What Lion’s Mane actually does, how long it actually takes, and how to make sure you’re not buying expensive grain dust.
There’s a fungus with the appearance of a white waterfall, the texture of a sea creature, and a name that sounds like it belongs in a Tolkien novel. It grows on ancient hardwood trees across Asia, Europe, and North America. It’s been used in traditional Chinese medicine for centuries. And it might be one of the most interesting things you can do for your long-term brain health.
Lion’s Mane mushroom (known scientifically as Hericium erinaceus) has moved from obscure mycology to mainstream wellness in the last few years. You’ve probably seen it in coffee. You’ve probably seen it in supplement form. You’ve almost certainly seen someone claim it will make you smarter, calmer, and sharper within days of taking it.
Some of that is real. Some of it is marketing. The difference is worth understanding.
This article will explain what Lion’s Mane actually does inside your brain, how long that process realistically takes, and how to spot the difference between a product that works and one that’s mostly just expensive grain flour in a capsule.
Most Lion’s Mane products on the market are not what they claim to be. Understanding why is half the battle.
First: What Is Lion’s Mane and Why Does It Matter?
Lion’s Mane (Hericium erinaceus) is a medicinal mushroom with a documented history stretching back centuries in East Asian medicine, where it was used for cognitive support, gut health, and general vitality. Modern science has spent the last three decades trying to understand exactly why it works, and what it found is genuinely interesting.
The mushroom contains two families of bioactive compounds that are unique to it and not found in significant quantities elsewhere in nature:
Hericenones: found in the fruiting body (the visible mushroom). These stimulate the production of Nerve Growth Factor in nerve cells.
Erinacines: found in the mycelium (the root-like network beneath). These also stimulate NGF synthesis, and critically, erinacine A has been shown to cross the blood-brain barrier in animal studies.
Both compound families work through the same target: NGF. Which brings us to the question most people have never had properly answered.
What Is Nerve Growth Factor, and Why Should You Care?
Nerve Growth Factor (NGF) is a protein your brain produces to support the growth, maintenance, and survival of neurons. Think of it as your brain’s maintenance crew chief: it signals neurons to grow new connections, repair themselves, and stay alive longer.
NGF is particularly important for the cholinergic system, the network of neurons that uses acetylcholine as its primary neurotransmitter. This system is central to memory, attention, and learning. It’s also the system that deteriorates most visibly in Alzheimer’s disease.
NGF: the brain’s maintenance signal
Nerve Growth Factor promotes the growth and differentiation of neurons, regulates the survival of nerve cells, and supports the brain’s ability to form and maintain new connections — a process called neuroplasticity. Researchers from the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation note that dysfunction in NGF signalling is believed to contribute to the cognitive decline seen in Alzheimer’s disease. (ADDF Cognitive Vitality Report, 2025)
This the problem: NGF itself cannot cross the blood-brain barrier. You can’t take it as a supplement and expect it to arrive where it’s needed. What you can do - and this is the remarkable thing about Lion’s Mane - is stimulate your brain to produce more of it from within.
The bioactive compounds in Lion’s Mane, particularly erinacines, have been shown in studies to penetrate the blood-brain barrier and trigger NGF synthesis inside the brain directly. Your brain makes more of its own maintenance signal. That’s the mechanism.
You can’t swallow NGF and have it reach your brain. But you can take something that tells your brain to produce more of its own. That’s the Lion’s Mane story.
※ Sources: PMC — Neurotrophic and Neuroprotective Effects of Hericium erinaceus, 2023 — ADDF Cognitive Vitality Report, 2025
What Does the Research Actually Show?
This is where intellectual honesty matters, because the supplement industry has a habit of presenting animal studies as if they were clinical proofs.
Here’s an accurate picture of where the science stands:
The Animal Research Is Compelling
In multiple rodent studies, Lion’s Mane has consistently shown the ability to increase NGF levels in the brain, promote the growth of new nerve connections (neurite outgrowth), reduce amyloid plaques associated with Alzheimer’s disease, support hippocampal neurogenesis (the birth of new brain cells), and reduce anxiety and depressive behaviour. These findings are consistent across many independent research groups and published in peer-reviewed journals including PubMed and Frontiers in Nutrition.
The Human Research Is Promising But Still Early
Human clinical trials are fewer, smaller, and shorter than we’d ideally want. That said, some are meaningful:
Key human studies to know
A 2009 randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of 30 people with mild cognitive impairment found that 16 weeks of Lion’s Mane supplementation (3g daily) improved scores on the Revised Hasegawa Dementia Scale compared to placebo. A 2019 trial of 31 healthy adults over 50 found that 12 weeks of supplementation (3.2g daily) improved performance on the Mini Mental State Examination. A 2023 double-blind pilot study in 41 healthy adults (aged 18–45) found that a single dose improved reaction time on the Stroop task at 60 minutes post-dose — with a trend toward reduced stress after 28 days. (Mori et al., 2009 — Saitsu et al., 2019 — Docherty et al., 2023)
Importantly, the 2009 cognitive impairment study found that scores declined again after supplementation stopped — suggesting that benefits may require consistent, ongoing use. This is not unusual for nutritional interventions, but it’s worth knowing before you expect a one-month experiment to produce permanent results.
What the research doesn’t show (yet)
Large-scale randomised controlled trials in healthy adults are still limited. Some trials have shown null results, particularly for short-term use in young, healthy people. The Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, one of the most rigorous evaluators of dementia prevention research, currently rates Lion’s Mane as ‘promising’ but notes the need for larger, longer studies. The science is real — it’s just not finished yet.※ Sources: Mori et al., 2009 (Phytotherapy Research) — Saitsu et al., 2019 (PubMed) — Docherty et al., 2023 (PMC) — ADDF Cognitive Vitality, 2025
How Long Does Lion’s Mane Take to Work?
This is the question most supplement brands would rather you didn’t ask. Here’s the honest answer.
NGF stimulation is not a switch you flip. It’s a biological process that unfolds gradually. The compounds need to accumulate in your system, trigger synthesis pathways, and those pathways need time to produce measurable effects on neuron health and connectivity.
A realistic timeline
Weeks 1–2: Some users notice subtle improvements in focus and mental clarity as compounds begin to accumulate. Weeks 4–8: Mood effects and reduced stress are most commonly reported in this window. Research showing cognitive improvements in impaired adults used 12–16 week protocols. Months 2–3+: The studies showing the most meaningful cognitive results ran for at least 12 weeks at consistent dosages. The 49-week trial in early Alzheimer’s patients showed improvements in daily living after nearly a year of consistent use.
The 2023 Stroop task study is notable because it showed an acute effect, improved reaction time just 60 minutes after a single dose. But the researchers were careful to note this is an early finding and that peak concentration of key compounds in human plasma after oral administration is not yet fully mapped.
The bottom line: treat Lion’s Mane as a long game. It’s not a pre-workout. It’s closer to a training programme for your brain. Expect to give it at least 8–12 weeks of consistent, daily use before drawing conclusions about whether it’s working.
Lion’s Mane is not a pre-workout. It’s more like a training programme for your brain. Give it the time it needs.
How to Find a Good One: The Quality Problem Nobody Talks About
Here’s where things get frustrating. The Lion’s Mane supplement market is full of products that use the name, the research, and the credibility of the ingredient — and then quietly deliver something quite different inside the capsule.
Understanding four concepts will help you cut through almost all of it.
1. Fruiting Body vs. Mycelium on Grain
Lion’s Mane has two main parts: the fruiting body (the visible white mushroom) and the mycelium (the underground root network). Both contain active compounds. Hericenones are concentrated in the fruiting body. Erinacines are found in the mycelium.
Here’s the problem: most commercial Lion’s Mane products use mycelium that has been grown on a grain substrate (usually oats or rice). After fermentation, the mycelium becomes inseparably mixed with the grain. When it’s dried and powdered, you’re getting a product that is often 35–40% starch with only 1–5% beta-glucans.
The grain filler problem in numbers
A 2020 analysis published in the Journal of Fungi found that fruiting body extracts contained 3–5 times more beta-glucans than mycelium-on-grain products. Some myceliated grain supplements have been found to contain as little as 1% beta-glucan - compared to 30%+ in quality fruiting body extracts. The EU Novel Foods Guidelines have taken note: they now prohibit the use of mycelial extracts in Lion’s Mane supplements, requiring fruiting body only.
Labels to watch for: “full spectrum biomass,” “myceliated grain,” or any product that doesn’t specify “fruiting body only.” These are often signs that grain content is a significant part of what you’re buying.
2. Extraction Method: Why It Matters
Grinding dried mushroom into powder is not the same as extracting it. The active compounds in Lion’s Mane are locked behind chitin, an indigestible fibre that forms the cell wall of fungi. Without proper extraction, your digestive system cannot access most of the beneficial compounds.
There are two types of extraction that matter:
Hot water extraction: breaks down chitin and releases the water-soluble beta-glucans (the immune-modulating polysaccharides). This is the minimum standard.
Alcohol (ethanol) extraction: captures the alcohol-soluble compounds including hericenones and triterpenes. Without this step, you miss the compounds most directly linked to NGF stimulation.
What dual extraction means
A dual-extracted product uses both hot water and alcohol in sequence to capture the full compound profile - beta-glucans from the water extraction, hericenones and triterpenes from the alcohol extraction. This is considered the gold standard for Lion’s Mane supplements. A hot-water-only extract is better than no extraction, but it’s incomplete. A raw powder with no extraction is largely inaccessible to your body.
3. What to Look For on the Label
A trustworthy Lion’s Mane supplement should be able to tell you:
✓ Fruiting body only (not myceliated grain or ‘full spectrum biomass’)
✓ Dual extraction method specified (hot water + alcohol)
✓ Beta-glucan content stated as a percentage (look for 25–30%+)
✓ Certified organic — especially important for mushrooms, which readily absorb contaminants from their environment
✓ Third-party tested for heavy metals and purity
✓ Clear sourcing — where the mushrooms were grown and on what substrate
And what to be suspicious of:
✗ No mention of extraction method
✗ ‘Full spectrum’ or ‘mycelium biomass’ without explanation
✗ No beta-glucan percentage stated
✗ Extremely high ‘equivalent’ doses (e.g. 10,000mg QCE) without active compound percentages
✗ Gummies — the processing required to make them typically destroys heat-sensitive compounds
4. Why China Isn’t a Red Flag (When Done Right)
The words “sourced from China” have become a reflexive concern for supplement buyers. In the case of Lion’s Mane, context matters.
China has cultivated Hericium erinaceus for centuries and remains the world’s leading producer of medicinal mushrooms. The country hosts the most established organic mushroom farms, the deepest institutional knowledge of cultivation, and the most experienced extraction facilities. The research on erinacines was largely done in Asia, with Chinese and Japanese institutions among the most published on the subject.
The question is not whether mushrooms come from China. The question is whether they come from certified organic farms with transparent supply chains, tested for pesticides, heavy metals, and adulterants, extracted to verified active compound standards. When those conditions are met, Chinese-grown Lion’s Mane represents the best raw material available.
Where it’s grown matters less than how it’s grown, how it’s extracted, and whether anyone can prove it.
The Summary: What Lion’s Mane Does, Honestly
Lion’s Mane mushroom is not magic. It is not going to make you a different person by next Tuesday. But it is one of the most scientifically credible natural compounds for long-term brain support — with a mechanism (NGF stimulation via hericenones and erinacines) that is well-characterised in preclinical research and showing genuine promise in human trials.
What consistent, high-quality Lion’s Mane supplementation appears to support, based on current evidence:
✓ NGF production — supporting neuron maintenance and growth
✓ Neuroplasticity — the brain’s ability to form and adapt connections
✓ Cognitive function — particularly in adults with mild cognitive impairment, over 12+ weeks
✓ Mood and stress response — via BDNF and hippocampal neurogenesis pathways
✓ Long-term neuroprotection — with early animal evidence suggesting reduced Alzheimer’s-related pathology
What it is not, based on honest reading of the research: a guaranteed overnight cognitive enhancer, a replacement for sleep or exercise, or a cure for any neurological condition.
Take it daily. Take it properly extracted. Give it three months. That’s the honest protocol.
A NOTE FROM MUJO
This is exactly why we use dual-extracted lion’s mane in Mujo's mushroom-based coffee alternative, sourced from certified organic farms in China, where lion’s mane has been cultivated and studied for centuries. Our extraction process captures both the water-soluble beta-glucans and the alcohol-soluble hericenones from the fruiting body, so you’re getting the full compound profile, not just part of it. No mycelium on grain. No starchy filler. Fully transparent sourcing.
Because if you’re going to take something for your brain every day, it should actually be worth taking.
SOURCES
※ Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, “Lion’s Mane — Cognitive Vitality Report” — alzdiscovery.org, 2025
※ PMC, “Neurotrophic and Neuroprotective Effects of Hericium erinaceus” — PMC10650066, 2023
※ PMC, “Lion’s Mane: A Neuroprotective Fungus with Antioxidant, Anti-Inflammatory, and Antimicrobial Potential” — PMC12030463, 2025
※ Mori K. et al., “Improving Effects of Yamabushitake on Mild Cognitive Impairment” — Phytotherapy Research, 2009
※ Saitsu Y. et al., “Improvement of Cognitive Functions by Oral Intake of Hericium erinaceus” — PubMed, 2019
※ Docherty S. et al., “Acute and Chronic Effects of Lion’s Mane on Cognitive Function, Stress and Mood” — PMC10675414, 2023
※ Surendran G. et al., “Acute Effects of a Standardised Extract of Hericium erinaceus on Cognition and Mood” — Frontiers in Nutrition, 2025
※ Kawagishi H. et al., “Erinacines A, B and C: Strong Stimulators of NGF Synthesis from the Mycelia of Hericium erinaceum” — Tetrahedron Letters, 1994
※ Journal of Fungi, “Immunomodulatory and Anti-Inflammatory Effects of Polysaccharides from Fruiting Bodies and Cultivated Mycelium” — 2020
※ Neuroscience & Biobehavioural Reviews, “Effects of Mushrooms on Mood and Neurocognitive Health Across the Lifespan” — 2024