Individual and Family Discount Dental Plans, Affordable
Dental Care Starting at $79.95 a Year!
1-888-632-5353 
M-F 8 AM - 9 PM EST 

Find Plans in Your Area
 
ZIP code
 

Find Dentists in Your Area
 
ZIP code
 
Dentist last name
(optional)
 




you are here: DentalPlans.com > Dental Health Articles > Medicine > Garlic May Ward Off Heart Woes

Garlic May Ward Off Heart Woes
It spurs a chemical linked to healthy blood vessels, study finds
By Ed Edelson
HealthDay Reporter
Updated: 10/16/2007 9:05:47 AM
 

TUESDAY, Oct. 16 (HealthDay News) -- Garlic lovers, take heart: The pungent root may promote healthier responses in blood vessels.

So say researchers who found that compounds in garlic cause tissues or blood vessels to release a chemical called hydrogen sulfide. In large quantities, this compound can be deadly, but it's also an essential molecule within the body, causing blood vessels to relax and reducing dangerous inflammation.

But how you take your garlic matters, the research showed. "If you prepare it in certain ways, you can lose the compounds that cause it to release hydrogen sulfide, so that helps explain why there has been such great variability in studies," noted senior researcher David Kraus, an associate professor of environmental health sciences at the University of Alabama, Birmingham.

His team published its findings in this week's online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

In the array of garlic health studies, more than half have shown some positive effect, but that effect has tended to be small, and some trials have even shown negative health effects, Kraus noted. Some of his team's experiments used juice extracted from supermarket garlic. Human red blood cells exposed to tiny amounts of the juice began emitting hydrogen sulfide. Most hydrogen sulfide production took place at the membrane of the red blood cells, although a fraction was made within the cells.

When working with garlic, Kraus first crushes the clove. He then waits for the reaction that produces the compounds that trigger hydrogen sulfide release. "We usually let the garlic crush for 15 minutes," he said.

Other studies of garlic's health effects have failed, Kraus said, because they look for activity that is impossible -- a reduction in blood cholesterol levels, for example. One such trial was done by Christopher D. Gardner, a nutrition scientist and assistant professor at Stanford University's Prevention Research Center in California.

"We used real raw garlic and two commercial supplements in doses higher than people are advised to take," Gardner noted. "We assumed that at least one of the three would work. These were people whose LDL ['bad'] cholesterol was elevated. We worked with 192 people for six months, and they [LDL cholesterol levels] didn't budge, not even a bit, month after month."

According to Gardner, Kraus' work now offers a reason for that failure, because hydrogen sulfide has no effect on cholesterol.

Another expert urged caution in interpreting the Birmingham team's results.

Eric Block, professor of chemistry at the State University of New York, Albany, has also done extensive work on garlic. He called the paper "provocative" but expressed some concerns.

For example, he said, "the benefits of garlic on cardiovascular disease remain controversial, because they have not been established by the gold standard method of placebo-controlled, double-blind clinical studies," he said.

It's also uncertain that garlic's purported beneficial effects are due to the mechanism described in the new report, Block added. Clinical trials are needed to help prove that point, he said.

According to Block, Kraus' team, "should be more conservative in over-extending some of their conclusions in the absence of additional work." However, "their work does represent a significant advance in the science of this amazing, ancient, ever-popular herb," he said.

Kraus stressed that his study only looked at the effect of fresh garlic, not garlic supplements. "What we are proposing is that you eat a garlic-rich diet," he said. "We haven't really tried to look at supplements yet."

"Garlic-rich" has different meanings, depending on the part of the world being studied, Kraus added. "In the Middle East, that would be 5 to 10 cloves of garlic a day," he said. "If you go to the Far East, it would be even higher."

More information

There's more on garlic and health at the U.S. National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.

SOURCES: David Kraus, Ph.D., associate professor, environmental health sciences, University of Alabama, Birmingham; Christopher D. Gardner, Ph.D., assistant professor, Stanford Prevention Research Center, Palo Alto, Calif.; Eric Block, Ph.D., professor, chemistry, State University of New York, Albany; Oct. 15-19, 2007, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Copyright © 2007 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.

Customer Care - 1-888-632-5353 Toll Free

  
Additional Articles
St. John's Wort Doesn't Work for ADHD
Sea Buckthorn Leaves May Hold Benefit...
Music Hath Charms to Calm Hypertension
Grapefruit Compound Inhibits Hepatitis...
An Alternative to Medicinal Marijuana
DNA Find in Oregon Is Oldest Yet in...
Music as Medicine
Aromatherapy Falls Short, Study Finds
Acupuncture May Aid In Vitro...
Saline Nasal Wash Helps Kids Fight Flu...
Almost Half of Doctors Have Prescribed...
Most Psychiatrists Open to Discussing...
Honey Beats Meds at Soothing Kids'...
Garlic May Ward Off Heart Woes
Meditation a Quick Fix for Stress
Almost a Third of U.S. Kids Use...
Even Sham Acupuncture Eases Low Back...
Health Tip: When Acupuncture May Help
Leave That Holiday 'To Do' List in a...
Health Tip: Research Alternative...
No Clear Evidence Meditation Can Boost...
Meditation Won't Boost Health: Study
Yoga May Help Treat Depression, Anxiety...
Health Tip: Stressed Out?
Low-Dose CoQ10 Supplements Won't Ease...
Transcendental Meditation Lessens Pain...
Homeopathy: Natural Approach or All a...
Health Tip: Considering a Chiropractor?
'Magic Mushroom' Drug Study Probes...
Health Tip: Considering Acupuncture?
What You Should Know About and Medicine...
Whistle While You Recuperate
Health Tip: Be Careful About Herbal...
Narcolepsy Drug Helps Brain Tumor...
Black Cohosh Supplements Don't Always...
Herbals Plus Conventional Meds Can Be...
Mind-Body Treatments Ease Irritable...
Combining Mainstream, Alternative Back...
St. John's Wort Could Ease Bladder Woes
Popular Supplement Doesn't Reduce High...

Add to Google MSN Medicine
 Add Medicine
 To My Yahoo  Subscribe with Bloglines   Subscribe in NewsGator Online Medicine
 News Feed

The materials and articles published on DentalPlans.com are for informational purposes only. Although DentalPlans.com strives to be accurate and complete, the information is provided without liability for errors. DentalPlans.com does not warrant the accuracy or completeness of the information, text graphics, links, or other items contained on DentalPlans.com.

DentalPlans.com expressly disclaims liability for errors or omissions in these materials and DentalPlans.com makes no commitment to update the information on DentalPlans.com.

DentalPlans.com expressly disclaims all liability for the use or interpretation by others of information on DentalPlans.com. Decisions based on information contained on DentalPlans.com are the sole responsibility of the visitors, and visitors agree to hold DentalPlans.com and its Affiliates harmless against any claims for damages arising from decisions visitors make on such information.

Nothing on DentalPlans.com constitutes medical advice or other forms of advice. DentalPlans.com assumes no responsibility for material created or published by third parties linked to DentalPlans.com with or without DentalPlans.coms knowledge.

Let's Get Connected
Like Us on Facebook Follow Us on Twitter DentalPlans.com Blog, Dental Insurance Alternatives View Our YouTube Channel
Email Me Savings & Updates
Submit
Privacy Policy
The DENTALPLANS.COM website is administered by DENTALPLANS.COM, INC., a licensed Florida Discount Medical Plan Organization, 8100 S.W. 10th Street Suite #2000, Plantation, FL 33324. Plans and Programs offered by DentalPlans.com are not health insurance policies. Plans and Programs offered by DentalPlans.com provide discounts at certain health care providers for medical services. Plans and Programs offered by DentalPlans.com do not make payments directly to the providers of medical services. The Plan or Program member is obligated to pay for all health care services but will receive a discount from those health care providers who have contracted with the Plan, Program or discount plan organization.
Special promotions including but not limited to additional months free and Membership Rewards® points from American Express are not available to California residents.

© 1999-2011 DentalPlans.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Patents Pending. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Florida is an Independent Licensee of the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association.
BBB Rating A+    McAfee SECURE sites help keep you safe from identity theft, credit card fraud, spyware, spam, viruses and online scams