Safed Musli

Last Updated: November 18, 2022

Chlorophytum borivilianum (Safed Musli) is a Rasayana herb from Indian Medicine supposedly used as an aphrodisiac and adaptogen. Mostly rat studies currently, but it appears to be an effective erectogenic agent and aphrodisiac.

dosageDosage

Safed Musli is most often used for




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1.

Sources and Composition

1.1

Sources

Chlorophytum Borivilianum (henceforth Safed Musli) is a traditionally rare Indian herb from Ayurveda (now commercially produced) in the Rasayana class of vitality and longevity promoting herbs, touted to also be an aphrodisiac[1] as well as a tonic (aid) for diabetes, inflammation, and used to intentionally increase body immunity.[2] In some instances this plant is called Herbal Viagra.[3] It has some reported usage postpartum in part due to preventing depression and acting as a galactogogue (milk production enhancer), although no evidence exists to support either usage.[2]

General historical usage as a physical and sexual tonic

1.2

Composition

The overall composition of the roots consist of carbohydrates (42%), proteins (5–10%), fiber (3–4%) and saponins (17–20%),[3] although saponin contents as low as 13.58% have been noted.[4] The overall polyphenolic content of Chlorophytum Borivilianum appears to be quite low at 0.25% with flavonols at 0.07%.[4]

  • Chlorophytoside I, a saponin[5]
  • Borivilianosides of the F, G, and H series; saponins[6]
  • Neotigogenin, Neohecogenin, and Tokorogenin[7]
  • Immunostimulatory polysaccharide[8] and others[9]
  • Fatty Acids (linoleic acid, 11 and 14-Eicosadienoic acid, hexadecane)[5]
  • Stigmasterol[5] with phytosterols consisting of 0.9% total weight[4]
  • Vitamin C at 0.67% of dry weight[4]

Saponins tend to be seen as the main bioactives of Safed Musli mainly due to their overall high content (17-20%), although polysaccharides also appear to have some activity

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Borivilianosides vary by the glycoside attached to the base structure (at R1) and modifications on both R2 and R3.[6]

2.

Neurology

2.1

Stress

One study conducted in rats assessing the anti-stress effects of Safed Musli noted that, in response to three tests noted that 21 days of ingestion of 100-300mg/kg of the alcoholic extract improved swim time (endurance and despair swimming tests) and showed some efficacy in preventing stress ulcers.[10] A later test noted that while 125mg/kg exerted anti-stress effects, that 250mg/kg of the aqueous extract was as effective as 1mg/kg Diazepam in reducing stress as assessed by a Cold Water Restraint Test and measuring biochemical alterations in serum.[11]

Moderate anti-stress effects, supporting its use as an adaptogenic compound

2.2

Sleep

The only current human intervention using Safed Musli was in combination with Velvet Bean (Mucuna Pruriens) where 18 persons with impaired sleep but otherwise healthy consumed 2250mg of the combination (equal parts) in divided doses improved all parameters of sleep as reported by self-report on a PSQI after 28 days, including global rating of sleep.[12] This study was partly funded by USPLabs, the producer of a supplement that was used in this study.

May aid sleep, but currently all studies are somewhat confounded with donations and funding from a supplement company making the particular formulation (USPLabs)

3.

Cardiovascular Health

3.1

Lipoproteins and Cholesterol

One intervention with hypercholesterolemic rats fed 0.75g (112.5- 225mg/kg) or 1.5g (225-450mg/kg) noted dose-dependent reductions in total lipids (17.61-24.97%), cholesterol (16.05-27.01%), triglycerides (15.47-21.05%), and LDL-C (21.56-36.31%) with an increase in HDL-C (21.05-36.26%); none of these changes affected normocholesterolemic rats.[4] These serum changes were matched with similar hepatic changes, and the increase in faecal cholesterol was 8.81-12.71% higher than hypercholesterolemic control with slightly greater increases in faecal lipids and bile acids.[4]

3.2

Artherogenesis

One study using serum from volunteers (conducted ex vivo) notes that in a test of copper-mediated LDL oxidation that both aqueous and alcoholic extracts of Safed Musli were able to confer protective effects by prolonging lag time and reducing both lipid peroxidation and the oxidation rate of LDL; slightly but significantly weaker than an equimolar concentration of Vitamin E.[13]

4.

Inflammation and Immunology

4.1

Mechanisms

One study on erectile properties that used a murine macrophage cell line noted that, when incubated in these macrophages, that Safed Musli at 10mg/mL was able to elevate levels of nitric oxide to 1004% of baseline levels.[14]

Appears to be quite potent in stimulating otherwise resting macrophages; potency needs replication

4.2

Natural Killer Cells

When tested in vitro in PBMCs, Natural Killer Cytotoxicity is enhanced 2-fold (+98%) of control when the polysaccharide fragment is at 5mcg/mL while higher concentrations of 25mcg/mL attenuate the enhancement to 58.4+/-0.3%; the polysaccharide appears to be the active molecule.[8]

4.3

Interventions

An immunostimulatory polysaccharide from the hot-water extract of Safed Musli was found to, after 28 days of feeding to rats at 100mg/kg, increase Immunoglobulin levels 10.9% above control.[8]

A survival study in rats against C. albicans infection (to assess non-specific immunity) noted that the extracts were 50-60% more effective than control in promoting survival against infection, suggesting an enhancement of non-specific immunity.[15] A subsequent test against drug-induced immunosuppression noted that azathioprine-induced immunosuppression (assessed by RBC and WBC count) was effectively normalized.[15]

Implicated in increasing non-specific (innate) immunity

5.

Interactions with Sexuality

Safed Musli has been used as an aphrodisiac and sexual tonic in Ayurveda where it is known as a Vajikaran.[16]

5.1

Erectile Properties

Rho-Kinase II (ROCK-II) is a protein that contracts muscles of the corpus cavernosus upon activation, and its inhibition should aid in erections (due to preliminary studies with the synthetic inhibitor Y-27632[17][18])

Safed Musli (root), in an investigation on ROCK-II inhibitory potential, was found to have poor inhibitory potential at 4.11% and 40.54% (aqueous and methanolic extracts) at 50mcg/mL; this study also noted efficacy with Terminalia chebula, Albizia lebbeck, Cinnamomum cassia, and Syzygium cumini all exerting over 75% inhibition at 50mcg/mL with both extracts.[19] Ashwagandha was poorly effective and Asparagus Racemosus was ineffective while the methanolic extract of Terminalia Chebula was most potent with an IC50 of 6.09±0.17mcg/mL[19]

May improve erectile properties via ROCK-II inhibition, but its effects at doing so seem comparatively weak

In a macrophage cell line that while control elevated Nitric Oxide to 4.93+/-0.4uM that Safed Musli was highly effect at 10mg/mL increasing NO to 49.5 ± 1.6uM (1004% of control).[14] The authors drew a connection to the potency in vitro and the role of Nitric Oxide in erections, but did not establish a connection.[14]

May mechanistically work via penile Nitric Oxide, unproven though

Interventions with Safed Musli note that 100mg/kg oral intake in rats note improvements in erection as assessed by the Penile Erection Index (PEI) 140% above control after 14 days, which nonsignificantly outperformed 0.5mg/kg testosterone twice weekly and Curculigo orchioides while ourperforming Asparagus Racemosus.[14] A study on diabetic rats with impaired erectile potential (29-33% of control) fed Safed Musli at 200mg/kg aqueous extract actually noted a PEI exceeding that of control (185-194% of control after 26 days);[20] a third study notes this at 165% of control after 30 days of 200mg/kg.[21]

Benefits to erections have also been noted in diabetic mice (the state of diabetes is highly associated with impairment to sexuality, up to 90% of men[22]), where 200mg/kg Safed Musli aqueous extract for 26 days was associated with a restoration of sexuality impaired by either alloxan or streptozotocin (two chemicals used to induce diabetes) and actively outperfomed control on parameters of aphrodisia.[20] In a comparative study with doses standardized to 200mg/kg, Safed Musli outperfoms Asparagus Racemosus and Curculigo Orchioides in attention towards female rats (2.5-fold increase relative to control); mount latency and intromission latency were reduced 37% and 36% respectively.[21]

One study used Viagra as an active control at 4mg/kg, and noted that after 28 days of 125-250mg/kg Safed Musli that there was equal effectiveness in reducing mount latency and slightly less efficacy in intromission latency, slightly less increases of mounting and intromission frequency, and slightly less efficacy in ejaculatory latency and post-ejaculatory intervals.[21] This study did not note many differences between the doses of 125mg/kg and 250mg/kg at day 28, with 250mg/kg being more effective up until day 14 where the effects seemed to have saturated.[21]

Appears to have potent erectogenic properties as well as aphrodisiac properties, at least one study suggests it to be slightly less potent than Viagra

5.2

Testicular Properties

100mg/kg of Safed Musli in rats for a period of 14 days results in a 28.04% increase in sperm count.[14] This increase in sperm count has been noted in a dose-dependent manner after 60 days of both 125mg/kg and 250mg/kg aqueous extract, reaching up to 151.69% of control with 250mg/kg.[21]

May increase sperm count

6.

Interactions with Cancer

6.1

Tumorigenesis

100, 200, and 800mg/kg of Safed Musli for 30 days exerted anti-oxidant effects in vivo to rats, with decreases in lipid peroxidation and an increase in hepatic glutathione were noted at the two higher doses while increases in SOD and Catalase were seen at all doses;[23] the degree of efficacy at the highest dose was lipid peroxidation (-15.7%), reduced glutathione (+93.6%), SOD (78.8%), and Catalase (23.3%), and this dose exerted anti-tumor effects during experimental tumor induction.[23] Other studies measuring induction of these anti-oxidant enzymes note lower values for Catalase (1.04-9.10%) and SOD (3.57-25.17%), with disease states having higher percent induction due to lower baseline value.[4]

Superoxide scavenging abilities have been noted to have an IC50 value of 178µg/mL and 138.4µg/mL for the aqueous and alcoholic extracts, respectively.[13] Anti-oxidant effects were also noted in DPPH and Iron-binding assays (both less potent than the standard of Vitamin E) and nitric oxide scavenging abilities of Safed Musli (IC50 67.8µg/mL for alcoholic extract) appear to be close to the standard of Vitamin E, while the aqueous extract was weaker (IC50 143.2µg/mL).[13]

7.

Interactions with Hormones

7.1

Testosterone

One study in rats using 200mg/kg daily for a period of 30 days noted an increase in prostatic weight in the rats fed Safed Musli, usually associated with androgenic signalling; the potency was not significantly different than 0.5mg/kg testosterone (biweekly) and was greater than Asparagus Racemosus.[21] This study did not measure serum androgens.

Weak evidence of androgenic activity

7.2

Growth Hormone

One study that used Safed Musli and Mucuna Pruriens in equal parts (total dose of 2250mg) noted that over the course of 120 minutes that there were no significant increases in growth hormone Area Under Curve (AUC) if two outliers (hyperresponders) were factored out, but including these two hyperresponders (out of 15) caused a statistically significant increase in growth hormone at the time points of 60-100 minutes, but not 120 minutes;[24] a very high variability existed between subjects, and this study was funded by a supplement manufacturer that products the used product.[24]

Technically improved growth hormone levels in serum, but with highly unreliable efficacy; results also need to be rexamined due to company involvement

References
1.^Kumar D, Bhatnagar SPPharmacognostical evaluation of chlorophytum borivilianum rootAnc Sci Life.(2004 Jul)
2.^Thakur GS, Bag M, Sanodiya BS, Debnath M, Zacharia A, Bhadauriya P, Prasad GB, Bisen PSChlorophytum borivilianum: a white gold for biopharmaceuticals and neutraceuticalsCurr Pharm Biotechnol.(2009 Nov)
4.^Visavadiya NP, Narasimhacharya AVAmeliorative effect of Chlorophytum borivilianum root on lipid metabolism in hyperlipaemic ratsClin Exp Pharmacol Physiol.(2007 Mar)
6.^Acharya D, Mitaine-Offer AC, Kaushik N, Miyamoto T, Paululat T, Mirjolet JF, Duchamp O, Lacaille-Dubois MACytotoxic spirostane-type saponins from the roots of Chlorophytum borivilianumJ Nat Prod.(2009 Jan)
8.^Thakur M, Connellan P, Deseo MA, Morris C, Dixit VKImmunomodulatory Polysaccharide from Chlorophytum borivilianum RootsEvid Based Complement Alternat Med.(2011)
9.^Narasimhan S, Govindarajan R, Madhavan V, Thakur M, Dixit VK, Mehrotra S, Madhusudanan KPAction of (2-->1)Fructo-oligopolysaccharide fraction of Chlorophytum borivilianum against Streptozotocin-Induced oxidative stressPlanta Med.(2006 Dec)
13.^Visavadiya NP, Soni B, Dalwadi N, Madamwar DChlorophytum borivilianum as potential terminator of free radicals in various in vitro oxidation systemsDrug Chem Toxicol.(2010 Apr)
15.^Thakur M, Bhargava S, Dixit VKImmunomodulatory Activity of Chlorophytum borivilianum Sant. FEvid Based Complement Alternat Med.(2007 Dec)
18.^Dai Y, Chitaley K, Webb RC, Lewis RW, Mills TMTopical application of a Rho-kinase inhibitor in rats causes penile erectionInt J Impot Res.(2004 Jun)
19.^Goswami SK, Manoj Kumar P, Jamwal R, Dethe S, Agarwal A, Mohammed Naseeruddin IScreening for Rho-kinase 2 inhibitory potential of Indian medicinal plants used in management of erectile dysfunctionJ Ethnopharmacol.(2012 Oct 5)
20.^Thakur M, Bhargava S, Praznik W, Loeppert R, Dixit VKEffect of Chlorophytum Borivilianum Santapau and Fernandes on sexual dysfunction in hyperglycemic male ratsChin J Integr Med.(2009 Dec)
21.^Thakur M, Chauhan NS, Bhargava S, Dixit VKA comparative study on aphrodisiac activity of some ayurvedic herbs in male albino ratsArch Sex Behav.(2009 Dec)
22.^Malavige LS, Jayaratne SD, Kathriarachchi ST, Sivayogan S, Fernando DJ, Levy JCErectile dysfunction among men with diabetes is strongly associated with premature ejaculation and reduced libidoJ Sex Med.(2008 Sep)
23.^Kumar M, Meena P, Verma S, Kumar M, Kumar AAnti-tumour, anti-mutagenic and chemomodulatory potential of Chlorophytum borivilianumAsian Pac J Cancer Prev.(2010)