Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 I may be in the minority, but I still feel that things like ginger should be considered whole foods and taken with all of their components, rather than treating them like drugs and singling out their " active ingredients " as we understand them right now... Which is always subject to change... There are so many wonderful ways to take ginger too! I like to juice it with my carrots, make a tea out of it, or add it to meals when I am cooking... Then for a firey special treat there is candied ginger... Yum! Other comments? Misty L. Trepke http://www..com Ginger May Help Reduce Arthritis-related Knee Pain http://healthy.net/scr/news.asp?Id=8724 Knee pain from arthritis is one of the most common medical problems in the United States today. Treatment options include pain medications, knee injections, physical therapy and surgery. As we continue to age, there will be an increased demand for good pain relief. However, rising medical costs may ultimately limit access to newer medications, physical therapy and invasive procedures. Inexpensive and safe dietary supplements such as glucosamine, chondroitin and methyl-sulfonyl-methane (MSM) have been shown to reduce the pain associated with osteoarthritis. A common spice - ginger - may soon be added to that list. In a recent study in the journal OsteoArthritis and Cartilage, ginger was shown to be effective in reducing arthritis-related knee pain and increasing function. Ginger comes from the root of the plant Zingiber officinale. It has been used as a spice, condiment and medicine for more than 2,500 years. Today, ginger is available as a spice, raw, pickled, and in capsule form at grocery and health food stores. The active ingredient in ginger is an oil called gingerol. It accounts for the aroma as well as the therapeutic properties. Historically, ginger has been used as a treatment for the nausea associated with motion sickness and following surgery. It also reduces platelet stickiness, but only at very high doses (more than 10 grams a day). Twenty-nine patients with osteoarthritis of the knee were enrolled in a double-blinded, crossover study. Some of the patients took 1 gram of ginger a day. The study authors followed levels of pain, function and swelling of the knee. Only the patients taking ginger had a reduction in pain and knee swelling. They also had a significant increase in knee function. These results go beyond simply reducing pain. Patients whose knees hurt are often limited in their ability to exercise. The sedentary lifestyle associated with knee pain can lead to serious, life- threatening conditions such as heart disease, cancer, obesity, diabetes and high blood pressure. Is ginger better than medications or other dietary supplements? We don't know. Future research could include comparisons to pain medications and dietary supplements like glucosamine. One area of interest would be evaluating specific combinations, such as ginger and glucosamine. I have seen very good relief of knee pain for my arthritis patients when I prescribe combinations of pain medications and glucosamine. Ginger may also be an option. - Patrick B. Massey, M.D., Ph.D., is medical director for alternative and complementary medicine for Alexian Brothers Hospital Network. His Web site is www.alt-med.org. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 Misty, I'm with you, when it comes to whole foods! Whole foods are always better than isolated nutrients. After all, the nutrients all work synergistically together. That's why I'm generally against vitamin pills, with all their bits and pieces of stuff. I love that candied ginger, too! But it does have a lot of sugar on it. Do you know how they make it? Because, ginger is so hard, and the candied ginger is very chewy. What do they do to it? Maybe I don't want to know. Carol ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Would you benefit from a more effective and healthy immune system? <http://www.bluegreensolutions.com> http://www.bluegreensolutions.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Misty L. Trepke [mistytrepke] Wednesday, March 24, 2004 10:38 AM [s-A] [AltMedForum] Ginger May Help Reduce Arthritis Related Knee Pain I may be in the minority, but I still feel that things like ginger should be considered whole foods and taken with all of their components, rather than treating them like drugs and singling out their " active ingredients " as we understand them right now... Which is always subject to change... There are so many wonderful ways to take ginger too! I like to juice it with my carrots, make a tea out of it, or add it to meals when I am cooking... Then for a firey special treat there is candied ginger... Yum! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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