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Wed, 31 Mar 2004 08:15:28 -0500

HSI - Jenny Thompson

Root of Relief

 

Root of Relief

 

Health Sciences Institute e-Alert

 

March 31, 2004

 

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Dear Reader,

 

You may already know that ginger can treat an upset stomach

and calm nausea. But a secret about ginger that is less well

known is that in Ayurvedic and traditional Chinese medicine

this aromatic root has been used as an anti-inflammatory

agent for thousands of years.

 

Now a new study in the journal Osteoarthritis Cartilage

confirms what many HSI members have been aware of for

sometime: Ginger extract may effectively relieve some types

of arthritis pain.

 

-----------------------------

Easy as 1, 2, 3

-----------------------------

 

Researchers at Israel's Tel Aviv University enrolled 29

patients who suffered from osteoarthritis of the knees. The

six men and 23 women (aged 42 to 85 years) were divided into

two groups. One group received a 250 mg dose of ginger

extract four times each day for 12 weeks, while the other

group received a placebo.

 

At the end of this first phase of the study, those subjects

who had been receiving ginger extract began receiving

placebo, and the former placebo group began receiving the

extract. After another 12 weeks, all of the subjects began

using the ginger extract for a final phase of 24 weeks.

 

At the outset of the study, and once each month throughout

the study phases, researchers used a visual analog scale

(VAS) to measure patients' pain and their response to

treatment. Patients rated their pain on a line; one end of

the line represented feeling in the best condition, while

the other end of the line represented the worst possible

pain. Researchers also assessed knee swelling and mobility.

 

Results for the three phases showed:

 

* Knee pain was reduced and mobility increased significantly

in the group that first used placebo and then switched to

ginger extract.

* Placebo group subjects also reported less pain and greater mobility after

the first phase, but by the end of the second phase there was a significant

difference between overall data collected while subjects were using placebo

compared with when they were using ginger extract.

* Subjects who used ginger extract during the second phase

continued to improve mobility during the third phase as pain

decreased.

* Subjects using placebo during the second phase

experienced significant improvements throughout the third

phase.

 

Noting that, overall, the " ginger extract group showed a

significant superiority over the placebo group, " researchers

concluded that 24 weeks of treatment with ginger extract may

be optimal for the treatment of osteoarthritis of the knees.

 

-----------------------------

Relief in Miami

-----------------------------

 

The Tel Aviv results are impressive, but as I mentioned

above, the effectiveness of ginger extract on osteoarthritis

is not new to HSI members.

 

In the e-Alert " Another Option for Treating Arthritis Pain

Without Side Effects " (12/28/01), I told you about a

University of Miami study that enrolled 247 patients with

mild to severe osteoarthritis of the knee. Subjects in this

study were randomly assigned to take either a 255 mg ginger

extract or a placebo each day for six weeks. As in the Tel

Aviv study, pain was measured with VAS, as well as the Western

Ontario and McMaster Universities osteoarthritis (WOMAC) index;

a questionnaire that assesses stiffness, function and total

impact of arthritis pain.

 

After six weeks of treatment, both groups showed

improvement. But in every assessment category, the ginger

extract group showed greater results. Sixty-three percent of

patients in the ginger group improved their VAS score by 15

or more (on a scale of 100), while half of the control group

reported such gains. That may seem like a substantial

placebo effect, but subjects in the ginger group showed

nearly twice as much improvement in pain after walking 50

feet, and also showed significant gains in the WOMAC index.

 

The greatest impact was seen in stiffness, where ginger

produced nearly a 20-point improvement over baseline

measures.

 

-----------------------------

Ginger access

-----------------------------

 

Ginger is generally regarded as safe, but it can cause some

minor side effects. In the Miami study, patients in the

ginger group reported mostly mild gastrointestinal effects

like belching, stomach upset, heartburn, and a bad taste in

the mouth.

 

The ginger therapy used in this study was a patented formula

called EV.EXT 77, which is extracted from dried ginger root

and the root of dried galanga (a plant similar to ginger,

which is also believed to have anti-inflammatory

properties). Laboratory tests have shown that one capsule of

EV.EXT 77 contains close to one mg of salicylate, the same

anti-inflammatory agent found in aspirin. Research has also

shown that the extract can inhibit both cyclooxgenase (COX)

and lipooxygenase, enzymes that trigger inflammation.

 

There are two formulations I've found that include EV.EXT

77. Zinaxin delivers the same dose of ginger extract used in

the Miami study. And Zincosamine combines 170 mg of the

ginger extract with 50 mg of methyl-sulfonyl-methane (MSM)

and 350 mg of glucosamine. Both of these products can be

found in health food stores and through various Internet

sites.

 

If you suffer with arthritis pain and stiffness and haven't

found much relief with painkillers like ibuprofen and

acetaminophen, consider giving ginger extract a try.

 

**************************************************************

To start receiving your own copy of the HSI e-Alert, visit:

http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/freecopy.html

Or forward this e-mail to a friend so they can sign-up to

receive their own copy of the HSI e-Alert.

 

**************************************************************

 

... and another thing

 

Weighing the cost/benefit ratio of a drug can be dicey. If a

drug saves lives but also happens to be very expensive, you

have to allow that perhaps the cost is worth it.

 

When I was preparing the e-Alert " Ball of Confusion "

(3/23/04), I came across a very revealing insight into the

cost/benefit ratio of cholesterol-lowering statin drugs.

 

Writing in Red Flags Daily, Malcolm Kendrick, M.D., notes

that so far no studies have shown that statin use provides

very much protection at all against cardiac-related death.

For instance, the Heart Protection Study (HPS) was the

largest clinical study ever conducted to test statins on

subjects at high risk of coronary events. More than 20,000

people were followed for five years. Results showed that

statin use reduced the absolute risk of death by 0.5

percent.

 

But here's the kicker: Studies have shown that that's about

the same risk reduction as you would get with daily low-dose

aspirin therapy. And of course there are natural

alternatives to aspirin - such as bromelain - that have been

shown to reduce platelet aggregation safely and

effectively.

 

According to Reuters Health, a typical starting dose of

Lipitor runs about $900 per year. So in order to save a

single life, patients (and their insurance companies)

collectively shell out about $1,800,000 per year. And now

researchers have started recommending even more expensive

megadoses of statins. If doctors follow this recommendation,

the enormous amount of prescription dollars spent on

statins - already a burden for many older people - will

spike even higher.

 

Considering that aspirin will apparently save just as many

lives, at a fraction of the cost and with no damage to the

liver, the cost/benefit ratio of statin drugs continues to

not add up.

 

To Your Good Health,

 

Jenny Thompson

Health Sciences Institute

 

**************************************************************

 

Sources:

" The Effects of Zintona EC (a Ginger Extract) on Symptomatic

Gonarthritis " Osteoarthritis Cartilage, Vol. 11, No. 11,

Novermber 2003, ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

" Alternative Approach: Ginger May Help Reduce Arthritis-

Related Knee Pain " Patrick B. Massey, M.D., Chicago Daily

Herald, 3/15/04, healthy.net

" Effects of a Ginger Extract on Knee Pain in Patients with

Osteoarthritis " Arthritis & Rheumatism, Vol. 44, No. 11,

November 2001, ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

" Why the Cholesterol-Heart Disease Theory is Wrong " Malcolm

Kendrick MbChB, MRCGP, Red Flags Daily, 12/19/02,

redflagsdaily.com

 

Copyright ©1997-2004 by www.hsibaltimore.com, L.L.C.

The e-Alert may not be posted on commercial sites without

written permission.

 

**************************************************************

Before you hit reply to send us a question or request,

please visit here

http://www.hsibaltimore.com/ealert/questions.html

 

**************************************************************

If you'd like to participate in the HSI Forum, search past

e-Alerts and products or you're an HSI member and would like

to search past articles, visit http://www.hsibaltimore.com

 

**************************************************************

 

 

 

 

 

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