This 'Miracle Food' Protects
You Against Heart Disease,
Cancer and Infections
Copyright © 1995 by Jack
Challem, The Nutrition
Reporter™
All rights reserved.
If garlic had been created
in the laboratory instead of
by nature, it would probably
be a high-priced
prescription drug.
That's just how good it
really is.
Medical studies have shown
that garlic - the aromatic
seasoning people either love
or hate - can lower
cholesterol, prevent
dangerous blood clots,
reduce blood pressure,
prevent cancer, and protect
against bacterial and fungal
infections.
Just what makes garlic so
good? Known scientifically
as Allium sativum, garlic
contains more than 100
biologically useful
chemicals, including
substances with such strange
names as alliin, alliinase,
allicin, S-allylcysteine,
diallyl sulfide, allyl
methyl trisulfide.
In fact, garlic has been
used medicinally for at
least 3,000 years, but until
relatively recently its
benefits were considered
little more than folklore.
According to a report in the
Journal of the American
Medical Association (Nov.
28, 1990;264:2614), the
therapeutic roles of garlic
have been described in more
than 1,000 scientific
studies.
Garlic Benefits the
Cardiovascular System
Adesh K. Jain, M.D., of the
Clinical Research Center and
Tulane University School of
Medicine, New Orleans,
reported last year that
garlic can lower blood
levels of "total"
cholesterol and,
particularly, of the
dangerous low-density
lipoprotein (LDL) form. Jain
gave 20 men and women 900
milligrams of garlic powder
tablets daily and compared
them to 22 people getting
just a placebo.
By the end of the 12-week
study, total blood
cholesterol levels dropped
by an average of 6 percent
among those taking the
garlic tablets, compared
with only a 1 percent drop
among those taking a
placebo. The garlic takers
also benefited from an 11
percent decrease in the LDL
form of cholesterol,
compared with a 3 percent
reduction in the placebo
group.
"Garlic powder, given in the
form of tablets in our
study, was well tolerated
and only one subject
reported increased belching
and a garlic odor,"
explained Jain in the
American Journal of Medicine
(June 1994;94:632-5).
Garlic is also an
anticoagulant - a natural
blood thinner. H. Kieswetter,
M.D., of the University of
Saarlandes, Hamburg,
Germany, recently found that
garlic could help patients
suffering from peripheral
arterial occlusive disease,
characterized by blood clots
in the legs.
Typically, patients with the
condition are asked to walk,
because increased blood flow
reduces the number of clots.
However, they are easily
discouraged because
peripheral arterial
occlusive disease causes
extreme pain after walking
only a short distance.
Kieswetter gave 32 patients
800 milligrams of garlic
powder tablets daily for 12
weeks, while another 32
patients received a placebo.
He then measured their
"pain-free walking
distance." For the first
several weeks, both groups
of patients progressed about
as they would in a typical
walking program. As time
went on however, patients
taking garlic were able to
walk about one-third farther
without pain, according to
Kieswetter's report in
Clinical Investigator (May
1993;71:383-6). The
researcher also noted that
garlic's benefits, which
included decreased blood
pressure, could be detected
after patients took a single
garlic powder capsule.
Why does garlic lower blood
pressure? Blood pressure
increases in response to the
body's production of
angiotensen I-converting
enzyme (ACE). Some
prescription blood pressure
drugs work as "ACE
inhibitors," blocking
formation of the chemical.
Garlic contains gamma-glutamylcysteine,
a natural ACE inhibitor,
according to an article in
Planta Medica (Sendl, A.
Feb. 1992;58:1-7).
Garlic Protects Against
Cancer
Garlic also protects against
cancer. Benjamin Lau, M.D.,
Ph.D., noted in Molecular
Biotherapy (June
1991;3:103-7), that garlic
"is one of the most ancient
of plants reputed to have an
anticancer effect. As
recorded around 1550 B.C.,
in the Ebers Papyrus, garlic
was used externally for the
treatment of tumors by
ancient Egyptians and
internally by Hippocrates
and Indian physicians."
Lau, a researcher at the
Loma Linda University School
of Medicine, has identified
three ways garlic protects
against cancer: by directly
inhibiting tumor cell
metabolism, by preventing
the initiation and
reproduction of cancer
cells, and by boosting a
person's immune system to
more efficiently fight
cancer cells.
John Milner, Ph.D., of
Pennsylvania State
University, University Park,
recently studied how aged
garlic powder might protect
against nitrosamine-induced
cancers in laboratory mice.
Nitrosamines are formed when
processed meats, such as
bacon and bologna are eaten.
Milner found that a diet
consisting of 2 to 4 percent
garlic delayed the growth of
breast cancer and reduced
the number of tumors. "The
total tumor number was
reduced by 56% in rats fed
the 2% garlic-powder diet
throughout the 20 weeks
feeding period compared to
control-fed rats," he
explained in Carcinogenesis
(Oct. 1992;13:1847-51).
Another benefit was that
levels of glutathione-S-transferase
were 42 percent higher among
the animals eating
high-garlic diets.
Glutathione-S-transferase is
an enzyme that helps the
liver detoxify carcinogens
and other dangerous
chemicals.
In a separate study, Milner
found that garlic could
dramatically reduce the
number of "adducts" in
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA).
Adducts are chemicals that
attach nitrosamines to DNA,
setting the stage for
cancerous changes.
Milner exposed a group of
laboratory rats to
nitrosamines, but some of
the animals were also given
large amounts of aged garlic
powder - again, 2 to 4
percent of the diet.
Depending on the amount of
garlic they ate, the rats
had a 40 to 80 percent
reduction in the adducts in
the liver. In addition,
garlic-eating rats benefited
from 55 to 69 percent fewer
mammary gland adducts,
according to Milner's
article in Carcinogenesis
(Feb. 1994;15:349-52).
Several studies have also
shown that garlic reduces
the risk of stomach cancer.
One study, conducted in
China, found that garlic
consumption was inversely
related to the incidence of
stomach cancer, according to
a report in Preventive
Medicine (Han, J., Sept.
1993;22:712-22). Other
experiments, such as the one
described in Cancer Letters
(Nagabhushan, M., Oct. 21,
1992;66:207-16), noted that
diallyl sulfide
significantly reduced
stomach tumors in hamsters.
In still another experiment,
Professor M. M. El-Mofty of
Alexandria University,
Egypt, fed Egyptian toads
either freshly minced
garlic, garlic oil, or corn
oil (placebo) for four
months, then exposed them to
aflatoxin B1 (AFB1), a food
contaminant that can cause
liver cancer.
Only 3 percent of the toads
fed fresh garlic and only 9
percent of the 65 animals
fed garlic oil developed
tumors. In contrast, 19
percent of those fed corn
oil developed liver and
kidney tumors.
"Our results show that
feeding toads minced garlic
or garlic oil resulted in a
marked reduction in the
incidence of tumors induced
by AFB1," El-Mofty wrote in
Nutrition and Cancer,
1994;21:95-100). "The fresh
garlic showed a greater
inhibitory effect...This
suggests that there are
additional highly active
components in fresh garlic."
Fights Microbial and
Fungal Infections
Scientific research has also
confirmed garlic's role as a
natural antibiotic. Back in
1983, Lau noted in Medical
Hypotheses (12:227-37) that
"garlic extract has
broad-spectrum antimicrobial
activity against many genera
of bacteria and
fungi...Because many of the
microorganisms susceptible
to garlic extract are
medically significant,
garlic holds a promising
position as a broad-spectrum
therapeutic agent."
One way garlic works is by
promoting phagocytosis, the
ability of white blood cells
to fight infections. Another
is by stimulating other
immune cells, such as
macrophages and T-cells to
fight bacterial and viral
infections and to scavenge
for cancer cells. One
report, in Deutsche
Zeitschrift für Onkologie
(April 1989;21:52-3),
described how garlic
enhanced the body's "killer
cell" activity against the
AIDS virus.
Lau has also noted that
garlic can combat Candida
infections. In one study, he
injected an aged garlic
extract into mice with
Candida infections. After a
day, the Candida colonies
numbered 400, compared with
3,500 among the mice given
only a salt-water solution.
After two days, the
garlic-treated mice were
free of Candida.
Active Ingredients
In one of the great ironies
of nature, raw garlic has
very little biological
activity. But when you
"damage" garlic cloves - by
slicing, cooking, or chewing
- the enzyme alliinase
immediately converts alliin
into allicin, which gives
garlic its characteristic
odor.
Allicin was once thought to
be garlic's principal active
ingredient. However,
researchers now know that
allicin is rapidly oxidized.
More than 100 biologically
active sulfur-containing
compounds, proteins, and
saponins are created as a
result of this oxidation.
While allicin may still
serve as a general marker of
garlic's potency, research
increasingly points to S-allylcysteine
and other compounds as the
most therapeutically active
ingredients in garlic.
So how should you take
garlic? Most scientific
studies have, for
consistency, used a
standardized garlic extract
in capsule or liquid form.
However, just about any form
offers some benefits. If you
enjoy the taste of garlic,
use it liberally in your
food. If the taste and odor
turn you off, opt for
deodorized garlic capsules.
Either way, garlic is good
for your health.
This article originally
appeared in Let's Live
magazine. The information
provided by Jack Challem and
The Nutrition Reporter™
newsletter is strictly
educational and not intended
as medical advice. For
diagnosis and treatment,
consult your physician.
copyright © 1996 The
Nutrition Reporter™ -
updated 12/04/96
for more information contact
jack@thenutritionreporter.com
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