Perhaps the best known in the West is the species E. senticosus used as herbal medicine,[3] and commonly known by such English names as Eleuthero or Siberian ginseng.[3] In Traditional Chinese medicine, this is administered to increase energy, thus traditionally recognized to have attributes akin to true ginseng (Panax).[4][5] This is also reflected in its formerly used genus name Acanthopanax[6] meaning "thorny ginseng". The word "Eleutherococcus," from Greek, means "free-berried."
The European Medicines Agency has concluded that there is insufficient evidence to demonstrate the efficacy of Eleutherococcus for any clinical condition.[7]
Naming
The Chinese materia medica in question [3](Chinese: 五加皮; pinyin: wǔjiāpí; Wade–Giles: wuchiapi) may designate a number of species.[8] But the plant now given the common name wujia in China is specifically E. gracilistylus, and according to one source, the genuine crude drug must come from this species, and C. spinosum is only a substitute.[3]
The Japanese nameukogi (ウコギ, 五加(木)) borrows directly from the Chinese name, and refers somewhat broadly to several plants in the genus.[9] A 10th century herbology text, Honzō wamyō (本草和名), introduced the Chinese wujia as an herb to be pronounced mu-ko-gi (牟古岐), refers specifically to E. sieboldianus (Japanese name: hime-ukogi).[10] (See #Species list below).
The taxonomical nomenclature in the botanical science also has had a sinuous history, so that Acanthopanax had been used as the proper genus name in China till recent years, while the West adopted Eleutherococcus as the official name.[3]
Several species are also grown as ornamental garden shrubs. In Japan, they have been planted as hedges.[9] Particularly in Yamagata Prefecture, a daimyō named Uesugi Yōzan[11] encouraged the planting of the ukogi as fencing around the homes of samurai retainers (E. sieboldianus was planted in the region[11]), and the bitter young buds, leaves and stems have traditionally been picked and eaten as vegetable in the area. However, since the plant is deciduous, it requires sweeping in the fall (high maintenance), and the bare hedges fail to protect the homeowner's privacy.
Fossil record
The four earliest fossil species of Eleutherococcus are from the Maastrichtian (about 70 Ma) floras of Eisleben and Walbeck, Germany, the synonymAcanthopanax is used for these species †A. friedrichii, †A. gigantocarpus, †A. mansfeldensis and †A. obliquocostatus.[12]
Eleutherococcus divaricatus, Ja:keyama-ukogi (ケヤマウコギ), aka oni-ukogi. Found in central and southern Japan, Korean peninsula, and Chinese mainland, with many flowers arranged in conical inflorescence[13]
Eleutherococcus spinosus (L. f.) S.Y. Hu, Ja:yama-ukogi (ヤマウコギ), growing widely in Honshu and Shikoku, with white flowers in globular inflorescence[20]
^The Timetree of Life edited by S. Blair Hedges and Sudhir Kumar, OUP Oxford, 23. apr. 2009 - 576 pages,
ISBN0191560154, 9780191560156
^京都府レッドデータブック(Kyoto Prefecture Red Data Book) (2009). ケヤマウコギ(オニウコギ) (in Japanese). Retrieved August 23, 2009.
^愛媛県レッドデータブック(Ehime Prefecture Red Data Book) (2009). 高等植物 - ウラジロウコギ (in Japanese). Archived from the original on April 6, 2023. Retrieved August 23, 2009.
^鎌倉発 旬の花. オカウコギ (in Japanese). Retrieved August 23, 2009.
^神戸・六甲山系の森林. ウラゲウコギ (in Japanese). Archived from the original on November 29, 2007. Retrieved August 23, 2009.
^NAGY 植物図鑑. エゾウコギ (in Japanese). Archived from the original on July 26, 2009. Retrieved August 23, 2009.