Home | Community | Message Board

MushroomMan Mycology
This site includes paid links. Please support our sponsors.


Welcome to the Shroomery Message Board! You are experiencing a small sample of what the site has to offer. Please login or register to post messages and view our exclusive members-only content. You'll gain access to additional forums, file attachments, board customizations, encrypted private messages, and much more!

Shop: Left Coast Kratom Buy Kratom Extract   MagicBag.co All-In-One Bags That Don't Suck   Mushroom-Hut Grow Bags   Original Sensible Seeds Bulk Cannabis Seeds   Bridgetown Botanicals CBD Concentrates   North Spore North Spore Mushroom Grow Kits & Cultivation Supplies   Kraken Kratom Kratom Capsules for Sale   PhytoExtractum Kratom Powder for Sale

Jump to first unread post Pages: 1
First Controlled Human Trial Linking Maitake Mushroom Consumption to Improved Cognitive Function * 3
    #29583328 -

https://www.mycostories.com/post/yukiguni-factory-s-maitake-mushroom-trial-points-to-a-fungal-path-against-cognitive-decline

You'll have to clickie to see pics.  One year I found dozens of these guys in prime condition, some trees would have 3 or 4 on them.  It was wild.  I cloned some onto agar and then 5lb bags of pasteurized hard wood fuel pellets, then I used the totem method and sandwiched the colonized sawdust between freshly cut Oak logs harvested in winter about three or four years ago.  The logs are showing signs of mycelium growth but they're all 12"+ in diameter so it's going to be a long game. :lol:

..........


A rigorous 18-week clinical trial found that daily consumption of maitake mushrooms significantly improved cognitive scores in healthy older adults, particularly in memory.

The study suggests that maitake mushrooms may help slow the transition from normal cognition to mild cognitive impairment, a precursor to dementia.

Immune activation, specifically natural killer cell activity, appears to play a meaningful role in the cognitive benefits observed.



Dementia now affects tens of millions of people worldwide, and with populations ageing rapidly, the search for accessible, dietary approaches to cognitive preservation has become pressing. Maitake mushrooms (Grifola frondosa), a species long prized in East Asian cuisine, have accumulated a promising body of evidence across immune function, blood pressure, and gut health. Until recently, however, their effects on cognition in healthy humans remained unexamined in a rigorous clinical setting.


Maitake mushrooms (Grifola frondosa). Credits: Caspar S.

Maitake mushrooms (Grifola frondosa). Credits: Caspar S.

A Fungus With a Long History and a New Purpose

Credits: Antioxi

Credits: Antioxi

Yukiguni Factory, a Japanese food and mushroom producer based in Niigata, has now helped change that. Researchers affiliated with the company, alongside academics from Kobe Pharmaceutical University and Shimane Rehabilitation College, conducted an 18-week randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial involving 47 healthy Japanese adults aged 60 and older. The results, published in the Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology in 2026, offer the first controlled human evidence linking maitake consumption to improved cognitive function in healthy older volunteers.


What the Trial Found

Participants were divided into three groups. Two consumed bread containing 50 grams of maitake mushroom paste, using either the Y10M or C5304 strain, both developed by Yukinugi Factory. A third group received identical bread without any mushroom content. To confirm compliance, researchers measured blood ergosterol, a lipid found almost exclusively in fungi, which rose significantly in both mushroom-consuming groups compared to the placebo group.


Credit: VeryWell

Credit: VeryWell

The primary cognitive outcome was measured using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), a tool well suited to detecting subtle early-stage decline that cruder tests, such as the widely used Mini-Mental State Examination, can miss. After 18 weeks, participants consuming the Y10M strain showed a statistically significant improvement in their overall MoCA scores compared to the placebo group. The memory subscale, considered one of the more demanding components of the assessment, also showed a significant positive shift in the Y10M group. The C5304 group, despite consuming a similar quantity of mushroom with comparable beta-glucan content, showed no such improvement, a finding the authors attribute to as-yet-uncharacterised differences in minor constituents or polysaccharide structures between the two strains.


No adverse events were recorded across any group, and blood biochemistry, liver function markers, and haematological parameters all remained within normal ranges throughout the trial.


The Immune Connection

Perhaps the most scientifically intriguing finding concerns the immune system. Natural killer (NK) cells, a type of immune cell that circulates in the bloodstream and plays a role in clearing abnormal proteins from tissues, were significantly more active in the Y10M group after 18 weeks. Crucially, this increased NK cell activity correlated positively with higher MoCA scores across all participants, suggesting the two phenomena are linked rather than coincidental.


YUKIGUNI FACTORY's Maitake Mushroom Trial Points to a Fungal Path Against Cognitive Decline

Credits: Karoliska Institutet

This matters because growing research into fungal compounds has begun to illuminate how mushroom-derived polysaccharides, including beta-glucans, interact with the immune system in ways that extend well beyond their traditional associations. In the case of cognition, NK cells may help clear amyloid-beta, the protein whose accumulation is closely associated with Alzheimer's disease, by supporting microglial function, the brain's resident immune cells. The maitake polysaccharides in Y10M bread may stimulate this pathway, though the authors are careful to note that the precise mechanism remains unconfirmed.


This line of reasoning sits within a broader scientific conversation about how functional mushrooms are reshaping understanding of wellness across multiple biological systems.


Limitations and the Road Ahead

The trial's authors acknowledge a modest sample size, an unrestricted diet outside the intervention, and a focus limited to NK cells within a broader immune picture. Larger trials examining different populations, longer timeframes, and more granular mechanistic data will be needed before dietary guidance can be responsibly updated.


Nevertheless, the study provides a notable preliminary signal: a common edible mushroom, consumed daily at a practical dose, may contribute meaningfully to preserving cognitive health in older adults, with an immune-mediated mechanism that deserves considerably more scientific attention


--------------------


"Blow up your TV, throw away your paper.  Go to the country, build you a home."

- John Prine

Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Re: First Controlled Human Trial Linking Maitake Mushroom Consumption to Improved Cognitive Function [Re: schmutzen]
    #29585373 -

Are they not pretty tasty too?

Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Re: First Controlled Human Trial Linking Maitake Mushroom Consumption to Improved Cognitive Function [Re: Rukus]
    #29585941 -

I think these are aka chicken of the woods. If so, then very tasty to some.

Food as medicine is good practice. And if it can be foraged or home grown, imo it's even better.

Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Re: First Controlled Human Trial Linking Maitake Mushroom Consumption to Improved Cognitive Function [Re: space daddy] * 1
    #29586375 -

space daddy said:
I think these are aka chicken of the woods. If so, then very tasty to some.

Food as medicine is good practice. And if it can be foraged or home grown, imo it's even better.



These are hen of the woods. Chicken of the woods is orange shelf clusters

Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Re: First Controlled Human Trial Linking Maitake Mushroom Consumption to Improved Cognitive Function [Re: Rukus]
    #29586613 -

Hen of the woods taste like steak.

There are two different chickens, one grows on trees and the other from the ground.  The former has orange pores and is tough/woody.  The later has white pores is soft/tender with a lot more flavor.  Both are delicious and have as much protein as actual bird meat chicken.  If I had a choice I would prefer the mushrooms.  I like to deep fry them like tenders and make sandwiches.

I just looked today and there is grey/silver slime on my log, looks promising.  It's night time right now but I'll get a pic later.


--------------------


"Blow up your TV, throw away your paper.  Go to the country, build you a home."

- John Prine

Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Re: First Controlled Human Trial Linking Maitake Mushroom Consumption to Improved Cognitive Function [Re: schmutzen]
    #29587497 -

Think I started this in '22



Bonus: A lichen (algae + fungi) that's been growing in full sun on a steel chair for ~10 years now.  Got a bigger one in full shade on a plastic trash bin.



--------------------


"Blow up your TV, throw away your paper.  Go to the country, build you a home."

- John Prine

Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Re: First Controlled Human Trial Linking Maitake Mushroom Consumption to Improved Cognitive Function [Re: schmutzen]
    #29587813 -

Wow so beautiful. Lichens are neat. I have some growing with moss and fern in a big glass jug.

Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Re: First Controlled Human Trial Linking Maitake Mushroom Consumption to Improved Cognitive Function [Re: schmutzen] * 1
    #29593535 -

schmutzen said:
After 18 weeks, participants consuming the Y10M strain showed a statistically significant improvement in their overall MoCA scores compared to the placebo group. The memory subscale, considered one of the more demanding components of the assessment, also showed a significant positive shift in the Y10M group. The C5304 group, despite consuming a similar quantity of mushroom with comparable beta-glucan content, showed no such improvement, a finding the authors attribute to as-yet-uncharacterised differences in minor constituents or polysaccharide structures between the two strains.




Or maybe the sample sizes were so small that random differences in test scores made it look like there were differences.    With a n=45 study divided into 3 groups, that's n=15.

schmutzen said:
Think I started this in '22




Kretzchmaria deusta

Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Re: First Controlled Human Trial Linking Maitake Mushroom Consumption to Improved Cognitive Function [Re: Alan Rockefeller]
    #29593638 -

Translates to Brittle Cinder fungus.  Are you suggesting that is what I'm actually growing and not Grifola frondosa?  Looking at the pic on the Oak log does not look like HOTW to me.  I might check a nearby tree that produces every year to see how it compares.

I have read not to use trees affected by Oak wilt as cultivation logs, the ones I used came down in winter and looked relatively healthy but it's still a possibility. :shrug:



I buried them a couple inches into the soil.  IIRC, left to right, COTW, Gymnopilus, Shitake and Maitake.









--------------------


"Blow up your TV, throw away your paper.  Go to the country, build you a home."

- John Prine

Edited by schmutzen (06/02/26 09:59 PM)

Extras: Filter Print Post Top
Jump to top Pages: 1

Shop: Left Coast Kratom Buy Kratom Extract   MagicBag.co All-In-One Bags That Don't Suck   Mushroom-Hut Grow Bags   Original Sensible Seeds Bulk Cannabis Seeds   Bridgetown Botanicals CBD Concentrates   North Spore North Spore Mushroom Grow Kits & Cultivation Supplies   Kraken Kratom Kratom Capsules for Sale   PhytoExtractum Kratom Powder for Sale


Similar ThreadsPosterViewsRepliesLast post
* Scientists Study Mushrooms For Potential Cancer Treatments motamanM 1,643 0 11/11/03 07:31 AM
by motaman
* Hypertensive Crisis Linked to Psilocybin Mushroom Use in Patient Taking MAOI and Amphetamine Myco-A-E 861 10 06/02/26 10:58 AM
by durian_2008
* Mushroom grower?s conviction stands motamanM 5,041 18 04/11/08 05:37 PM
by Coaster
* Canned mushrooms blamed in outbreak motamanM 2,976 4 05/21/03 03:45 PM
by Seuss
* Ed Rosenthal (Marijuana Guru) Trial Update bowling-name 7,666 12 03/27/03 11:15 AM
by Middleman
* Mushrooms vs. Murder ; an article from my local paper dawn of a new day 3,580 10 12/03/03 06:31 PM
by DailyPot
* Maitake goodness veggieM 776 0 08/20/05 10:35 PM
by veggie
* High times in magic mushroom business - UK Sorted 6,850 12 12/13/03 02:51 PM
by Revelation

Extra information
You cannot start new topics / You cannot reply to topics
HTML is disabled / BBCode is enabled
Moderator: motaman, veggie, Alan Rockefeller, Mostly_Harmless
533 topic views. 0 members, 1 guests and 3 web crawlers are browsing this forum.
[ Show Images Only | Sort by Score | Print Topic ]
Search this thread:

Copyright 1997-2026 Mind Media. Some rights reserved.

Generated in 0.026 seconds spending 0.004 seconds on 14 queries.