Jing-Ning Granules (JNG)
Specifically for Attention-deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
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Why it works for Attention-deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD):
There is preclinical (animal) evidence and small/single-centre clinical observations that Jing-Ning Granules (静宁颗粒 / JNG) can reduce core ADHD symptoms and modulate dopamine-related pathways — but large, high-quality randomized controlled trials are still limited. That means JNG is a promising complementary/alternative option in some Chinese medicine settings, not a proven first-line replacement for established ADHD drugs.
Herbal composition & plausible neuropharmacology — JNG is a fixed TCM formula composed of seven herbs (Pseudostellaria heterophylla, Rehmannia glutinosa, Schisandra chinensis, Lycium barbarum, Poria cocos, Polygala tenuifolia, and Acorus tatarinowii). Analysis of the formula shows active constituents that can affect neurotransmitter systems and neurotrophic factors. Semantic Scholar
Dopaminergic / intracellular signalling effects (preclinical) — In a controlled rat study (spontaneously hypertensive rats, a common ADHD model) JNG improved hyperactivity/impulsivity and learning tests and regulated D1- and D2-like dopamine receptors and downstream signaling (cAMP/PKA and Ca²⁺/CaM/CaMKII pathways). This gives a biologically plausible mechanism because dopamine signalling is central to ADHD pharmacology. Semantic Scholar
Clinical observations / small trials — Several clinical observational studies and small clinical trials in China report symptom improvements (SNAP-IV and Conners scale reductions, improved cancellation test performance) and biochemical changes (e.g., BDNF, serum dopamine or vitamin D–related markers in some reports). These are encouraging but generally small and not always randomized, so they suggest efficacy but don’t definitively prove it yet. Baidu Xueshu
How to use for Attention-deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD):
- Typical course length used in clinical work — Published clinical observations and theses commonly report treatment courses of 4–8 weeks, with outcome assessments at baseline, 4 weeks and 8 weeks. (Example: an 8-week observational study reported SNAP-IV/Conners improvements at 4 and 8 weeks.) Baidu Xueshu
- Age groups studied — Most human studies in the Chinese literature enroll children, commonly ages 5–14 (trial registrations and clinical reports reflect this age range). MedPath
- Dosing / formulation — JNG is supplied as granules. Exact manufacturer dosing varies by product and is not standardized internationally. The animal studies calculated rat doses from a human equivalent dose but the published animal paper does not give a single universal human dose to apply; clinical papers mention the granules were taken orally per protocol but the product insert / manufacturer label should be followed for exact mg/g per bag. Do not assume a single “one size fits all” dose — dosing depends on product, child’s age/weight, and clinician prescription. Semantic Scholar
Practical takeaway on instructions: in clinical practice described in the Chinese literature, JNG is given orally as granules daily for several weeks (commonly 4–8 weeks), with outcomes tracked by ADHD rating scales. If you are considering trying JNG, follow a licensed practitioner’s prescription or the manufacturer label for the specific product you buy — don’t self-dose from ingredient lists alone. Baidu Xueshu
Scientific Evidence for Attention-deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD):
Preclinical mechanistic + behavioral study (rats) — “Jing-Ning Granules Can Alleviate Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder in Rats by Modulating Dopaminergic D2/D1-Like Receptor-Mediated Signaling Pathways” (Hindawi / Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2022). This paper describes behavioral improvements and molecular pathway modulation. Semantic Scholar
(PDF/full text available via the Hindawi link in the PDF result returned above.) Semantic Scholar
Clinical observations / smaller clinical studies (China) — Multiple Chinese clinical reports/observational studies and master’s theses report benefit in pediatric patients (some report total effective rates ~80–85% in small cohorts). Examples include: clinical observation papers and a thesis describing 25–54 child cohorts with 4–8 week treatment courses. These are typically single-centre, open-label or nonrandomized. Baidu Xueshu
Clinical trial registrations — Ongoing / planned trials are registered (e.g., a Phase 1 interventional trial for Jingning Granules in ADHD registered by Dongzhimen Hospital, Beijing University of Chinese Medicine). Registration documents give inclusion/exclusion criteria and age ranges (e.g., 5–14 years). (Registration status / outcomes should be checked for updates.) MedPath
Reviews / TCM systematic analyses — Systematic reviews of TCM for ADHD note large numbers of small studies in Chinese literature and call for higher-quality RCTs; they caution that the evidence base is heterogeneous and of variable quality. (See review/meta-analyses of Chinese TCM trials for ADHD). SAGE Journals
Specific Warnings for Attention-deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD):
Limited high-quality human RCT evidence — most human evidence for JNG is from small, sometimes nonrandomized Chinese studies and theses. That means efficacy and safety are not yet established to the standard of large randomized controlled trials used to approve conventional ADHD medications. Use that to guide risk/benefit decisions. doc88.com
Herb variability & manufacturing quality — granule products differ by manufacturer (ingredient sourcing, concentration, contaminants). Only use products from reputable manufacturers and obtain them via regulated pharmacies when possible. Clinical studies typically used hospital-produced granules with quality control per the Chinese Pharmacopoeia. Semantic Scholar
Possible interactions — herbal constituents can interact with conventional drugs (including stimulants or atomoxetine). If a patient is on ADHD medication, do not stop or change doses without discussing with the prescribing physician. Always check herb–drug interactions with a pharmacist or clinician. (There is limited published herb-interaction data specific to JNG, but many herbs can alter liver metabolism enzymes or have additive CNS effects.) Semantic Scholar
Population cautions — children, pregnant/lactating people, and those with significant medical comorbidities should only use JNG under supervision. Many clinical studies focus on children — but safety data across large, long-term cohorts are limited. Baidu Xueshu
Adverse effects & monitoring — reported adverse events in small studies are generally mild or not well documented, but that may reflect study size and reporting. Monitor appetite, sleep, mood changes, GI upset, allergic reactions, and any new neurological symptoms. Baseline and periodic clinical reviews (and liver function if clinically indicated) are prudent. Semantic Scholar
Regulatory / evidence caution — JNG is used in TCM practice and has a Chinese national invention patent, but it is not an approved ADHD medication by major international regulatory agencies (e.g., FDA/EMA) with large RCT evidence. Rely on practitioner guidance and the current state of the evidence before choosing it as monotherapy. Semantic Scholar
General Information (All Ailments)
What It Is
Jing-Ning Granules (JNG, sometimes called “静宁颗粒” in Chinese) is a traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) herbal formula.
It is a compound (multi-herb) formula, combining several individual herbs in fixed proportions.
According to one published description, the component herbs (and their weight ratios) include:
- Pseudostellaria heterophylla
- Rehmannia glutinosa
- Schisandra chinensis
- Lycium barbarum
- Poria cocos
- Polygala tenuifolia
- Acorus tatarinowii
The formula has been granted a national invention patent in China (patent No. ZL201510303541.6) for its use in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Semantic Scholar
It is often produced in the form of granules, i.e. a concentrated extract of the herbs prepared into a powder or granule form that dissolves in water (a common delivery form in modern TCM practice).
How It Works (Mechanisms / Hypotheses)
Because JNG is a complex herbal formula, its “mechanism” is not fully characterized. Still, a few hypotheses and experimental findings exist:
Animal (rat) model evidence in ADHD / hyperactivity
- A study using spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs, a common animal model for ADHD-like behavior) compared JNG (at low, medium, and high doses) against a control group and also atomoxetine (a standard ADHD medication) for 6 weeks. Semantic Scholar
- Behaviorally, JNG treatment was reported to ameliorate hyperactive/impulsive behavior and improve cognitive function in these rats. scienceopen.com
- Afterward, brain tissues (especially striatum and hippocampus) were examined for molecular / biochemical markers. Semantic Scholar+1
Effect on dopaminergic receptor signaling and downstream pathways
- One of the central mechanistic hypotheses is that JNG modulates the balance of D2-like vs D1-like dopamine receptor–mediated signaling. scienceopen.com
- Specifically, JNG is thought to affect the cAMP / PKA pathway and the Ca²⁺ / Calmodulin / CaMKII cascade as downstream signal transduction components. Semantic Scholar
- In the striatum, JNG treatment was associated with altered expression (mRNA / protein) of D1‐like and D2‐like receptors, increased cAMP, and modulation of Ca²⁺ levels. Semantic Scholar
Neuroprotection / modulation of neuronal activity
- The authors of the animal study suggest that JNG may exert neuroprotective effects (i.e. reducing neuronal damage or stress) in these ADHD models. Semantic Scholar
- Because herbal formulas tend to have multiple phytochemicals, some components may act via anti-oxidative, anti-inflammatory, or membrane stabilization effects (this is speculative, not proven for JNG in existing literature).
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) theoretical basis
- From the TCM perspective, JNG is presumed to “calm” or “stabilize” certain internal imbalances (e.g. calming the spirit, balancing Yin/Yang or organ systems), in line with TCM diagnosis principles. The name “Jing-Ning” can be understood as “quiet / calm (宁)” and “essence / tranquility (静)”.
- However, the published mechanistic work focuses on modern neurobiological pathways rather than TCM theory.
In summary, the likely mechanism is multi-target and modulatory, centered on dopaminergic receptor signaling and downstream intracellular pathways (cAMP/PKA, Ca²⁺/CaM/CaMKII), plus possible neuroprotective actions. But these remain hypotheses based mainly on preclinical data.
Why It’s Important (Potential Significance)
JNG is of interest for several reasons:
Alternative / adjunct to conventional ADHD therapy
- Because current ADHD medications (e.g. stimulants, atomoxetine) can cause side effects or be less acceptable in some patients, there is interest in complementary or alternative treatments with better safety profiles. JNG offers a TCM-based option. Semantic Scholar
Patent and formalization of a TCM formula
- JNG has been patent-protected and has undergone at least some standardized preclinical study, which is relatively more rigorous than many traditional formulas. Semantic Scholar
Bridging TCM and modern neuroscience
- Because mechanistic work has attempted to map herbal effects to known neurotransmitter systems (dopamine, intracellular signaling), JNG is a useful case study for integration of TCM and biomedical science.
Potential for symptom relief
- If effective, JNG could help ameliorate core ADHD symptoms (inattention, hyperactivity, impulsivity) in individuals who do not tolerate or prefer not to use conventional medications. Early observational reports (in children) suggest some favorable clinical outcomes. SAGE Journals
Stimulus for further research
- Because JNG is a well-defined formula with promising preliminary data, it may stimulate more rigorous clinical trials (e.g. randomized controlled trials in humans) to validate efficacy, safety, dosing, pharmacokinetics, etc.
Hence, JNG is significant as a potentially useful complementary therapy in neurodevelopmental or behavioral disorders, and as a research model of TCM-modern medicine integration.
Considerations (Limitations, Risks, Gaps, Practical Issues)
When evaluating or using JNG, many caveats and practical factors must be taken into account:
Insufficient human clinical evidence
- Much of the published work is in animal models, especially rats, not in well-controlled human trials. The translational validity (i.e. whether animal results apply to human ADHD) is uncertain.
- Some smaller clinical / observational reports (in China) reference formulas like “Jing Ning Zhi Dong Granules” in children with ADHD, but quality of evidence (blinding, controls, sample size) is limited. SAGE Journals
Complex herbal mixture — component interactions and variability
- Because JNG is a blend of many herbs, identifying which components are active, their synergistic or antagonistic interactions, and pharmacokinetics is challenging. Semantic Scholar
- Batch-to-batch variability in herbal quality, extraction process, standardization, contaminant levels (heavy metals, pesticides, adulterants) is always a risk in herbal medicines.
Dosing, standardization, and formulation differences
- The optimal dose (in humans) and treatment duration are not well established. The animal study used multiple dose groups, but scaling to humans requires caution.
- Granule formulations differ depending on manufacturer (concentration, excipients, solubility). The way granules are prepared (dissolved, dissolved time, temperature) may affect bioavailability.
Safety, side effects, and interactions
- Though TCM formulas are sometimes perceived as “gentle,” herbal ingredients can have bioactive (and sometimes toxic) effects, especially in certain populations (children, pregnant women, individuals with liver or kidney disease).
- There is very limited published safety data specifically for JNG; potential for herb–drug interactions (e.g. with conventional ADHD medications or other psychotropic drugs) must be considered.
- Herb contamination (heavy metals, pesticides, microbial contamination) is a known risk in herbal products if manufacturing controls are inadequate.
Individual variation and TCM pattern diagnosis
- In classical TCM practice, herbal treatments are personalized according to a patient’s “pattern” (e.g. Yin deficiency, Qi stagnation, etc.). Use of a fixed formula (JNG) may not suit all patients or patterns of ADHD presentation.
- Thus, a TCM practitioner might adjust the formula or combination depending on individual diagnosis — the “one formula fits all” approach may not align with TCM principles.
Regulatory and quality control
- In many countries, herbal products are regulated less stringently than pharmaceutical drugs. Ensuring that a JNG product meets quality, purity, and potency standards is crucial.
- Patients and practitioners should source granules from reputable, GMP-certified suppliers with independent testing.
Placebo and expectancy effects
- As with many complementary therapies, placebo effects and expectation may influence subjective improvements, especially in behavioral conditions like ADHD. Without strong controlled trials, it’s hard to separate real effect from non-specific effects.
Long-term efficacy and safety unknown
- Even if short-term benefits are observed, long-term outcomes, durability of effect, and cumulative safety over months or years are largely unknown.
Helps with these conditions
Jing-Ning Granules (JNG) is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.
Detailed Information by Condition
Attention-deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
There is preclinical (animal) evidence and small/single-centre clinical observations that Jing-Ning Granules (静宁颗粒 / JNG) can reduce core ADHD sym...
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