blood sugar levels.
One study has demonstrated that Reishi can decrease symptom scale scores for men experiencing lower urinary tract symptoms (urination difficulty). Reishi can be used safely in adjunct with certain oncology medications and diagnoses.
Because of its well-rounded capacity to support numerous systems in the body, herbalists call reishi the King of Medicinal Mushrooms.
Historical Uses of Reishi Medicinal Mushrooms:
Reishi, or Ganoderma lingzhi, has a 2000-year-old written record in medicinal texts. Most notably, Chinese Taoist monks wrote of using it to promote calmness, as well as to enhance their meditative practices. Chinese royalty used reishi to promote longevity and held this “mushroom of immortality,” in high esteem. Reishi was listed as the most cherished among the superior herbs, which are considered to support a long life, support healthy aging, boost qi, and make the body light.
There are six different colors of reishi referenced in historical literature, each with their own unique benefits.
Primary Cordyceps Mushroom Medicinal Benefits:
Improves lung capacity and increases energy.
The cordyceps mushroom is an incredible energy-boosting fungi. Certain studies have shown that cordyceps can increase the production of ATP, the compound that gives cells energy, in rodents. This is why Cordyceps is a good mushroom supplement to take for exercise and physical performance. In fact, two well-controlled clinical studies have found cordyceps improves exercise performance in healthy older individuals.
Preliminary research in humans, animals, and test tubes also indicates that cordyceps supports healthy levels of inflammation and immune markers.
Related cordyceps species may have hormone regulatory properties shown in research studies to increase libido (in women) and improve sperm health in men. Cordyceps can support kidney health in certain populations.
Historical Uses of Cordyceps Medicinal Mushrooms.
Old Chinese medical books and Tibetan medicine describe cordyceps as a treasure. With hundreds of different species, it is a parasitic fungus that preys on insects. Traditional healers use the fungus as a powerful tonic to improve energy, appetite, stamina, and endurance.
Cordyceps was traditionally used as a tonic because it has the capacity to revitalize and restore symptoms like fatigue, exhaustion, and chronic stress. Out of all the medicinal mushrooms, Cordyceps is the most stimulating, warming, and powerful in a traditional context. It has an affinity to the kidneys and lungs, meaning it supports these organs the most.
Primary Chaga Mushroom Medicinal Benefits:
Boosts digestion reinforces immunity system and clears/protects skin.
Chaga has been studied for its use in alternativer cancer treatment anti viral properties. Chaga has over 200 pre-clinical animal and cell studies showing promising health benefits including such as being high in antioxidants, supporting digestion, immune support, modulating inflammation, containing key anti-microbial substances, and being adaptogenic.
Historical Uses of Chaga:
Chaga or Inonotus obliquus, which is commonly referred to as a mushroom, is actually a highly prized woody canker or conk that grows in the colder regions of the Northern Hemisphere on birch trees.
The first medicinal uses of chaga seem to have come out of Russia around the 16th century when it was used as a tea to enhance stomach health. After 1966, Chaga gained more exposure after its powers were written about in Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s book, Le Pavillon des cancéreux. Many indigenous people continue to use Chaga around the world for varying health-supportive purposes.
How Chaga Grows Is the Key to Its Benefits
As Chaga grows primarily on birch trees and much of the mass itself is actually wood fiber and not mycelium, many medicinal compounds from birch like betulin and betulinic acid end up in the chaga. The outer black layer on the canker contains high amounts of melanin, which can be beneficial for our skin.
Lab-cultivated Chaga does not develop into canker, and as it does not grow on birch but on grain, it does not contain the important medicinal compounds that come from birch.
Primary Lion´s Mane Mushroom Medicinal Benefits:
The brain’s ability to grow and form new connections typically declines with age, which may explain why mental functioning worsens in many older adults Studies have found that lion’s mane mushrooms contain two special compounds that can stimulate the growth of brain cells: hericenones and erinacines
Additionally, animal studies have found that lion’s mane may help protect against Alzheimer’s disease, a degenerative brain disease that causes progressive memory loss.
In fact, lion’s mane mushroom and its extracts have been shown to reduce symptoms of memory loss in mice, as well as prevent neuronal damage caused by amyloid-beta plaques, which accumulate in the brain during Alzheimer’s disease.
A 2020 study of people with mild Alzheimer’s disease found that supplementation with 1 gram of lion’s mane mushroom daily for 49 weeks significantly improved cognitive test scores compared with a placebo.
The ability of lion’s mane mushroom to promote nerve growth and protect the brain from Alzheimer’s-related damage may explain some of its beneficial effects on brain health.
Historical Uses of Lion´s Mane:
Lion’s Mane had played a role in Asian culture and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) long before it was introduced to the west. According to TCM, this powerful mushroom supports all five internal organs—liver, spleen, lung, heart, and kidney. The mushroom is also hailed in TCM to combat the deficiency of Qi, or “life force.”
Buddhist monks were said to have made tea using Lion’s Mane mushroom powder to enhance brain function and heighten their focus during meditation. This is not surprising when you learn of the many brain-boosting benefits it offers, which we’ll get to shortly.