How Ashwagandha Helps Reduce Stress
Madhur Kotharay
Preventive Health, Nutrition, & Fitness | IIT Bombay ???? | Princeton Univ ???? | Author, Blogger, & Businessman | Marathon Runner & Fitness Enthusiast
Ashwagandha (scientific name Withania somnifera) is described as a wonder herb in Ayurveda, the Indian medicinal science. Modern research has shown its benefits in reducing stress, anxiety, depression, infertility, sexual dysfunction, brain degeneration, memory loss, and inflammation, and improving immunity, strength, stamina, endurance, and blood glucose control.
In this article, I will discuss Ashwagandha’s role in stress management.
Stress
In the good old days, stress arose from an attacking bear or tiger—a matter of life and death. So it was immediate and acute.
In modern times, stress is more prolonged and chronic, as it comes from financial worries, job responsibilities, relationship problems, exam pressures for students, and long-term health uncertainties such as cancer treatment, most of which are practically never-ending.
Stress Reduction
There are various ways of reducing stress such as yoga, exercise, and mindfulness. However, a simple nutritional way relies on how stress affects your body.
Stress Hormones
Imagine a flying cockroach in the room. Some people get nearly a heart attack—their stress levels go through the roof. Some others don’t even give a second look to the roach—they feel no stress. So it is not the stress itself but the perception of stress that affects us.
When your body considers a situation stressful, it reacts by releasing stress hormones such as cortisol and adrenaline. They, in turn, temporarily shut down different body systems that are not needed for immediate survival such as bone formation, immunity, and muscle growth. After all, stronger bones in the future would be the least of your worries, if you are likely to die from the tiger (or cockroach!) attack in the next couple of minutes.
Thus, reducing stress means lowering the body’s stress hormone levels. Just like mind control exercises, certain herbs help in bringing down stress hormones.
Adaptogens
Herbs that help in the management of stress are called Adaptogens. They help your body cope well with anxiety, reducing its damaging effects.
Ashwagandha is an herb used for thousands of years in India and is called Indian Ginseng. Both Ashwagandha and Ginseng are adaptogenic herbs, along with a few others such as Rhodiola and Schisandra.
Ashwagandha As An Adaptogen
Ashwagandha reduces cortisol levels and as a result, decreases the feelings of anxiety and tension. Besides, ashwagandha also removes the other ill effects of stress. Before we jump into the benefits, let me clarify that I have references for each of the claims below. Check the last paragraph for more details.
Please understand that ashwagandha is not a treatment for any cancer. Continue your cancer treatment and discuss with your doctor whether you should add ashwagandha to your regimen. Only if she agrees, proceed with taking ashwagandha as an additional supplement; do not do so on your own. If you wish to consume it for preventive reasons, you may do so.
All these benefits accrue from Ashwagandha’s adaptogenic properties.
How Much Ashwagandha You Should Take?
There are no studies on how much Ashwagandha one should take. However, most trials used between 500 mg and 1,000 mg of its extracts a day. Now, what is an extract?
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This is where it gets confusing. So let me explain the logic, which is common for all herbal supplements.
Understanding Herb Potency and Standardisation
In the medicinal world, 100 mg of paracetamol is precisely that much worldwide. But herbs vary in their potency depending on the exact species, the time of harvesting, as well as the soil conditions. Their nutrient contents fluctuate based on the processing, too.
So herbs are normally specified as extracts (or processed versions) that are standardised in terms of their active ingredients. Ashwagandha’s benefits arise from its compounds called withanolides. So the norm is to specify how much withanolides your Ashwagandha powder is providing, and not the powder quantity itself.
Let us understand this with an example.
On the Internet, you may read websites advising 500 mg of Ashwagandha a day. That is incomplete information. The correct way would be to mention '500 mg of Ashwagandha powder standardised to 5% withanolides'. In other words, the advice is for 25 mg of withanolides (500 mg x 5% = 25 mg) a day. You may get it from any amount of powder. If the powder has less than 5% withanolides, then you need to take more. For example, you can take 1,000 mg of Ashwagandha powder containing 2.5% withanolides.
The exact wordings should be:
Both mean the same. Sometimes, experts drop the latter part such as ‘standardised to 5% withanolides’. They do this because they expect you to understand that it is a standardised extract—a wrong assumption considering we are laypersons. Additionally, they assume that Ashwagandha powder or supplement exists only in one standardisation—5% withanolides.
I have seen Ashwagandha extracts of 2.5%, 5%, and 10% withanolides. What should you do if you encounter such a different standardisation? Change the amount accordingly; take 250 mg of 10% standardised Ashwagandha extract.
Preferably, divide it into two doses and take with meals.
As a broad rule, herbal supplements are to be consumed with food because that is when your digestive system is functioning at its best. Herbal nutrients, unlike chemical-based medicines, are bound to the plant organic matter and are best extracted by your digestive juices.
Who Should Avoid Ashwagandha
Certain categories of people should avoid Ashwagandha intake as its effects are not clear in these situations:
Summary
This article is based on my more detailed article on my website Health Sachet. It has all the reference links to the research claims mentioned. Go to www.healthsachet.com and search for the following article (LinkedIn does not link external links; so I am not providing it here):