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GARLIC-THE BOUNTIFUL BULB

JoAnn Guest

Oct 07, 2004 22:35 PDT

 

GARLIC-THE BOUNTIFUL BULB

by Carmia Borek, Ph.D.

 

http://www.lef.org/magazine/mag2000/jan00-report.html

 

Can a clove of garlic a day keep the doctor away? Can an odor-free

supplement be as good or even better? Garlic has been an important

part of life for centuries, across cultures and millennia.

 

In fact, no other single food has had as many applications as this

pungent plant. Garlic has been used to spice food, protect against

vampires and witches, prepare soldiers for war, cure colds, heal

infections, and treat ailments ranging from heart disease to cancer

and even the plague.

 

Today, after close to 6000 years of folklore, scientific research

shows that garlic is an amazing resource of phytochemicals

(botanicals) whose wide range of actions can benefit health. Studies

show that garlic protects against infection and inflammation, lowers

the risk of heart disease, and has anticancer and antiaging effects.

Scientific studies also show that garlic does not have to be eaten

raw or fresh to be effective.

The potent odor of garlic may not be necessary for its health

benefits. Research shows that aged, deodorized garlic extract

sometimes works even better than fresh garlic without causing

digestive disorders and " garlic breath " that may haunt the fresh

garlic eater.

 

A history of garlic

 

Long before humans began keeping written records, garlic, found in

the wild, was cultivated for human use. Though the exact geographic

origin of garlic is not known, modern botanists think it came from

Central Asia, some say Siberia. The plant, with its pungent flavored

bulb, was transported West and East by migrating tribes, becoming

native to Mediterranean regions of Europe, Asia and Africa as well

as China and other countries in the Far East.

 

Garlic-Allium sativum-is a hardy perennial plant that belongs to the

lily family, as do onions, leeks, shallots and chives. However,

garlic contains a number of organosulfur substances with medicinal

properties that are unique to garlic. The history of garlic

stretches far back, to a time when people who foraged in the fields

for food and healing herbs came across garlic and cultivated it for

their use. Remnants of garlic have been found in cave dwellings that

are over 10,000 years old. Egyptian tombs, dating back to close to

5700 years ago, were found to contain sketches of garlic and clay

sculptures of the bulb.

 

The ancient Egyptian text Codex Ebers details formulas with garlic

as remedies for heart problems, headaches, tumors and other

ailments.

 

Chinese writings dating from 2700 B.C. describe garlic for treating

many

ailments and for enhancing vigor. In India, Ayurvedic medicine

recommends garlic to boost energy and treat colds and fatigue.

 

In modern times garlic has become popular as a healing herb in some

Asian and European countries. In certain parts of China people eat

about 20 grams of garlic a day, approximately 8 medium size cloves.

 

In Germany, most adults take a daily garlic supplement to promote

health.

In the United States the use of garlic preparations as supplements

has been rapidly escalating in recent years.

 

The chemistry of garlic is complex, with over 100 different

compounds that contribute to its effects. The most important and

unique feature is its high content of organosulfur substances.

Garlic contains at least

four times more sulfur than other high sulfur vegetables-onion,

broccoli and cauliflower.

 

Water soluble sulfur compounds

 

From a medicinal point of view, the most important organosulfur

substances are water soluble S-allyl compounds, including S-allyl

cysteine and other sulfur amino acids that are increased by aging

garlic extract. Stable, odorless and safe, with high antioxidant

activity,

S-allyl cysteine easily gets into the circulatory system from the

gut (highly bioavailable), with an absorption of close to 90%. S-

allyl cysteine has been shown to slightly reduce blood cholesterol

levels, protect cells from toxic chemicals,

prevent cancer in laboratory animals

and stop the growth of prostate cancer cells and breast cancer

cells, in culture. Its high antioxidant activity provides it with

the potential to fight oxidant-related damage that leads to heart

disease, cancer and aging.

 

Oil-soluble sulfur compounds

 

Whole garlic cloves contain very small amount of oil-soluble sulfur

compounds. However, once the cloves are cut or macerated, oil-

soluble sulfur compounds are produced through enzymatic reactions.

Upon crushing or chopping garlic, alliin-a sulfur containing

compound that is found in the whole clove-is converted by the enzyme

alliinase to a volatile

compound called allicin, the substance that gives garlic its pungent

odor and flavor. Allicin is highly unstable and decomposes into

oil-soluble substances that include diallyl sulfide, diallyl

disulfide and other volatile sulfur compounds.

 

Non-sulfur compounds

 

Non-sulfur compounds in garlic and in the aged extract include

proteins, carbohydrates (sugars, fructans, pectins), saponins, that

are steroid substances recently shown to have antibacterial and

antifungal actions, flavonoids, such as allixin, that are important

antioxidants. Garlic contains low amounts of vitamins and minerals

including selenium.

The organosulfur compounds are mostly responsible for garlic's

medicinal qualities, but their cooperative action with other

components that are present in garlic enhances its health benefits.

 

Modern medicine

 

Over the last two decades the growing use of botanicals in

complementary

and alternative medicine has resulted in a burst in garlic research.

Modern scientific methods are being used to investigate the actions

of

garlic and its components in protecting against aging and disease.

 

At a recent scientific conference, scientists confirmed what

traditional healers found out through trial and error: garlic can

help prevent modern ailments and disorders.

 

The two and a half day international conference took place in

November, 1998, in Newport Beach California and focussed on " Recent

Advances on the Nutritional Benefits Accompanying the Use of Garlic

as a Supplement " . Organized by the National Cancer Institute and

Pennsylvania State University, the conference gathered close to 200

researches and health professionals from 12 countries. Scientists

presented work on the

health benefits of garlic and garlic supplements and it became clear

from studies reported at the conference that deodorized aged garlic

extract was more effective than fresh garlic in large part because

of

the unique water soluble organosulfur compounds that have a wide

scope of action and are highly bioavailable.

 

Antioxidant effects

 

Just as oxidized iron in a car turns to rust, so do free radicals

oxidize and damage DNA, lipids and proteins in the body, triggering

disease and accelerating aging. Free radicals are made in cells in

normal metabolism and during infection and inflammation. They

increase

in the body by exposure to sunlight, X-rays, smoking, smog and other

pollutants. Cells fight oxidants by antioxidant enzymes and small

molecules, which are produced internally and by antioxidant

vitamins,

minerals and phytochemicals that are obtained from food.

 

Garlic is rich in antioxidants phytochemicals that include

organosulfur

compounds and flavonoids, capable of scavenging free radicals.

Garlic

also contains selenium, which is required for the antioxidant enzyme

glutathione peroxidase. Though we do not know the mechanisms of all

the

garlic components, many of its disease preventive, anti-inflammatory

and

anti-aging effects are due to the antioxidant actions of garlic and

garlic preparations that contain stable organosulfur compounds.

 

Research shows that among garlic preparations, aged garlic extract

has

the highest antioxidant potential, compared to fresh garlic and some

commercial preparations. Aged garlic extract and in other

experiments

some forms of garlic powder have been shown to boost cell

glutathione,

which scavenges free radicals and helps maintain a healthy immune

system

and enzymes that convert free radicals to water and destroy toxic

peroxides.

 

Reducing the risk of heart disease and stroke

 

In the past 15 years, garlic supplementation studies have

concentrated

on the bulb's effects in reducing blood cholesterol and

triglycerides

(the form in which fat is transported in the blood). All studies did

not

agree with one another, given differences in the kind of garlic

preparation, quality of standardization, doses and periods of

treatment.

But most findings showed that garlic slightly lowered blood

cholesterol,

LDL cholesterol and triglycerides with a consistent lowering of

blood

lipids seen in studies that used aged garlic extract as the

supplement.

For example, while a University of Oxford study showed that garlic

powder, given to patients at 900 mg a day for six months, had no

protective effects and did not lower cholesterol levels, a study at

East

Carolina University found that aged garlic extract given at 2.4-4.8

gm a

day, for six months, lowered cholesterol by 5-7%, and reduced LDL,

triglycerides and blood pressure in men with high cholesterol.

 

Preventing lipid oxidation, protecting blood vessels, anti-platelet

action

 

Oxidation of LDL cholesterol by free radicals accelerates

atherosclerosis. The oxidized LDL injures cells that line the blood

vessels, increasing the chance of plaque forming cholesterol

deposits in

the vessel wall. Aged garlic extract, its components S-allyl

cysteine

and the flavonoid allixin, have been shown to protect LDL from

oxidation

and prevent cell injury in the blood vessels. Oil soluble

organosulfur

components of garlic also show an ability to protect LDL from

oxidation.

 

 

Garlic has anti-clotting effects that reduce plaque formation in

blood

vessels and clots that cause heart disease and stroke. Garlic

prevents

clumping of blood platelets to each other (aggregation) and their

sticking to blood vessels (adhesion). When patients were given 2.4-

4.8

grams of aged garlic extract daily for six months, the aged extract

that

contains stable organosulfur compounds prevented clotting and

adhesion

of blood platelets and reduced blood pressure.

 

Protection against brain injury by ischemia

 

If blood circulation to the brain is decreased due to

atherosclerosis or

a poor heart condition-risks that increase with age-the brain is

deprived of oxygen (ischemic hypoxia). When the brain is enriched

again

with oxygen ( reperfusion), free radicals are produced, causing

brain

injury that accelerates aging and diseases such as Alzheimer's

disease.

Antioxidants protect against such damage and garlic preparations

rich in

water soluble antioxidants show a protective effect. Experiments in

rats

show that aged garlic extract and water soluble S-allyl cysteine,

prevented brain injury by ischemia and reperfusion. In contrast, oil

soluble garlic compounds allyl sulfide and allyl disulfide, tested

in

the same way, did not protect the brain.

 

Enhanced immune functions

 

The immune system consists of many types of cells and protective

substances that fight infections, the common cold and help battle

life

threatening diseases, such as cancer. A strong immune system can

defend

against bacteria, viruses and fungal diseases. When immunity is

severely

damaged, as in the case of AIDS, the body cannot fight off invading

infectious organisms. Immunity can be compromised by many factors,

by a

poor diet, stress, environmental pollution, disease and aging.

Fortunately, science has identified dietary substances that help

stimulate the immune system, and garlic is among them.

 

Human studies confirm immune stimulation by garlic. Subjects

receiving

aged garlic extract at 1800 mg a day for three weeks showed a 155.5%

increase in natural killer immune cell activity that kills invaders

and

cancer cells. Other subjects receiving large amounts of fresh garlic

of

35g a day, equivalent to 10 cloves, showed an increase of 139.9%. In

six

weeks, patients with AIDS receiving aged garlic extract showed an

enhancement of natural killer cells from a seriously low level to a

normal level.

 

In another human study, subjects were given garlic powder for three

months. Blood samples tested for white cell activity, showed an

increased capacity of the immune cells to engulf the E. coli

bacteria.

Garlic and garlic preparations increase the activity of immune

cells,

including macrophages, that kill infectious invaders.

 

Recent studies show that garlic powdered extract contains substances

that kill Heliobacter pylori, a virulent organism that grows in the

stomach and is thought to be associated with stomach ulcers and

stomach

cancer. Since 122 patients out of 145 people infected with H. pylori

showed resistance to antibiotic treatment, treatment with garlic

supplementation may be an essential approach.

 

Anti-cancer effects

 

Normal cells become malignant through stages, in a complex process

that

takes many years, thus enhancing cancer risk with age. Mutations in

DNA

by free radicals or by binding of chemical carcinogens trigger a

loss in

growth regulation, causing cells to replicate in an uncontrolled way

and

result in a cancer.

 

The anti-cancer effects of garlic have been recognized since ancient

times, mostly in the form of therapeutic effects. New scientific

methods

enable us to confirm that garlic helps prevent cancer and stop

cancer

cell growth.

 

Epidemiological studies

 

The anti-cancer effects of garlic-rich diets have been shown in over

12

epidemiological studies in China, Italy and the United States. Diets

high in garlic lowered the risk of stomach and colon cancer. Among

the

earliest documented evidence were studies in China that showed a

marked

decrease in stomach cancer in residents of the Gangshang province

whose

daily consumption was 20 g or more. Cancer rate was thirteen times

lower

compared to people in another province who consumed 1g a day.

Studies in

Italy showed a 50% reduction in stomach cancer in people who's daily

diet was high in vegetables and contained large amounts of garlic.

The

protective effects of garlic against colon cancer were shown in a

striking finding in the Iowa Womens' study, in which 41.837 women,

aged

55-69, ate one or more servings of garlic a week, over five years.

Garlic eaters showed a 35% lower risk of colon cancer, compared with

women on diets that did not include garlic.

 

Experimental studies

 

The antioxidant effects that prevent DNA damage and cancer-causing

mutations are essential to the cancer preventive effects of garlic

and

its components. In addition, aged garlic extract, and lipid soluble

organosulfur compounds that are also found in garlic powder, prevent

the

binding of DNA and chemical carcinogens. They also increase the

disposal

of the carcinogens in animals, ridding the body of the cancer

causing

agents.

 

Other animal studies show that aged garlic extract protects against

early and late stages of cancer development in the colon, mammary

glands, skin, stomach and esophagus. Among the compounds in the

garlic

extract showing prevention of tumor promotion is allixin, a

flavonoid

that also prevents the formation of prostaglandins, hormone-like

substances that are active in enhancing inflammation, platelet

aggregation and tumor growth.

 

Cancer therapy

 

In ancient times, garlic was used to treat cancer of the uterus.

Experimental studies with human cells in culture support garlic

action

in blocking tumor growth. Work at Sloan Kettering Memorial Medical

Center showed that the water soluble S-allyl cysteine and S-allyl

mercaptocysteine, which are high in aged garlic extract, stop the

growth

of human prostate cancer and breast cancer cells in culture. Other

recent studies at Pennsylvania State University showed that the oil

soluble diallyl sulfide prevented the growth of human colon cancer

cells. These studies offer hope for adjuvant therapy with garlic

compounds.

 

Preventing heart and liver toxicity in cancer therapy

 

Cardiotoxicity and liver toxicity caused by anti-cancer agents that

produce free radicals is a concern in cancer therapy. Doxorubicin,

which

is used in treating breast cancer, ovarian carcinoma and other

tumors,

damages the heart muscle and leads to in-heart failure. Methotrexate

and

5-fluorouracilused, which are used in treating a variety of cancers,

produce liver toxicity. Aged garlic extract and the organosulfur

compounds polysulfides protect mice and heart cells in vitro from

Doxorubicin toxicity and liver cells against the toxic effects of

methotraxate and 5-fluorouracil. These protective effects of the

garlic

supplement may have applications in the clinic, reducing the risk of

toxicity in patients receiving anti-cancer treatment.

 

Anti-aging, cognitive function enhancement and life extension

 

The history of garlic tells us of its uses to promote well being.

Recent

studies on mice show that garlic may have important effects on brain

function and in increasing life span. The research showed that aged

garlic extract and its key sulfur compound, S-allyl cysteine,

enhanced

learning ability in mice that are genetically prone to early aging.

Nerve cells exposed to these compounds showed an unusual ability to

grow

and branch, which may be associated with the enhanced memory

function by

the garlic compounds. Aged garlic extract prevented degeneration in

the

frontal lobe of the brain, improved memory retention and extended

the

life span of the animals.

 

Conclusions

 

Garlic contains a wide range of substances, including antioxidants,

which are enhanced by aging garlic extract and act together to help

prevent atherosclerosis, heart disease, stroke, cancer and aging, as

well as boost immunity and help increase memory and life span.

Garlic

and garlic supplements as well as garlic components, notably stable

organosulfur compounds, have been shown to influence cancer by

several

mechanisms: prevent mutations, prevent the binding of carcinogens to

DNA, increase the destruction of carcinogens by producing enzymes

that

do the job, prevent later stages in cancer, enhance immunity and

stop

the growth for some human cancer cells. Garlic antioxidants are

highest

in the aged garlic supplement compared to fresh garlic and other

commercial preparations. The antioxidants protect against toxic

effects

of free radicals from radiation, including sunlight, environmental

pollutants and some anti-cancer drugs, and help fight cancer, heart

disease, loss of memory and aging.

 

The conference on " Recent Advances on the Nutritional Benefits

Accompanying the Use of Garlic as a Supplement " concluded that

garlic

research has come a long way in confirming the health benefits of

garlic. However, there is work ahead to define other benefits and

establish the most effective doses that will provide each person

with

the benefits against diseases and aging.

 

Garlic supplementation in our daily diet may be one of the best

options

to prevent aging and disease and therefore extend life. Those who

wish

to eat a clove of garlic a day and do not suffer adverse reactions

can

do so. Various garlic products on the market offer an alternative

but

require careful viewing of the manufacturer's standardization of the

product and of the bioavailability of the compounds in the

supplement.

Those who want to increase their daily dose of garlic but avoid

garlic

breath can turn to regular use of aged garlic extract, a deodorized

standardized, highly bioavailable supplement, whose benefits are

well

researched.

 

Anti-Atherosclerotic Effects of Garlic

 

Recipe

For Anti-Cancer Garlic Requires Chef With " Slow

 

--

Recipe For Anti-Cancer Garlic Requires A Chef With A " Slow Hand "

 

http://www.scienceagogo.com/news/19981016030553data_trunc_sys.shtml

 

Researchers have shown that microwave heating, or roasting garlic,

can

diminish or destroy its anti-cancer activity - unless the herb is

chopped or crushed, and allowed to " stand " for at least 10 minutes

before cooking.

 

Kun Song and Dr. John A. Milner, from the Department of Nutrition at

Penn State University, conducted the study. The research was the

first

to show that as little as one minute of microwaving or 45 minutes of

oven roasting can completely block garlic's ability to retard the

action

of a known cancer-causing agent in rats. Garlic's anti-cancer

activity

was retained, however, if the herb was first chopped or crushed and

allowed to stand for 10 minutes before being heated.

 

Song said that the 10-minute " standing period " after chopping or

crushing the garlic enables an enzyme naturally present in certain

garlic cells to come in contact with, and act on, chemicals in other

cells. Chopping or crushing the garlic opens the cells and enables

the

enzyme to start a reaction that produces chemicals called allyl

sulfur

compounds that possess anti-cancer properties.

 

" The allyl sulfur compounds produced from the enzyme's reaction are

critical to garlic's anti-cancer effects, " Song noted. " If garlic

was

heated or roasted immediately after crushing, the enzyme was

de-activated by the heating process and garlic's anti-cancer effects

were blocked. "

 

Song and Milner conducted the study with rats given garlic by

intubation

six times over a two-week period. The rats received garlic equal to

2

per cent of their daily food ration. After the feeding period was

over,

the rats were treated with a breast tumor inducer called DMBA. DNA

from

the rats' breast tissue then was examined in order to count the

number

of instances in which DMBA reaction products or metabolites had

become

attached to the DNA. The number of DMBA metabolites binding to DNA,

called DNA adducts, was used as the measure of cancer incidence.

 

Rats that received no garlic had the highest number of adducts. Rats

given raw garlic showed an average decrease of 64 per cent in adduct

formation compared with rats that had received no garlic. Rats given

garlic that had been heated for one minute in the microwave oven or

roasted in a convention oven for 45 minutes after being crushed and

allowed to " stand " for 10 minutes showed 41 per cent and 21 per cent

reductions in adduct formation, respectively. Rats given heated or

roasted garlic that had not been allowed to stand showed no decrease

in adducts compared with non-garlic fed rats.

_________________

 

JoAnn Guest

mrsjo-

DietaryTi-

www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Genes

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