XV. 20. Sage

XV. 20. Sage
XV.20.

Sage

Salvia salvat — thujone, cognitive effects, and the Mediterranean herb to avoid in pregnancy.

Latin: Salvia officinalis (common), Salvia lavandulifolia (Spanish)FODMAP: 🟢 lowEvidence: ★ ★Microbiota: Polyphenol substrate + neuroprotective

In 1 minute

What does it provide? Thujone (α- and β-, 35–60% of essential oil), 1,8-cineole, camphor, and rosmarinic acid — cognitive performance support, antimicrobial, moderate menopausal hot-flush relief, and antioxidant activity.

How much? In the kitchen 1–3 g fresh or dried leaf daily; clinical (cognitive, menopause) 150–600 mg standardized S. lavandulifolia extract / day.

When to avoid? Pregnancy (thujone toxicity, uterine-stimulant), breastfeeding (suppresses milk production), epilepsy (thujone proconvulsant), alongside anticoagulants, concentrated essential oil on infants.

📜 Történeti áttekintés

Sage (Salvia officinalis) takes its name from the Latin "salvare" ("to save") — classical Mediterranean medicine considered it one of the most effective herbs. Hippocrates and Pliny recommended it for many complaints: digestion, gynecological problems, respiratory issues, and local wound healing. The classic Latin saying "Salvia salvatrix" ("savior sage") goes: "cur moriatur homo cui salvia crescit in horto?" ("why should a man die when sage grows in his garden?").

In medieval European monastery gardens (Hildegard von Bingen), sage was among the most frequently recommended herbs — it often appears in Salerno school recipes. The "Anti-Plague Four Thieves Vinegar" (Vinaigre des Quatre Voleurs, 14th–17th c.) also contained sage. The classic English "Sage and Onion Stuffing" (even Lord Byron sang of it) is the sage-and-onion bread stuffing made for Christmas turkey.

Modern phytochemistry identified thujone in the 1900s as the main bioactive — interestingly the same compound is in absinthe (wormwood distillate), which also caused 19th-century absinthe-toxicity scares. Clinical interest exploded with Akhondzadeh's 2003 Iranian RCT: 60 drops/day sage tincture for 4 months in mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's patients significantly improved cognitive test results. The Bommer 2011 RCT significantly reduced menopausal hot flushes with sage extract. **(Akhondzadeh 2003, Bommer 2011)

🔬 Scientific Background

Sage essential oil is 35–60% thujone-dominant (α- and β-thujone ratio), complemented by 1,8-cineole, camphor, borneol, and viridiflorol. Thujone is a GABA(A)-receptor antagonist — this explains cognitive stimulation at low doses and convulsive potential at high doses. Rosmarinic acid and carnosic acid (in small amounts) are strong antioxidants.

Clinical evidence in cognitive areas: Akhondzadeh 2003 (J Clin Pharm Ther) showed a 4-month sage tincture course significantly improved cognition and reduced agitation in Alzheimer's patients. The Tildesley 2003 RCT showed 50 μl/day sage essential oil improved short-term memory in healthy adults.

Menopausal hot flushes: the Bommer 2011 RCT, 280 mg/day sage tablets over 8 weeks reduced hot-flush frequency by 64%. The effect size is moderate.

Antimicrobial spectrum (in vitro): moderate — driven by the thujone and camphor composition. The classic "sage gargle" for sore throat is traditional.

Anti-secretolytic / milk-production-suppressing effect: the classic "lactation-stopping" sage tradition is proven; for this reason it is avoided during breastfeeding.

At the microbiome level, small pilots have shown moderate antimicrobial selectivity of sage polyphenols.

Thujone toxicity: EU regulation limits thujone in foods to a max 0.5–25 mg/kg (varies by beverage type); EMA monograph limits long-term use as a supplement (max 2 weeks continuously). High doses can trigger epilepsy, liver stress, and at overdose convulsions.

✅ Mivel kombináld?
  • + Turkey, game, pork (classic Mediterranean-English): flavor synergy.
  • + Onion, butter (sage and onion stuffing): classic Christmas pattern.
  • + Beans, legumes (Tuscany): classic Italian "fagioli alla salvia."
  • + Olive, lemon (Mediterranean matrix): flavor harmony.
  • + Honey (gargle for sore throat): classic.
  • + Hot drink (gargle): classic "sage tea for sore throat."
🚫 Mivel NE fogyaszd együtt?
  • Anticoagulants + high-dose extract: theoretical additive bleeding risk.
  • Diabetes medications + high-dose sage: moderate hypoglycemia synergy.
  • Anticonvulsant medications + high-dose essential oil: theoretical antagonistic effect (thujone).
  • During breastfeeding: milk production suppressed.
  • Long boiling (45+ min high heat): essential oil evaporates.
  • Concentrated essential oil on infants: strictly to be avoided.
⚠️ Mikor kerüld?
  • Pregnancy: uterotonic + thujone toxicity — to be avoided at high doses.
  • Breastfeeding: lactation-suppressing — to be avoided if not weaning.
  • Epilepsy, uncontrolled seizure disorder: thujone proconvulsant.
  • Concentrated essential oil on infants and small children: to be avoided.
  • Anticoagulant therapy: clinical supplement only under medical supervision.
  • Severe hypoglycemia tendency: monitor.
  • Lamiaceae allergy: cross-reaction.
  • Severe liver disease: high-dose supplement with caution (thujone).
❌ Tévhitek és cáfolatuk
"Sage is completely safe."It is not. Because of thujone content, it must be strictly avoided at high doses and in pregnancy. EU food regulations limit thujone ratios.
"Sage and absinthe are the same."Partial — both contain thujone, but classic absinthe toxicity comes mainly from wormwood (Artemisia absinthium), not sage.
"Sage prevents Alzheimer's."The Akhondzadeh 2003 RCT showed cognitive improvement in mild-to-moderate Alzheimer's patients, but it does NOT cure the disease, and prevention evidence is limited.
"Sage tea promotes weight loss."Modest thermogenic effect exists, human weight-loss RCT evidence is limited.
"Sage is also good for breastfeeding mothers."STRICTLY no — it suppresses lactation. The classic traditional use is precisely for weaning.
"Pineapple sage (Salvia elegans) is the same as common sage."It is NOT. Different essential oil profile, weak therapeutic effect, mainly a culinary garnish plant.
🍳 Konyhai protokoll
Daily serving

1–3 g fresh or dried leaf (≈ 4–8 fresh leaves) per day; tea 1–2 g leaf/200 ml water, 10 min.

Preparation pattern
  1. Fresh leaf: 30 sec in hot butter (pasta with sage burnt butter).
  2. Dried: chopped into stuffing mix.
  3. Tea: 1–2 g dried leaf + 200 ml hot water, 10 min standing.
  4. Gargle: strong tea + honey + vinegar — for sore throat.
Classic patterns

Saltimbocca alla romana: pork/veal + prosciutto + sage + butter.

Sage and onion stuffing: breadcrumbs + sage + onion + butter — Christmas turkey.

Fagioli alla salvia: Tuscan white beans + olive oil + sage + garlic.

Gargle: sage tea + honey + 1 drop vinegar — for sore throat, max 1 week short-term.

Storage and what not to do

Storage: fresh sprig 1–2 weeks refrigerated; dried 1 year airtight in a dark place.

What not to do: STRICTLY do not consume in pregnancy at high doses; don't combine clinical-dose supplements during breastfeeding; don't apply concentrated essential oil to infants.

References

[1] Akhondzadeh S et al. Salvia officinalis extract in the treatment of patients with mild to moderate Alzheimer's disease: a double blind, randomized and placebo-controlled trial. J Clin Pharm Ther 2003;28(1):53–59.

[2] Bommer S et al. First time proof of sage's tolerability and efficacy in menopausal women with hot flushes. Adv Ther 2011;28(6):490–500.

[3] Tildesley NTJ et al. Salvia lavandulaefolia (Spanish sage) enhances memory in healthy young volunteers. Pharmacol Biochem Behav 2003;75(3):669–674.

[4] EMA/HMPC. European Union herbal monograph on Salvia officinalis L., folium. 2016.

[5] Lopresti AL. Salvia (sage): a review of its potential cognitive-enhancing and protective effects. Drugs R D 2017;17(1):53–64.

[6] EFSA. Thujone in flavourings and other food ingredients with flavouring properties. EFSA Journal 2008.

[7] Walch SG et al. Determination of the thujone content of Salvia officinalis. Eur Food Res Technol 2011.