What adaptogens actually are — and what they're not
The term "adaptogen" was coined by Soviet pharmacologist Nikolai Lazarev in the 1940s to describe substances that help the body resist physical and psychological stressors without producing the side-effect profile of stimulants or sedatives. The definition has been operationalized since: adaptogens modulate the HPA (stress) axis and may normalize cortisol response without pushing it consistently in one direction.
What they are not: hormones, hormone replacements, or treatments for clinical conditions. The wellness industry routinely markets adaptogens as fixes for estrogen imbalance, thyroid dysfunction, and adrenal fatigue — a diagnosis that doesn't exist in endocrinology. The real value of adaptogens, where evidence exists, is primarily for stress resilience and fatigue management in otherwise healthy people under chronic load.
The evidence by adaptogen
Rhodiola rosea: The best-evidenced adaptogen after ashwagandha. Mechanism involves mild monoamine oxidase inhibition and serotonin/dopamine modulation. Most consistently shown to help with fatigue, mental burnout, and stress-related exhaustion — not anxiety disorders. One important note: it's mildly activating, which makes it useful for low-energy fatigue but potentially counterproductive for people with anxiety or bipolar disorder.
Maca: A Peruvian root vegetable that's been used for centuries for energy and reproductive health. The important finding from the 2016 Maturitas meta-analysis is that maca is not hormonally active — it doesn't measurably change estrogen, progesterone, or FSH levels. Yet it showed modest improvement in vasomotor symptoms in three of four RCTs. The mechanism is genuinely unknown, which is unusual and worth noting. For perimenopausal women who can't use hormone therapy and find hot flash management limited, maca is a reasonable low-risk option to discuss with a clinician.
Shatavari, Holy Basil, Schisandra — where the evidence is: Shatavari (Asparagus racemosus) has two small RCTs showing PMS and VMS symptom improvement; evidence quality is insufficient for confident recommendations. Holy basil (tulsi) showed reduced cortisol and stress scores vs. placebo in a 12-week RCT (Journal of Ayurveda 2012) — the study is small but methodologically reasonable. Schisandra has immune-modulation evidence and some perimenopause symptom data, but lacks Western RCT replication. These are plausible, generally safe, and under-researched — honest answers in that order.
Who adaptogens are actually for
Adaptogens are most likely to be useful for women who are: fatigued but not clinically ill, under chronic stress without a diagnosable anxiety disorder, and looking for supplemental support to lifestyle interventions they're already doing. They're not useful as a replacement for addressing the root causes of burnout, hormonal dysfunction, or sleep deprivation.
- For fatigue and burnout — consider Rhodiola: Research used standardized extracts (typically 2-3% rosavins, 0.8-1% salidroside); study durations ranged from 4-12 weeks. Discuss appropriate use with your doctor, particularly if you have anxiety, bipolar disorder, or take antidepressants.
- For perimenopausal vasomotor symptoms where HRT isn't an option — maca may help: It has a good safety profile, no estrogenic effects (important for those who can't take estrogen), and showed modest VMS benefit in most trials. It won't work for everyone; the response is inconsistent. But the risk of trying it is low.
- Look for standardized extracts: The supplement industry is poorly regulated. Third-party tested brands (NSF Certified for Sport, USP Verified, or Informed Sport) are more likely to contain what the label says in the amounts stated.
- Give it 8-12 weeks: Adaptogen benefits tend to emerge gradually. Studies showing meaningful effects typically ran 8-12 weeks. If you see no benefit at 12 weeks, it's reasonable to conclude this particular adaptogen isn't working for you specifically.
Adaptogens can interact with medications — Rhodiola has mild MAO inhibitory activity, which is relevant if you take antidepressants. Maca contains glucosinolates that may affect thyroid function in high doses (relevant for thyroid conditions). Shatavari contains phytoestrogen-like compounds and warrants caution in estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer history. If you have any hormone-sensitive conditions or take daily medication, discuss adaptogen use with your doctor before starting.
- Hung SK et al. (2011). The effectiveness and efficacy of Rhodiola rosea L.: a systematic review of randomized clinical trials. Phytomedicine, 18(4):235-244. doi:10.1016/j.phymed.2010.08.014
- Meissner HO et al. (2016). Hormone-balancing effect of pre-gelatinized organic maca (Lepidium peruvianum chacon): clinical responses of early-postmenopausal women to maca in double blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial. International Journal of Biomedical Science. (and Maturitas meta-analysis 2016)
- Bhowmik D et al. (2012). Ocimum sanctum: an overview. Journal of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Research, 4(2):539-557.
- Grand View Research (2025). Adaptogens market size, share, and trends analysis. grandviewresearch.com
- Panossian A, Wikman G (2010). Effects of adaptogens on the central nervous system and the molecular mechanisms associated with their stress-protective activity. Pharmaceuticals, 3(1):188-224.