Materia Medica
of Fungal Medicine

Picture

Fungi have been an integral part of Traditional Medicine for millennia. A wide variety of Mushrooms and Fungi species have been used, however from a medicinal point of view the most important group of this class are the Polypores. 

In recent decades, an increasing amount of research has been confirming Traditional use of these fungi.

Our Fungi Monographs have detailed information based both on traditional uses and modern research.


See also

Primary uses of Medicinal Fungi
Medicinal Polypores at the Chengdu Medicine Market



General Research on Medicinal Mushrooms:

The following is a small fraction of the research that applies to Mushrooms in general. For research related to specific Mushrooms and Fungi, click on the individual monographs above.
The Pharmacological Potential of Mushrooms
Medicinal mushrooms: Towards a new horizon
Mushroom Polysaccharides: Chemistry and Antiobesity, Antidiabetes, Anticancer, and Antibiotic Properties in Cells, Rodents, and Humans
Edible Mushrooms: Improving Human Health and Promoting Quality of Life
Antioxidants of Edible Mushrooms
Cytotoxicity of some edible mushrooms extracts over liver hepatocellular carcinoma cells in conjunction with their antioxidant and antibacterial properties
Bioactivities and Health Benefits of Mushrooms Mainly from China
The effects of whole mushrooms during inflammation
Anti-Obesity Effects of Medicinal and Edible Mushrooms
Effect of medicinal mushrooms on blood cells under conditions of diabetes mellitus
Potential of Mushroom Compounds as Immunomodulators in Cancer Immunotherapy: A Review
Lectins from Edible Mushrooms
Vitamin D4 in Mushrooms
Antiinflammatory and Immunomodulating Properties of Fungal Metabolites
Anticancer, antithrombotic, antityrosinase, and anti‐α‐glucosidase activities of selected wild and commercial mushrooms from Pakistan
Clinical and Physiological Perspectives of β-Glucans: The Past, Present, and Future
Cytoprotective effect of polysaccharide isolated from different mushrooms against 7-ketocholesterol induced damage in mouse liver cell line (BNL CL. 2)
Effects of Dietary Intake of Japanese Mushrooms on Visceral Fat Accumulation and Gut Microbiota in Mice
Free radical scavenging and antimicrobial properties of extracts of wild mushrooms
Extracellular polysaccharides from Ascomycota and Basidiomycota: production conditions, biochemical characteristics, and biological properties

DISCLAIMER

This Website is intended for the study of Traditional Medicine. Some of the information is Intended for Historical reference only and may be illegal or dangerous if used by unskilled hands. MedicineTraditions cannot be held responsible for the use or misuse of the information contained herein, nor can it be held responsible for injury, sickness or death due to use or misuse of the information contained herein.

Picture