| Literature DB >> 29614764 |
Julien Stanisiere1, Pierre-Yves Mousset2, Sophie Lafay3.
Abstract
Ginger, Zingiber officinale Roscoe, is increasingly consumed as a food or in food supplements. It is also recognized as a popular nonpharmacological treatment for nausea and vomiting of pregnancy (NVP). However, its consumption is not recommended by all countries for pregnant women. Study results are heterogeneous and conclusions are not persuasive enough to permit heath care professionals to recommend ginger safely. Some drugs are also contraindicated, leaving pregnant women with NVP with few solutions. We conducted a review to assess effectiveness and safety of ginger consumption during early pregnancy. Systematic literature searches were conducted on Medline (via Pubmed) until the end of December 2017. For the evaluation of efficacy, only double-blind, randomized, controlled trials were included. For the evaluation of the safety, controlled, uncontrolled, and pre-clinical studies were included in the review. Concerning toxicity, none can be extrapolated to humans from in vitro results. In vivo studies do not identify any major toxicities. Concerning efficacy and safety, a total of 15 studies and 3 prospective clinical studies have been studied. For 1 g of fresh ginger root per day for four days, results show a significant decrease in nausea and vomiting and no risk for the mother or her future baby. The available evidence suggests that ginger is a safe and effective treatment for NVP. However, beyond the ginger quantity needed to be effective, ginger quality is important from the perspective of safety.Entities:
Keywords: CAM; NVP; Zingiber officinale R; adverse effects; food supplement; ginger; pregnancy; safety; toxicity
Year: 2018 PMID: 29614764 PMCID: PMC5920415 DOI: 10.3390/foods7040050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Comparison of food supplement consumption between men and women by country [12].
| Country | Men (%) | Women (%) |
|---|---|---|
| France | 17–21.6 | 26.3–28.5 |
| Belgium | 11–14 | 22.5–30 |
| Australia | 34.9 | 50.3 |
| USA | 45 | 58 |
| Greece | 2 | 6.7 |
| Spain | 5.9 | 12.1 |
| Italy | 6.8 | 12.6 |
| Germany | 20.7 | 27 |
| The Netherlands | 16 | 32.1 |
| UK | 36.3 | 47.5 |
| Denmark | 51 | 65.8 |
| Sweden | 30.5 | 42.4 |
Figure 1Herbal medicine used (A) and number of women who used them (B) by safety classification (green = safe; orange = caution; red = contraindicated; white = unknown). From Kennedy et al. [18].
Sample of food supplements with ginger sold around the world; composition and claims.
| Country | Composition | Daily Dose | Claims |
|---|---|---|---|
| Belgium | Cellulose; standardized ginger extract 50 mg with 10% gingerols (equal to 500 mg of powder); calcium phosphate; silicon dioxide, magnesium stearate; hypromellose, titanium dioxide; talc; glycerol | 2/day for pregnant women | Helps you regain optimal digestive balance in the following situations: |
| Ginger bio extract (6 × concentrated) 200 mg | 1/day | Digestive comfort | |
| 500 mg of ginger rhizome powder and 5 mg of ginger rhizome extract per caps | 1/day | Sexual fatigue; nausea in pregnant women; travel sickness | |
| Ginger rhizome extract: 67 mg, eq. to 1 g of ginger rhizome, magnesium carbonate, vitamin B6 | 1/day | Ginger contributes to the normal functioning of the stomach in case of early pregnancy (Claim under consideration (EFSA)) | |
| France | Organic ginger rhizome powder: 250 mg | 4/day | Nausea in pregnant women |
| Ginger rhizome powder ( | 4/day | Lower bowel contractions and digestive acids; prevent motion-induced nausea and vomiting | |
| Organic ginger rhizome extract ( | 2/day | Ginger contributes to the normal functioning of the stomach in case of early pregnancy | |
| Organic ginger rhizome extract ( | 5/day | Travel sickness | |
| 6/day | Helps to support the digestion/contributes to the normal function of intestinal tract | ||
| Sorbitol, rhizome ginger extract ( | 2/day | - | |
| Ginger, lemon, B6, magnesium, iron, B9 | 5 biscuits/day | - | |
| B6, folates, cocoa, strawberry pulp, ginger | 1/day | - | |
| Ginger ( | 1–3 sachets /day | - | |
| Cellulose, silicon dioxide, magnesium stearate, standardized ginger extract ( | Pregnant women: 2/day | Nausea in pregnant women; travel sickness | |
| Cellulose, standardized ginger extract (10% of gingerols) 50 mg eq. to 500 mg of ginger powder; calcium phosphate; silicon dioxide; magnesium stearate; HMPC; titanium dioxide, talc, glycerol. | 2/day for pregnant women | Helps to support the digestion/contributes to the normal function of intestinal tract/contributes to the normal functioning of the stomach in case of early pregnancy or travel sickness | |
| Microcrystalline cellulose, standardized ginger extract 50 mg, eq. to 500 mg of rhizome powder, silicon dioxide, fatty acid magnesium salts, hypromellose, titanium dioxide, talc, glycerol | 2 hard caps | Helps to support the digestion | |
| Bach flowers, essential oils, and plant extracts | 5 sprays if nauseous | Quick-acting oral spray against discomfort, apprehension and transport. | |
| Ginger root extract (160 mg of extract, 16 mg of gingerols); lemon balm extract (100 mg) | 4/day | Stomach; antiemetic; pregnant women | |
| Italy | Standardized root extract: 300 mg (5% gingerols) Whole root pulverized: 1500 mg | 2/day | Regulate the gastro-intestinal motility and gas elimination of in case of nausea |
| Hydro-alcoholic standardized ginger extract (5% of gingerols) | 2/day | Reducing nausea, gas, bloating and intestinal spasms | |
| Poland | Ginger rhizome extract 75 mg (eq. to 300 mg of powder); Vitamin B6: 0.5 mg | 3/day | Adults and children poorly tolerating travel by vehicles and craft: cars, buses, trains, ships, planes |
| UK | Ginger extract 55 mg eq. to 1.1 g of root powder | 1/day | Helps calm a queasy stomach; an excellent stomach soother; excellent travel companion |
| Ginger extract 120 mg eq. to 14 g of root powder (24 mg of gingerols) (120:1 extract) | 1/day | Do not take if pregnant or breastfeeding | |
| Ginger extract 138 mg eq. to 550 mg | 2/day | - | |
| Ginger root 500 mg | 2/day | - | |
| Ginger root extract ( | 2/day | - | |
| US | Ginger root powder | 2/day | - |
| Ginger root powder | 2/day | May soothe an upset stomach and support digestion | |
| Ginger root powder | 2/day | Helps calm a queasy tummy an excellent stomach soother Excellent travel companion |
Nutritional composition of ginger root (USDA, ANSES, DTU).
| USDA (National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference) | ANSES (Table Ciqual 2016 Composition Nutritionnelle des Aliments) | DTU (Fødevaredatabanken Version 7.01) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ginger type | Ginger Root, Raw | Ginger, Powder | Ginger Root, Raw |
| Phosphorus (mg/100 g) | 34 | 168 | 34 |
| Magnesium (mg/100 g) | 43 | 214 | 43 |
| Potassium (mg/100 g) | 415 | 1 320 | 415 |
| Manganese (mg/100 g) | - | 33.3 | 0.229 |
| Zinc (mg/100 g) | 0.34 | 3.64 | 0.34 |
| Iron (mg/100 g) | 0.60 | 19.8 | 0.60 |
| Calcium (mg/100 g) | 16 | 114 | 16 |
| Niacin (mg/100 g) | 0.750 | 9.62 | 0.950 |
| Folate (μg/100 g) | 11 | 13 | 11 |
Figure 2Chemical structures of active constituents: zingiberene, shogaols, and gingerols.
Mean risk perception scores for 13 individual items by geographical region (dark green = 0–2; pale green = 2–4; yellow = 4–6; orange = 6–8; red = 8–10). From Petersen et al. [37].
| Australia | Eastern Europe | Eastern Europe | Western Europe | North America | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cranberries | |||||
| Ginger | |||||
| Eggs | |||||
| Paracetamol | |||||
| OTC (against nausea | |||||
| Antibiotics | |||||
| Swine flu vaccine | |||||
| Blue-veined cheese | |||||
| Dental X-ray | |||||
| Antidepressants | |||||
| Alcohol (1st trimester) | |||||
| Smoking | |||||
| Thalidomide |
In vitro cytotoxicity of ginger extracts and main related compounds.
| Ginger, Ginger Extracts, or Related Compounds | Cell Line | IC50 | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ethanol extract of ginger | CL-6–Calcein assay | 10.95 µg/mL | Plengsuriyakarn et al., 2012 [ |
| Ethanol extract of ginger | CL-6–Hoechst 33342 assay | 53.13 µg/mL | Plengsuriyakarn et al., 2012 [ |
| Ethanol extract of ginger | HepG2–Calcein assay | 71.89 µg/mL | Plengsuriyakarn et al., 2012 [ |
| Ethanol extract of ginger | HepG2–Hoechst 33342 assay | 92.88 µg/mL | Plengsuriyakarn et al., 2012 [ |
| Ethanol extract of ginger | HepG2 | 358.71 µg/mL | Harliansyah et al., 2007 [ |
| Ethanol extract of ginger | HRE–Calcein assay | 198.15 µg/mL | Plengsuriyakarn et al., 2012 [ |
| Ethanol extract of ginger | HRE–Hoechst 33342 assay | 245.91 µg/mL | Plengsuriyakarn et al., 2012 [ |
| Ethanol extract of ginger | Hamster ovary | 245 µg/mL | Unnikrishnan et al., 1988 [ |
| Ethanol extract of ginger | Vero cells | 120 µg/mL | Unnikrishnan et al., 1988 [ |
| Ethanol extract of ginger | Dalton’s Lymphoma Ascites | 200 µg/mL | Unnikrishnan et al., 1988 [ |
| Aqueous extract of ginger | Dalton’s Lymphoma Ascites | 420 µg/mL | Unnikrishnan et al., 1988 [ |
| Aqueous extract of ginger | NRK-52E Cells (MTT test) | No cytotoxicity | Abudayyak et al., 2015 [ |
| Chloroform extract of ginger | NRK-52E Cells (MTT test) | 9.08 mg/mL | Abudayyak et al., 2015 [ |
| Methanol ginger extract | MCF7 (Breast) | 75 µg/mL | Zaeoung et al., 2005 [ |
| Methanol ginger extract | LS174T (Colon) | 80 µg/mL | Zaeoung et al., 2005 [ |
| Volatile oil of ginger | MCF7 (Breast) | 14.2 µg/mL | Zaeoung et al., 2005 [ |
| Volatile oil of ginger | LS174T (Colon) | 15.9 µg/mL | Zaeoung et al., 2005 [ |
| Diarylheptanoids and gingerol-related compounds | HL-60 | <50 µmol/L | Wei et al., 2005 [ |
| 6-gingerol | HepG2 | 431.7 µg/mL | Harliansyah et al., 2007 [ |
| 6-gingerol | MCF7 (Breast) | 31.6 µg/mL | Zaeoung et al., 2005 [ |
| 6-gingerol | LS174T (Colon) | 30.6 µg/mL | Zaeoung et al., 2005 [ |
| 6-gingerol | HepG2 | 89.58 µg/mL | Yang et al., 2010 [ |
| 6-shogaol | MCF7 (Breast) | 6 µg/mL | Zaeoung et al., 2005 [ |
| 6-shogaol | LS174T (Colon) | 4.2 µg/mL | Zaeoung et al., 2005 [ |
IC50 values and plasma concentration comparison.
| Ginger Related-Compounds | IC50 (µg/mL) | Plasma Concentration after 1.5 or 2 g of Ginger (µg/mL) | Ratio IC50/Concentration | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6-gingerol | 15.72 to 431.7 | 1.69 | 9.3 to 255.4 | Zaeoung et al., 2005 [ |
| 6-shogaol | 1.05 to 6 | 0.0136 to 0.15 | 7 to 441.2 | Zaeoung et al., 2005 [ |
| 8-gingerol | 8.85 to 12.57 | 0.23 | 38.5 to 54.7 | Kim et al., 2008 [ |
| 10-gingerol | 4.2 to 6.57 | 0.0095 to 0.53 | 7.9 to 691.6 | Kim et al., 2008 [ |
Genotoxicity/mutagenicity of ginger and related compounds.
| Ames assay | 5 to 200 µg/plate | Mutagenic on metabolic activation in strains TA 100 and TA 1535 | Nagabhushan et al., 1987 [ | |
| Ames assay | 25 and 50 mg/mL | Mutagenic in both TA, at both concentrations | Soudamini et al., 1995 [ | |
| Ames assay | 0.78 to 25 mg/mL | Mutagenic on TA 98 activated cells from 3.13 mg/mL | Abudayyak et al., 2015 [ | |
| Comet assay | HepG2 | 0 to 80 µmol/L | DNA strand breaks from 5.89 mg/mL (20 µmol/L) | Yang et al., 2010 [ |
| Ames assay | 5 to 200 µg/plate | Mutagenic on metabolic activation in strains TA 100 and TA 1535 | Nagabhushan et al., 1987 [ | |
| Ames assay | 5 to 200 µg/plate | Mutagenic on metabolic activation in strains TA 100 and TA 1535 | Nagabhushan et al., 1987 [ | |
| Ames assay | 5 to 200 µg/plate | No mutagenic effect | Nagabhushan et al., 1987 [ | |
Acute/subacute toxicity of ginger extracts and the main related compounds.
| Ginger powder | per os | Rats | No mortality | Rong et al., 2009 [ |
| Ginger dried rhizomes ethanol extract | intraperitoneal | Mice | 1551 ± 75 mg/kg | Ojewole et al., 2006 [ |
| Ginger dried rhizomes ethanol extract | per os | Hamsters | No mortality | Plengsuriyakarn et al., 2012 [ |
| Patented standardized ethanol extract of dried rhizomes of ginger (EV.EXT 33) | per os | Pregnant rats | No mortality | Weidner et al., 2001 [ |
| Freeze-dried ginger powder | per os | Rats | No mortality | Malik et al., 2011 [ |
| Dry ginger decoction | per os | Rats: Gastric ulcer models | 250 g/kg | Wu et al., 1990 [ |
| Roasted ginger decoction | per os | Rats: Gastric ulcer models | 170.6 g/kg | Wu et al., 1990 [ |
| Ginger dried rhizomes ethanol extract | Mice | No mortality at 2.5 g/kg | Anonymous, 2003 [ | |
| Ginger oil | per os | Rabbits | 5 g/kg | Anonymous, 2003 [ |
| Ginger oil | per os | Rats | No mortality | Jeena et al., 2011 [ |
| (E)-8 beta,17-epoxylabd-12-ene-15,16-dial (ZT) from ginger | per os (25 mg/kg) | Mice | No mortality | Tanabe et al., 1993 [ |
| (E)-8 beta,17-epoxylabd-12-ene-15,16-dial (ZT) from ginger | Intra-abdominal (25 mg/kg) | Mice | No mortality | Tanabe et al., 1993 [ |
| 6-shogaol | intravenous | Mice | 50.9 mg/kg | Suekawa et al., 1984 [ |
| 6-shogaol | intraperitoneal | Mice | 109.2 mg/kg | Suekawa et al., 1984 [ |
| 6-shogaol | per os | Mice | 687 mg/kg | Suekawa et al., 1984 [ |
| 6-gingerol | intravenous | Mice | 25.5 mg/kg | Suekawa et al., 1984 [ |
| 6-gingerol | intraperitoneal | Mice | 58.1 mg/kg | Suekawa et al., 1984 [ |
| 6-gingerol | per os | Mice | 250 mg/kg | Suekawa et al., 1984 [ |
Randomized double-blind trials investigating the effectiveness and safety of ginger for pregnancy.
| Objective | Population | Number | Treatment | Ginger Definition | Duration | Results | Adverse Events | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| To determine the effectiveness of ginger for the treatment of NVP | Women NVP | 1000 mg/day (4 × 250 mg) of ginger (powder capsules) vs. placebo | Fresh ginger root | 4 days + follow-up | Significant decrease of nausea in the ginger group vs. placebo group | Headache: | Vutyavanich et al., 2001 [ | |
| To compare the effectiveness of ginger and vitamin B6 for treatment of NVP | Women NVP | 1950 mg/day of ginger (3 × 650 mg) or 75 mg/day of vitamin B6 (3 × 25 mg) | Fresh ginger root | 4 days | Nausea/vomiting: | Side effects: | Chittumma et al., 2007 [ | |
| To determine the effectiveness of ginger for the treatment of NVP | Women NVP | 1000 mg/day (4 × 250 mg) | Ginger root powder (Zintoma, Goldaroo Company, Tehran, Iran) | 4 days | Nausea: | No complication during the treatment period was reported | Ozgoli et al., 2009 [ | |
| To compare the effectiveness of ginger and vitamin B6 for the treatment of NVP | Women with nausea with or without vomiting < 17 weeks of gestation | 1000 mg/day (2 × 500 mg) of ginger (powder capsules) or | Fresh ginger root | 4 days + follow-up visit 7 days later | Nausea score: | Spontaneous abortions: | Ensiyeh et al., 2009 [ | |
| To compare the effects of ginger on nausea and vomiting caused by pregnancy and compares it with metoclopramide medicine | Women NVP | 600 mg/day (3 × 200 mg) ginger;30 mg/day (3 × 10 mg) metoclopramide;600 mg/day (3 × 200 mg) placebo | Ginger essence | 5 days | Intensity of nausea: | - | Mohammadbeigi et al., 2011 [ | |
| To determine if ginger syrup mixed in water is an effective remedy for the relief of NVP | Women with nausea with or without vomiting first trimester | 1 g/day (4 × 250 mg) ginger (tablespoon) vs | Ginger including 1 mg pungent compounds from ginger rhizome juice, 1 mg of 20% pungent compounds and 5% zingiberene coming from CO2 supercritical extract of ginger rhizome | 2 weeks | Nausea: | Delivered viable infant at term without major complications | Keating et al., 2002 [ | |
| To investigate the effect of a ginger extract (EV.EXT35) on the symptoms of morning sickness. | Women with morning | 500 mg/day (4 × 125 mg) | EV.EXT35: ginger | 4 days | Nausea experience score: | Spontaneous abortion: | Willetts et al., 2003 [ | |
| To estimate whether the use of ginger to treat nausea or vomiting in pregnancy is equivalent to pyridoxine hydrochloride (vitamin B6) | Women NVP | 1.05 g/day ginger | - | 3 weeks | 53% reported an improvement taking ginger, and 55% reported an improvement with vitamin B6 | Belching: | Smith et al., 2004 [ | |
| To examine the evidence for the safety and effectiveness of ginger for NVP | Women NVP | 5 biscuits/day (2.5 g of ginger) vs. placebo | - | 4 days | Nausea scores: | In ginger group: | Basirat et al., 2009 [ | |
| To compare the breast milk volume during the early postpartum period between women receiving dried ginger capsules with those receiving placebo | Women ≥ 37 weeks gestation | 1 g of ginger (500 mg × 2) vs. placebo | Dried ginger powder | 7 days | Breast milk volume: | No notable side effects | Paritakul et al., 2016 [ | |
| To study the efficacy of ginger and dimenhydrinate in the treatment of NVP | Women NVP | 1 g (500 mg × 2) of ginger vs. 100 mg (50 mg × 2) of dimenhydrinate | - | 1 week | Nausea: | Drowsiness: | Pongrojpaw et al., 2007 [ | |
| To study the efficacy of ginger and placebo in hyperemesis gravidarum. | Women hyperemesis gravidarum < 20 weeks of gestation | 1 g (250 mg × 4) of ginger vs. placebo | Powdered root | 2 × 4 days | The preference: | One spontaneous abortion, which was not a suspicious high rate of fetal wastage in early pregnancy | Fischer-Rasmussen et al., 1991 [ | |
| To compare the effectiveness of ginger and acupressure in the treatment of NVP | Women NVP < 16 weeks of gestation | 750 mg (250 mg × 3) of ginger vs. acupressure | - | 7 days | Rhodes index scores: | 1 case of heartburn with ginger capsules | Saberi et al., 2013 [ | |
| To determine the effect of ginger to relieve NVP | Women NVP | 750 mg (250 mg × 3) of ginger vs. acupressure | - | 7 days | Rhodes index scores: | 1 case of heartburn with ginger capsules | Saberi et al., 2014 [ | |
| To compare the effects of ginger, pyridoxine | Women between 6 and 16 weeks of pregnancy; mild and moderate NVP | 1 g (500 mg × 2) ginger capsules | - | 4 days | Rhodes index scores: | Ginger is effective and safe | Sharifzadeh et al., 2017 [ |
Prospective studies investigating the effectiveness and safety of ginger for pregnancy.
| Study Type | Objective | Population | Number | Treatment | Ginger Definition | Duration | Results | Adverse Events | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prospective cohort study (Korean Motherisk Program) | To determine if ginger exposure during pregnancy would increase the risk of adverse fetal and neonatal outcomes | Women | 159 | Median dose: 470 mg/day | Dried ginger | Median length: 2 days | Spontaneous abortion: | Choi et al., 2014 [ | |
| The Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort study | To evaluate the safety of ginger use during pregnancy on congenital malformations | Women NVP | - | - | - | Not increase the risk of malformations | Heitmann et al., 2013 [ | ||
| Prospective cohort study (The Motherisk Program) | The primary objective: | Women | 187 (ginger group) | Various types of ginger: | - | Minimum 3 days | Ginger effectiveness scores (overall) on 66 women | - 3 spontaneous | Portnoi et al., 2003 [ |
List of adverse effects identified in the different clinical studies.
| Adverse Effects Identified (No Significance) | References |
|---|---|
| Headache, abdominal discomfort, diarrhea, heartburn, spontaneous abortion | Vutyavanich et al., 2001 [ |
| Sedation, arrhythmia, heartburn | Chitumma et al., 2007 [ |
| Intolerance, allergic reaction, medical assistance, spontaneous abortion | Willets et al., 2003 [ |
| Dry retching, vomiting, burning sensation, belching, spontaneous abortion | Smith et al., 2004 [ |
| Dizziness, heartburn | Basirat et al., 2009 [ |
| Drowsiness, heartburn | Pongrojpaw et al., 2007 [ |
| Spontaneous abortion | Ensiyehh et al., 2009 [ |
| Spontaneous abortion | Fisher Rasmussen et al., 1991 [ |
| Heartburn | Saberie et al., 2013 [ |
| Heartburn | Saberie et al., 2014 [ |