Thank you for your answers! I am aware that the fact that it is a glucoside only means that it has glucose attached, but for some reason I thought this would make it easy to extract just them and not everything else.
I believe that Paridin is the aglycone of Paristyphnin. Paridin is atleast the one that is thought to be responsible for the effects, and a mulecule with sugar attached would not be able to cross the blodd-brain-barrier, I guess? In other words, if the sugar would hydrolyze apart from the aglycone, this would propably not be bad.
I do not have access to pure or anything close to pure ethanol, methanol or any alcohol for that matter. Do you think a water extraction would work?
After som searching, at
a German site I found another glucoside that is thought to be partly responsible for the effects. I think it is safe to assume that the structure of this molecule is at least related to the structure of Paristyphnin:
Pennogenin
C52H84O19
1012,9 g/mol
Ginkgo attached the following image(s):
Pennogenin.gif
(4kb) downloaded 23 time(s).