| Literature DB >> 31935866 |
Nguyen Hoang Anh1, Sun Jo Kim1, Nguyen Phuoc Long1, Jung Eun Min1, Young Cheol Yoon1, Eun Goo Lee1, Mina Kim1, Tae Joon Kim1, Yoon Young Yang1, Eui Young Son1, Sang Jun Yoon1, Nguyen Co Diem2, Hyung Min Kim1, Sung Won Kwon1.
Abstract
Clinical applications of ginger with an expectation of clinical benefits are receiving significant attention. This systematic review aims to provide a comprehensive discussion in terms of the clinical effects of ginger in all reported areas. Following the preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) guideline, randomized controlled trials on the effects of ginger were investigated. Accordingly, 109 eligible papers were fully extracted in terms of study design, population characteristics, evaluation systems, adverse effects, and main outcomes. The reporting quality of the included studies was assessed based on the Cochrane Collaboration's tool for assessing the risk of bias in randomized trials and integrated together with studies that investigated the same subjects. The included studies that examined the improvement of nausea and vomiting in pregnancy, inflammation, metabolic syndromes, digestive function, and colorectal cancer's markers were consistently supported, whereas other expected functions were relatively controversial. Nevertheless, only 43 clinical trials (39.4%) met the criterion of having a 'high quality of evidence.' In addition to the quality assessment result, small populations and unstandardized evaluation systems were the observed shortcomings in ginger clinical trials. Further studies with adequate designs are warranted to validate the reported clinical functions of ginger.Entities:
Keywords: ginger; human health; randomized controlled trials; systematic review
Year: 2020 PMID: 31935866 PMCID: PMC7019938 DOI: 10.3390/nu12010157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1The workflow of systematical search on ginger randomized clinical trials (RCTs) with five categorized substantial functions.
Study design and demographic description of the included studies with a “high quality of evidence” (quality assessment score is of at least 10).
| Author (Year) | Cohort Allocation | Study Design | Type of Disease/Symptom | Intervention | Comparator | Duration | Blind | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number | M/F | Dosage | Number | M/F | Dosage | ||||||
| Marx et al. | Australia | Randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 24 | 8/16 | 300 mg of ginger extract (5% gingerol)/cap, 4 capsules/day | 27 | 11/16 | 300 mg of placebo/cap, 4 capsules/day | 5 days | Double-blind |
| Sanaati et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 15 | 0/15 | 500 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 2 capsules/day and DMA regimen * | 15 | 0/15 | DMA regimen * | 5 days before and 5 days after chemotherapy | Double-blind |
| Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 15 | 0/15 | 500 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 2 capsules/day and DMA regimen * | 15 | 0/15 | 500 mg of powdered chamomile/cap, 2 capsules/day and DMA regimen * | 5 days before and 5 days after chemotherapy | Double-blind | |
| Thamlikitkul et al. | Thailand | Crossover randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | Second cycle: 19; | Second cycle: 0/19 | 500 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 2 capsules/day | Second cycle: 15; | Second cycle: 0/15; | 500 mg of placebo/cap, 2 capsules/day | 5 days at each second and third cycle of chemotherapy | Double-blind |
| Li et al. | China | Randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 71 | 53/18 | 250 mg of powdered ginger (5% gingerols)/cap, 2 capsules/day, bid | 69 | 47/22 | 250 mg of corn starch/cap, 2 capsules/day, bid | 5 days | Double-blind |
| Ansari et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 57 | 0/57 | 250 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 4 capsules/day, bid | 62 | 0/62 | 250 mg of starch/cap, 4 capsules/day, bid | 3 days for each 3 cycles | Single-blind |
| Sharifzadeh et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Nausea and vomiting because of pregnancy | 28 | 0/28 | 500 mg of ginger/cap, 2 capsules/day | 26 | 0/26 | 40 mg of vitamin B6/cap, 2 capsules/day | 4 days | Triple- blind |
| Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Nausea and vomiting because of pregnancy | 28 | 0/28 | 500 mg of ginger/cap, 2 capsules/day | 23 | 0/23 | 2 placebo capsules/day | 4 days | Triple-blind | |
| Matsumura et al. | United States | Randomized controlled trial | Muscle damage and delayed onset muscle soreness | 10 | 5/5 | 4 g of powdered ginger in capsule(s)/day | 10 | 5/5 | 4 g of dextrose in capsule(s)/day | 5 days | Double-blind |
| Martins et al. | Brazil | Randomized controlled trial | Migraine | 30 | 4/26 | 200 mg of ginger extract/cap, 2 capsules/dose + 100 mg of ketoprofen (i.v.) | 30 | 4/26 | 200 mg of cellulose/cap, 2 capsules/dose + 100 mg of ketoprofen (i.v.) | Single dose | Double-blind |
| Arzati et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Type 2 diabetes mellitus | 25 | 9/16 | 500 mg of ginger/cap, 4 capsules/day | 25 | 7/18 | 500 mg of wheat flour/cap, 4 capsules/day | 10 weeks | Double-blind |
| Attari et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Obesity | 39 | 0/39 | 1 g of powdered ginger/tab, 2 tablets/day | 31 | 0/31 | 1 g of corn starch and other excipients/tab, 2tablets/day | 12 weeks | Double-blind |
| Attari et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Obesity management | 39 | 0/39 | 1 g of powdered ginger/tab, 2 tablets/day | 31 | 0/31 | 1 g of corn starch/tab, 2 tablets/day | 12 weeks | Double-blind |
| Mozaffari-Khosravi et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Knee osteoarthritis | 50 | 3/47 | 500 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 2 capsules/day | 50 | 7/43 | 500 mg of starch/cap, 2 capsules/day | 3 months | Double-blind |
| Aryaeian et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Active rheumatoid arthritis | 33 | 4/29 | 750 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 2 capsules/day | 30 | 3/27 | 750 mg of wheat flour/cap, 2 capsules/day | 12 weeks | Double-blind |
| Kashefi et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Heavy menstrual bleeding | 43 (1st month); 41 (2nd month); 38 (3rd month) | 0/43 (1st month) 0/41 (2nd month) 0/38 (3rd month) | 250 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 3 capsules/day | 43 (1st month); 38 (2nd month); 33 (3rd month) | 0/43 (1st month) 0/38 (2nd month) 0/33 (3rd month) | 250 mg of lactose/cap, 3 capsules/day | From the day before menstrual bleeding to the 3rd day of the menstrual period | Double-blind |
| Paritakul et al. | Thailand | Randomized controlled trial | Breast milk volume of postpartum women who delivered a term baby (≥37 weeks of gestation) | 15 | 0/15 | 500 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 2 capsules/day | 21 | 0/21 | 500 mg of corn starch/cap, 2 capsules/day | 7 days | Double-blind |
| Ryan et al. | United States | Randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 134 | 12/122 | One ginger capsule (250 mg of ginger extract) + 2 placebo capsules, twice/day | 149 | 14/135 | Three placebo capsules, twice/day | 6 days | Double-blind |
| United States | Randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 141 | 19/122 | Two ginger capsules (250 mg of ginger extract) + 1 placebo capsule, twice/day | ||||||
| United States | Randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 152 | 10/142 | Three ginger capsules (250 mg of ginger extract), twice/day | ||||||
| Zick et al. | United States | Randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 53 | 14/39 | 250 mg of dry ginger root extract/cap, 4 ginger capsules and 4 lactose capsules/day | 57 | 14/43 | 250 mg of lactose/cap, 8 capsules/day | 28 days | Double-blind |
| United States | Randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 52 | 12/40 | 250 mg of dry ginger root extract/cap, 8 capsules/day | ||||||
| Fahimi et al. | Iran | Crossover randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 36 | 26/10 | 250 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 2 capsules/day | 36 | 26/10 | 250 mg of lactose/cap, 2 capsules/day | 3 days for each period | Double-blind |
| Yekta et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting | 40 | 0/40 | 250 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 4 capsules/day | 40 | 0/40 | 250 mg of starch/cap, 4 capsules/day | 6 days from three days before a chemotherapy session | Double-blind |
| Ensiyeh et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Nausea and vomiting because of pregnancy | 35 | 0/35 | 500 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 2 capsules/day | 34 | 0/34 | 20 mg of vitamin B6/cap, 2 capsules/day | 4 days | Double-blind |
| Willetts et al. | Australia | Randomized controlled trial | Nausea and vomiting because of pregnancy | 48 | 0/48 | 125 mg of ginger extract/cap, 4 capsules/day | 51 | 0/51 | 4 capsules/day, each capsule containing soya bean oil | 4 days | Double-blind |
| Vutyavanich et al. | Thailand | Randomized controlled trial | Nausea and vomiting because of pregnancy | 32 | 0/32 | 250 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 4 capsules/day | 38 | 0/38 | 4 placebo capsules/day | 4 days | Double-blind |
| Fischer-Rasmussen et al. | Denmark | Crossover randomized controlled trial | Nausea and vomiting because of pregnancy | 27 | 0/27 | 250 mg of powdered ginger root/cap, 4 capsules/day | 27 | 0/27 | 250 mg of lactose/cap, 4 capsules/day | Two periods of 4 days | Double-blind |
| Smith et al. | Australia | Randomized controlled trial | Nausea and vomiting because of pregnancy | 145 | 0/145 | 350 mg of ginger/cap, 3 capsules/day, tid | 146 | 0/146 | 25 mg of vitamin B6/cap, 3 capsules/day, tid | 3 weeks | Double-blind |
| Biswas et al. | India | Randomized controlled trial | Nausea and vomiting because of pregnancy | 34 | 0/34 | 150 mg of dried ginger extract/tab, 3 tablets/day | 29 | 0/29 | 10 mg of doxylamine + 10 mg of pyridoxine/tab, 2 or 3 tablets/day | 3 weeks | Single-blind |
| Firouzbakht et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Nausea and vomiting because of pregnancy | 24 | 0/24 | 250 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 4 capsules/day | 35 | 0/35 | 40 mg of vitamin B6/cap, 4 capsules/day | 4 days | Double-blind |
| Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Nausea and vomiting because of pregnancy | 24 | 0/24 | 250 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 4 capsules/day | 28 | 0/28 | 40 mg of sugar/cap, 4 capsules/day | 4 days | Double-blind | |
| Arfeen et al. | Australia | Randomized controlled trial | Postoperative nausea and vomiting | 36 | N/A | One capsule containing 500 mg of powdered ginger and one placebo capsule | 36 | N/A | Two placebo capsules | Single-dose | Double-blind |
| Australia | Randomized controlled trial | Postoperative nausea and vomiting | 36 | N/A | Two capsules containing 500 mg of powdered ginger | 36 | N/A | Two placebo capsules | Single-dose | Double-blind | |
| Eberhart et al. | Germany | Randomized controlled trial | Postoperative nausea and vomiting | 59 | 0/59 | 100 mg of ginger extract/cap, 1 ginger capsule + 1 placebo capsule/dose | 59 | 0/59 | 2 placebo capsules/dose | Triple dose: before operation and 3 h and 6 h post operation | Double-blind |
| Germany | Randomized controlled trial | Postoperative nausea and vomiting | 57 | 0/57 | 100 mg of ginger extract/cap, 2 ginger capsules/dose | 59 | 0/59 | 2 placebo capsules/dose | Triple dose: before operation and 3 h and 6 h post operation | Double-blind | |
| Mandal et al. | India | Randomized controlled trial | Postoperative nausea and vomiting | 50 | 42/8 | 0.5 g of powdered ginger/cap, 2 capsules/dose + 4 mg of ondansetron (i.v.) | 50 | 38/12 | 2 capsules of placebo/dose + 4 mg of ondansetron (i.v.) | 1 h before induction of general anesthesia | Double-blind |
| Ozgoli et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Primary dysmenorrhea | 50 | 0/50 | 250 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 4 capsules/day | 50 | 0/50 | 250 mg of mefenamic acid/cap, 4 capsules/day | 3 days | Double-blind |
| Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Primary dysmenorrhea | 50 | 0/50 | 250 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 4 capsules/day | 50 | 0/50 | 400 mg of ibuprofen/cap, 4 capsules/day | 3 days | Double-blind | |
| Kashefi et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Primary dysmenorrhea | 47 (1st month); 45 (2nd month) | 0/47 (1st month) 0/45 (2nd month) | 250 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 3 capsules/day | 54 (1st month); 53 (2nd month) | 0/54 (1st month); 0/53 (2nd month) | 220 mg of zinc sulfate/cap, 3 capsules/day | 4 days | N/A |
| Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Primary dysmenorrhea | 47 (1st month); 45 (2nd month) | 0/47 (1st month) 0/45 (2nd month) | 250 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 3 capsules/day | 45 (1st month); 42 (2nd month) | 0/45 (1st month); 0/42 (2nd month) | 220 mg of lactose/cap, 3 capsules/day | 4 days | N/A | |
| Rahnama et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Primary dysmenorrhea | 59 | 0/59 | 500 mg of powdered ginger root/cap, 3 capsules/day | 59 | 0/59 | 500 mg of toast powder (placebo)/cap, 3 capsules/day | From two days before the onset of menstrual period to first three days of menstrual period | Double-blind |
| Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Primary dysmenorrhea | 59 | 0/59 | 500 mg of powdered ginger root/cap, 3 capsules/day | 46 | 0/46 | 500 mg of toast powder (placebo)/cap, 3 capsules/day | First three days of the menstrual period | Double-blind | |
| Black et al. | United States | Crossover randomized controlled trial | Muscle pain, inflammation, and dysfunction induced by eccentric exercise | 27 | 12/15 | Six capsules containing 2 g of dried ginger extract with 250 mL of water | 27 | 12/15 | Six capsules containing 2 g of flour with 250 mL of water | Single-dose | Double-blind |
| Black et al. | United States | Randomized controlled trial | Muscle pain caused by eccentric exercise | Raw ginger study: 17 | Raw ginger study: 3/14 | Raw ginger study: 2 g of raw ginger /day | Raw ginger study: 17 | Raw ginger study: 3/14 | Raw ginger study: 2 g of yellow cornflower/day | 11 days | Double-blind |
| United States | Randomized controlled trial | Muscle pain caused by eccentric exercise | Heat-treated ginger study: 20 | Heat-treated ginger study: 7/13 | Heat-treated ginger study: 2 g of heat-treated ginger/day | Heat-treated ginger study: 20 | Heat-treated ginger study: 7/13 | Heat-treated ginger study: 2 g of powdered brown sugar/day | 11 days | Double-blind | |
| Mahluji et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Type 2 diabetes mellitus | 28 | N/A | 1 g of powdered ginger/tab, 2 tablets/day | 30 | N/A | 1 g of corn starch/tab, 2 tablets/day | 8 weeks | Double-blind |
| Khandouzi et al. | Iran | Randomized controlled trial | Type 2 diabetes mellitus | 22 | 5/17 | 1 g of powdered ginger/cap, 2 capsules/day | 19 | 9/10 | Lactose (placebo) | 12 weeks | Double-blind |
| Phillips et al. | United Kingdom | Crossover randomized controlled trial | Gastric emptying | 16 | N/A | 500 mg of powdered ginger/cap, 2 capsules/dose | 16 | N/A | 500 mg of lactose/cap, 2 capsules/dose | Single-dose | Double-blind |
| Jiang et al. | United States | Randomized controlled trial | Normal risk for colorectal cancer | 14 | N/A | 250 mg of ginger extract/cap, 8 capsules/day | 16 | N/A | Placebo (lactose) | 28 days | Double-blind |
| United States | Randomized controlled trial | High risk for colorectal cancer | 10 | 4/6 | 250 mg of ginger extract/cap, 8 capsules/day | 10 | 3/7 | Placebo (lactose) | 28 days | Double-blind | |
| Citronberg et al. | United States | Randomized controlled trial | Cell cycle biomarkers in the normal-appearing colonic mucosa of patients at increased risk for colorectal cancer | 10 | 4/6 | 250 mg of ginger extract powder (5% gingerols)/cap, 8 capsules/day, bid | 10 | 3/7 | 250 mg of lactose powder /cap, 8 capsules/day, bid | 28 days | Double-blind |
| Zick et al. | United States | Randomized controlled trial | Eicosanoids level of patients with normal risk for colorectal cancer | 16 | N/A | 250 mg of dry ginger root extract/cap, 8 capsules/day | 17 | N/A | 250 mg of lactose/cap, 8 capsules/day | 28 days | Triple-blind |
| Zick et al. | United States | Randomized controlled trial | Eicosanoids level of patients with increased risk for colorectal cancer | 10 | 4/6 | 250 mg of dry ginger root extract (5% gingerols)/cap, 8 capsules/day | 10 | 3/7 | 250 mg of lactose/cap, 8 capsules/day | 28 days | Double-blind |
| Tilburg et al. | United States | Randomized controlled trial | Irritable bowel syndrome | 15 | N/A | 1 g of ginger in capsules (2.29 mg/g of gingerols and 6-shogaol) | 15 | N/A | Brown sugar in capsules | 28 days | Double-blind |
| United States | Randomized controlled trial | Irritable bowel syndrome | 15 | N/A | 2 g of ginger in capsules (2.29 mg/g of gingerols and 6-shogaol) | ||||||
| Wigler et al. | Israel | Crossover randomized controlled trial | Symptomatic gonarthritis | Group 1 (ginger first): 14; Group 2 (placebo first): 15 | Group 1 (ginger first): 1/13 Group 2 (placebo first): 5/10 | 250 mg of ginger extract (10 mg of gingerol)/cap, 4 capsules/day | Group 2 (placebo first): 15; Group 1 (ginger first): 14 | Group 2 (placebo first): 5/10; Group1 (ginger first): 1/13 | Placebo capsules, 4 capsules/day | Two periods of 12 weeks | Double-blind |
* DMA regimen: dexamethasone, metoclopramide, and aprepitant; M/F: Male/Female; N/A: Not available.
Figure 2Features of ginger Randomized controlled trial (RCT) characteristics. (a) The trend in the publication of ginger RCTs over the decades, (b) the types of study design, (c) the ranges of pooled sample size per group, (d) the types of comparison in intervention, (e) the ranges of adopted dosage, and (f) the variety of ethnicity. N/A: Not available.
Evaluation system and key finding of the included studies with a “high quality of evidence” (quality assessment score is of at least 10).
| Author (Year) | Evaluation Outcome System | Main Result | Adverse Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marx et al. (2017) [ | FLIE-5DR questionnaire, RINVR | Compared with placebo, ginger supplementation therapy can improve the chemotherapy-induced nausea-related quality of life and relieve vomiting and fatigue caused by chemotherapy. | No |
| Sanaati et al. (2016) [ | Effects of the groups on nausea and vomiting using the generalized estimating equations (GEE) model | Ginger treatment reduced the frequency of vomiting and nausea significantly. | No |
| Thamlikitkul et al. (2016) [ | Nausea score ( by VAS), vomiting incidence, rate of rescue medication use, and incidence of chemotherapy dose reduction | This study indicated that taking 1g of ginger for five days from the first day of chemotherapy had no effect in reducing the nausea severity of breast cancer patients receiving Adriamycin and cyclophosphamide chemotherapy. | No |
| Li et al. (2017) [ | Incidence and severity of CINV by the MASCC Antiemesis Tool | In lung cancer patients who received cisplatin regimen, taking ginger as an adjuvant drug for antiemetics was ineffective in reducing the incidence and severity of CINV. | No |
| Ansari et al. (2016) [ | Episodes of vomiting and nausea severity by nausea and vomiting grading | There was no significant improvement in breast cancer patients receiving chemotherapy regime-induced CINV upon ginger treatment. Thus, additional study is needed to make a conclusion. | No |
| Sharifzadeh et al. (2018) [ | Rhodes questionnaire 2 | In relieving moderate to mild nausea and vomiting caused by pregnancy, ginger groups had similar effects to vitamin B6 and were more effective than the placebo group. | No |
| Matsumura et al. (2015) [ | Creatine kinase, lactate dehydrogenase, 1RM, muscle soreness (by VAS), Circumference, ROM-flexion, ROM-extension, skin temp—non-dominant arm, skin temp—dominant arm | This study showed that taking 4 g of ginger may promote the recovery of muscle strength after intense exercise but has no effect on indicators of muscle damage or delayed onset muscle soreness. | No |
| Martins et al. (2018) [ | Four-point scale, faces pain scale, visual numeric scale, nausea, ordinal scale, photophobia, phonophobia, and treatment satisfaction | The ginger-treated group showed a significant effect in reducing migraine attacks. | No |
| Arzati et al. (2017) [ | FBS, total cholesterol, TG, LDL-cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, HbA1C | Ginger supplementation significantly lowered fasting blood sugar, the mean variation of HbA1C, and LDL/HDL ratio. | No |
| Attari et al. (2016) [ | Glucose, leptin, resistin, adiponectin, insulin, HOMA-IR, QUICKI | A little beneficial effect of ginger powder supplementation was found regarding improving biochemical obesity indicator and weight loss. | No |
| Attari et al. (2015) [ | Obesity-associated parameters 1 | Subjects with the | No |
| Mozaffari-Khosravi et al. (2016) [ | Serum TNF-α, serum IL-1β | In knee osteoarthritis patients, serum TNF-αNF-m IL-1β was decreased in both groups, with a lower level in the ginger group than the placebo group. | No |
| Aryaeian et al. (2019) [ | Disease activity score-28, | This study showed that ginger could improve the active rheumatoid arthritis, as | Yes |
| Kashefi et al. (2015) [ | Percentage by which the mean hemorrhage decreased (%) | Ginger treatment reduced menstrual blood loss significantly during three interventions. | No |
| Paritakul et al. (2016) [ | Breast milk volume on day three, breast milk volume on day seven, and serum prolactin level | Ginger treatment significantly increased milk volume on the third day compared to the placebo group. However, no significant difference was found in the milk volume and serum prolactin levels on the seventh day between the ginger and placebo groups. | No |
| Ryan et al. (2012) [ | Seven point semantic rating, 13 item symptom inventory, and functional assessment of chronic illness therapy general | In adult cancer patients, a daily dose of 0.5–1.0 g of ginger was helpful in relieving the severity of acute chemotherapy-induced nausea | Yes |
| Zick et al. (2008) [ | Prevalence and severity of delayed nausea and vomiting (by Morrow Assessment of Nausea and Emesis questionnaire) | Taking ginger as a reduction of CINV was insufficient, and there was no additional benefit for reducing the severity of acute and delayed CINV. | No |
| Fahimi et al. (2010) [ | Prevalence, severity, and duration of acute and delayed nausea and vomiting (by Morrow Assessment of Nausea and Emesis) | Ginger treatment showed no effect in reducing the prevalence, severity, and duration of both acute and delayed nausea and vomiting | No |
| Yekta et al. (2012) [ | Self-made, two-part self-reporting instrument (number of vomiting, use of other antiemetics, side effects) | The ginger treatment group decreased vomiting at anticipatory, acute, and delayed phases of patients who received chemotherapy. | Yes |
| Ensiyeh et al. (2009) [ | Nausea scores, average number of vomiting episodes, follow-up visit, a five-point Likert scale | In early pregnancy, ginger intake had a stronger effect on relieving the severity of nausea than vitamin B6 intake. However, it had no significant difference in decreasing the number of vomiting episodes. | No |
| Willetts et al. | Rhodes index of nausea, vomiting, and retching | Regarding nausea experience and retching, the ginger group was significantly lower than the placebo group of pregnancy-induced nausea. | No |
| Vutyavanich et al. (2001) [ | Nausea (VAS score), number of vomiting episodes, and symptoms assessed by Likert scales | Nausea and vomiting induced in pregnancy could be relieved by ginger. | No |
| Fischer-Rasmussen et al. (1990) [ | The severity of hyperemesis (by degree of nausea, vomiting, and weight loss) | Ginger treatment showed significantly greater relief on hyperemesis than a placebo. | No |
| Smith et al. (2004) [ | Incidence of nausea, dry retching, and vomiting (by Rhodes index of nausea and vomiting form) and health status (by MOS 36 short form health survey) | Pregnant women with nausea, dry retching, vomiting can use ginger in the early stage of pregnancy to relieve the severity of symptoms as effectively as vitamin B6 | No |
| Biswas et al. (2011) [ | The severity of dysmenorrhea, nausea, and vomiting (by VAS), average of nausea spells per day, vomiting episodes, average of nausea episodes, and average number of vomiting in last week | A ginger extract can be considered as safe therapy and effective alternative for the reduction of nausea and vomiting with no severe or serious adverse events. | No |
| Firouzbakht et al. (2014) [ | The severity of nausea and the frequency of vomiting (by Likert scale and VAS) | After one week, the severity of nausea and vomiting was reduced dramatically in 60.6%, 42.7% and 61% of the ginger, placebo, and B6 groups, respectively. | Yes |
| Arfeen et al. (1995) [ | The incidence of PONV and the distribution of nausea score | 0.5 or 1.0 g of ginger showed no efficacy on the incidence by postoperative nausea and vomiting. | No |
| Eberhart et al. (2003) [ | The incidence rate of PONV, nausea, vomiting, and rescue antiemetics | There was no reduction in nausea, vomiting and the demand for antiemetic rescue treatment in three groups. | Yes |
| Mandal et al. (2014) [ | Episodes of nausea, retching, vomiting and rescue antiemetic (by the score of Bellville), and severity of PONV (by VAS) | Ginger combined with ondansetron may be more helpful in controlled PONV than ondansetron alone. | No |
| Ozgoli et al. (2009) [ | Self-administered questionnaire | When alleviating pain in women with primary dysmenorrhea, ginger was comparable to mefenamic acid and ibuprofen. | No |
| Kashefi et al. (2013) [ | PVAS | There were differences in pain after administration in the ginger and zinc sulfate groups, and when compared with placebo groups, it was shown to be effective in both groups. | Yes |
| Rahnama et al. (2012) [ | Pain (by VAS), duration of pain | There were significant differences in the severity of pain between the two groups, but only ‘protocol 1’ showed a significant difference in the duration of pain between two groups. | No |
| Black et al. (2010) [ | Elbow range of motion, arm volume, VAS score, and metabolic rate | A single 2 g dose of ginger did not attenuate eccentric exercise-induced muscle pain, inflammation or dysfunction at 45 min after ingestion. However, ginger may attenuate the day-to-day progression of muscle pain. | No |
| Black et al. (2009) [ | Arm muscle pain intensity muscle soreness (mm) 24-post, range of motion, Arm volume, Isometric force, △ROM (mean percent change in range of motion, %), △Volume (percent change in arm volume, %), △Force (percent change in isometric force, %), PGE2 (pg/mL), and ratings of perceived exertion | Taking raw and heat-treated ginger helped to reduce muscle pain following exercise-induced muscle injury. | No |
| Mahluji et al. (2013) [ | Serum FBG, HbA1c, insulin, HOMA, QUICKI, TG, TC, LDL-C, HDL-C | Ginger supplementation had a significant effect in reducing the levels of insulin, LDL-C, TG, and HOMA, and it increased the QUICKI index compared to the control group. | Yes |
| Khandouzi et al. (2013) [ | FBS, HbA1c, ApoB, Apo A-I, ApoB/Apo A-I, MDA | Ginger supplementation may help reduce FBS, HbA1c, ApoB, Apo A-I, ApoB/Apo A-I, MDA levels, as compare to the placebo and the baseline groups. | No |
| Phillips et al. (1992) [ | Paracetamol concentration (time to peak and time to the first detection) | The oral ingestion of 1 g of ginger simultaneously with paracetamol did not affect the rate of absorption of paracetamol. Therefore, the study revealed that ginger had no better effect on gastric motility. | No |
| Jiang et al. (2013) [ | cyclooxygenase-1 and 15-hydroxyprostaglandin protein levels | In the high risk of CRC participants, the colonic cyclooxygenase-1 protein level significantly decreased in the ginger group. On the other hand, 15-hydroxyprostaglandin was unchanged. There is no significant difference in average risk for CRC between the ginger and placebo groups. | No |
| Citronberg et al. (2013) [ | Bax, Bcl-2, p21, hTERT, MIB-1, Bax/Bcl-2 Ratio, Bax/hTERT Ratio, Bax/MIB-1 Ratio, p21/hTERT Ratio, p21/MIB-1 Ratio, cell cycle score (w/MIB-1), and cell cycle score (w/hTERT) | Two grams of ginger extract may help in reducing the proliferation of normal-appearing colorectal epithelium, as well as increased apoptosis and differentiation relative to proliferation—especially in the differentiation zone of crypts | Yes |
| Zick et al. (2011) [ | PGE2, 13-hydroxy-octadecadienoic acid, and 5-, 12-, and 15 hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid | Ginger treatment may help to reduce eicosanoid levels by inhibiting synthesis from arachidonic acid. Additionally, ginger is considered to be safe for people with a high risk of colorectal cancer. | No |
| Zick et al. (2014) [ | PGE2, LTB4, 13-hydroxy-octadecadienoic acids, and 5-, 12-, and 15-hydroxy-eicosatetraenoic acid | Treating root extraction with ginger for people at high risk for CRC for 28 days significantly decreased risk in the normal colonic mucosa of arachidonic acid and significantly increased LTB4, but other eicosanoids were ineffective. | Yes |
| Tilburg et al. (2014) [ | Irritable bowel syndrome severity scale and adequate relief rating scale | In treating irritable bowel syndrome, ginger may not be a proper choice because the result of study could not suggest evidence for the better performance of the ginger treatment. | Yes |
| Wigler et al. (2003) [ | VAS of pain on movement and handicap | After the crossover (three months), the ginger treatment group showed a significantly higher effect compared to the placebo group. | Yes |
1: Body weight, BMI, waist circumference, hip circumference, waist-to-hip ratio, waist-to-height-ratio, body fat, body fat mass, fat-free body mass, appetite total score. CINV: chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting; FBS: fasting blood sugar; FLIE-5DR: functional living index emesis 5-day recall; HOMA-IR: homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance; HDL-C: high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol; HbA1c: Hemoglobin A1c; IL: interleukin; LDL-C: low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol; MDA: malondialdehyde; PVAS: pain visual analog scale; QUICKI: quantitative insulin sensitivity check index; RINVR: Rhodes inventory of nausea, vomiting and retching; ROM: range of motion; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor-alpha; VAS: visual analog scale; MASCC: multinational association of supportive care in cancer; Apo: apolipoprotein; TC: total cholesterol; TG: triglyceride; LTB4: leukotriene B4; PG: prostaglandins treatment.
Figure 3Methodological quality graph: The risk of bias for each item is expressed by percentage.
Figure 4Distribution of ginger randomized controlled trials (RCTs) based on quality assessment (QA) score: a bright color indicates a ‘high quality of evidence,’ whereas a dark color indicates the opposite. (a) In total, 43 RCTs were addressed to have a high quality of evidence, and (b) each important function was evaluated (CINV: chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting; NVP: nausea and vomiting of pregnancy; PONV: postoperative nausea and vomiting).