Reishi Mushroom (Ganoderma lucidum): The Mushroom of Immortality
Reishi — Ganoderma lucidum — is the most revered medicinal mushroom in East Asian medicine, known in Chinese as Ling Zhi (“Spirit Plant”) and in Japanese as Reishi, and used continuously in Chinese, Japanese, and Korean medicine for over 2,000 years as a tonic for vitality, longevity, and spiritual clarity. Its reputation as the “mushroom of immortality” reflects a genuinely impressive range of documented biological activities — from profound immune modulation and adaptogenic stress support to liver protection and anti-tumour effects — that make it one of the most pharmacologically well-studied natural medicines in the world.
At Herba Naturalle, Reishi is listed in the comprehensive herb index as a primary immune tonic and adaptogen — deeply aligned with the immune regulation framework of the Smooth Muscle and Immune Reset Bundle.
Active Compounds
- Polysaccharides (beta-glucans) — particularly beta-1,3/1,6-D-glucans; the primary immune-modulating compounds; activate macrophages, NK cells, and dendritic cells; stimulate interferon and cytokine production
- Triterpenes (ganoderic acids) — over 140 identified; anti-inflammatory, hepatoprotective, antihypertensive, and anti-tumour; responsible for the bitter taste
- Adenosine — with cardiovascular-protective and antiplatelet activity
- Sterols — ergosterol (precursor to vitamin D2); contributing to immune regulation
- Proteins and peptides — including LZ-8 immunomodulatory protein
Clinical Evidence and Applications
Immune Modulation
The most extensively validated application. Reishi’s beta-glucans are among the most powerful natural immune modulators — simultaneously enhancing innate immune function (macrophage and NK cell activation) while regulating excessive inflammatory responses. This bidirectional action makes Reishi valuable in both immune deficiency and immune over-activation. Directly relevant to Welcome to the Final Episode of the Inflammation Pandemic Series.
Cancer Supportive Care
Multiple clinical trials in cancer patients show that Reishi extract significantly improves quality of life, reduces fatigue, enhances immune function during chemotherapy, and in some studies improves disease-free survival. The polysaccharides promote tumour cell apoptosis and reduce angiogenesis (tumour blood vessel formation). Always used under oncological supervision.
Adaptogenic Stress Support
The triterpene content provides HPA axis-modulating adaptogenic activity — reducing cortisol, improving stress resilience, and supporting the adrenal glands. Complementary to the Nervous System Reset and Gotu Kola Complex.
Liver Protection
Ganoderic acids protect hepatocytes from toxic damage, reduce liver enzyme elevation, and support hepatic regeneration — making Reishi a valuable adjunct in hepatitis, fatty liver, and drug-induced liver stress.
Cardiovascular Support
Adenosine reduces platelet aggregation; triterpenes lower blood pressure through ACE inhibition and calcium channel blockade. Relevant to Healing the Heart.
Sleep and Nervous System
Clinical trials confirm improved sleep quality with Reishi — the adenosine and triterpene content supports deep sleep stages. Complementary to the Nervous System Reset.
Relevant Blog Posts
- Welcome to the Final Episode of the Inflammation Pandemic Series
- Healing the Heart: Understanding and Reversing Inflammation in the Cardiovascular System
- Stop the Inflammation Pandemic – The Lymphatic System
- Inflammation of the Surface Nervous System: Where Healing Begins
- Inflammation in Muscles and Joints: The Hidden Link to Autoimmunity
How to Use
- Hot water extract (standardised polysaccharides ≥10%): 1.5–9g daily (traditional doses); standardised extracts 500mg–1.5g daily
- Tincture (dual extraction — water and alcohol): 3–5ml twice daily; dual extraction captures both polysaccharides and triterpenes
- Whole mushroom powder: Less bioavailable than extract; 2–5g daily
- Allow 4–8 weeks for full adaptogenic and immune benefit
Safety
- Generally very well tolerated
- Anticoagulants: Adenosine has antiplatelet activity — professional guidance alongside warfarin
- Immunosuppressants: The immune-stimulating polysaccharides may counteract immunosuppressant drugs — discuss with specialist
- Pregnancy: Insufficient safety data — avoid therapeutic doses
- Liver enzymes: Rare reports of elevated liver enzymes with high doses — monitor with prolonged use
Contact Herba Naturalle for immune and adaptogenic herbal support. Browse all products and the full herb index.
This article is for informational purposes only. Please consult a qualified medical herbalist before use.

