turmeric/curcumin

lisa42
lisa42 Member Posts: 3,625 Member
edited March 2014 in Colorectal Cancer #1
Hi All,

Read this article today on Foxnews online in their health section on the health benefits of taking turmeric (curcumin is the ingredient in turmeric that helps). While the article never mentions its benefits for cancer, I have most definitely read in other sources that it has anti cancer effects. What is mentioned in this article (below) is its ability to counter pain better than ibuprofen. It reduces inflammation plus several other benefits. I personally suffer from allergies, asthma, and sinus problems & that is mentioned here as being helped by turmeric. Just something to consider taking if you already haven't thought about it. Also- something that isn't mentioned here, but that I read in another article a while back, turmeric is best absorbed by the body if also taken with a little black pepper. The supplement I now have has a bit of pepper mixed into the capusle. Another something to consider...

Lisa---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Here's the letter/article from FoxNews Health section- just realized that I must not have highlighted the title or accompanying picture from the article. The "I" mentioned below isn't me- it's the author of the article!
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Long ago in another period of my life, I lived in a communal household. My housemates and I practiced yoga together, ate natural foods, and learned how to cook, plant an organic garden and make bread together. We had a greenhouse, and we milked our own goats. For a while, I even learned to tend bee hives and collect honey. It was a lively and mind-opening experience. In that household, I learned to use spices and seasonings of all kinds. One of the spices we cooked with regularly was turmeric – the bright yellow spice that is commonly used to season curries. I can still smell the turmeric cooking in oil, and I can vividly remember the bright stains I occasionally got on my shirts when I used the spice incautiously.

Since the time I lived in that commune, a lot has happened. As relates to turmeric, science has investigated this humble root and has discovered in it a powerful compound called curcumin. This simple material has the power to turn modern medicine on its proverbial ear.

Traditionally, turmeric, or Curcuma longa, has been widely used for food, cosmetic, and medicinal purposes. Turmeric provides the distinctive yellow color to curry, and is used to color butter, cheese and other foods. In India’s 5,000-year-old traditional system of Ayurveda, turmeric enjoys a long history of use for the treatment of respiratory conditions including asthma and allergy, coughs, sinusitis, for liver disorders, for rheumatism and to treat diabetic wounds.

The compound in turmeric most responsible for its broad uses is curcumin. This yellow colored material demonstrates antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects, anti-carcinogenic and antimicrobial activity, liver-protective, heart-protective and anti-arthritic benefits. Whole turmeric root and concentrated curcumin are also very safe. No studies in animals or humans have discovered any toxicity associated with the use of either, even at very high doses.

Additional studies suggest that curcumin may also offer significant cognitive-enhancing and anti-depressant benefits. This effect appears primarily due to curcumin’s capacity to promote the activity of neuroprotective factors in the brain, and to regulate certain neurotransmitters.

Despite the broad benefits described above, curcumin’s greatest health property may be its capacity to relieve pain by relieving inflammation. The role of inflammation in pain is pretty straightforward. Various injuries can cause inflammation in the tissues of our bodies. External injuries like burns, bites, scrapes, stings, cuts and bruises cause skin tissue to swell as protective fluids pour into damaged tissue between cells. Nerves may also be directly hurt. All of this activity is accompanied by pain. This is also the case with internal injuries that may be diet-related or the result of wear and tear. Aging joints and ligaments can become occasionally or chronically inflamed, resulting in pain. Stop the inflammation; stop the pain.

Like the popular anti-inflammatory drugs ibuprofen and acetaminophen, curcumin inhibits the COX2 enzyme. But unlike these drugs, curcumin additionally affects the activity of other key factors in pain and inflammation, including NF-kappaB, PPAR Gamma transcription factors, and 5-LOX. By inhibiting the activity of all these factors of inflammation, curcumin delivers far superior anti-inflammatory and pain-relieving activity than most drugs.

If you can relieve pain and do so naturally and safely, if you can lift the veil of darkness that chronic pain engenders, then you can transform people’s understanding of the benefits of natural remedies through positive experience. I believe that curcumin does this remarkably well.

Additionally, curcumin also delivers other benefits to heart, liver, brain and immune system described here earlier.

Natural, plant-based remedies are the most widely employed medicines on earth, more than over-the-counter and prescription drugs. Today we are able to blend the very finely developed body of traditional medicinal knowledge, with modern technology and science. As a result we have access to safe, effective natural remedies like curcumin, to enhance people’s health, and open up the doors to greater vitality through the restorative and healing powers of nature’s bountiful pharmacy.

Recommendation: While I do not often direct readers to specific products, every once in a while I make exceptions for those that are unusually effective. In my estimation the branded product Curamin, made by Wisconsin-based EuroPharma, is a superior curcumin supplement.

Chris Kilham is a medicine hunter who researches natural remedies all over the world, from the Amazon to Siberia. He teaches ethnobotany at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where he is Explorer in Residence. Chris advises herbal, cosmetic and pharmaceutical companies and is a regular guest on radio and TV programs worldwide. His field research is largely sponsored by Naturex of Avignon, France. Read more at www.MedicineHunter.com

Comments

  • serrana
    serrana Member Posts: 163 Member
    curcumin
    Hi Lisa Several years ago I visited this issue and learned that it takes a HUGE amount of curcumin to have anticancer effect Nevertheless one of my fave recipes is powdered turmeric and poultry seasoning on skinless chicken breasts in the toaster oven, covered container, 450degrees for about 25 minutes for a huge frozen chick boob.
    A doctor from India I used to work for said that they don't see many migranes in India.......maybe because of this. Can't hurt.Tastes yummy
    J
  • serrana
    serrana Member Posts: 163 Member
    curcumin
    Hi Lisa Several years ago I visited this issue and learned that it takes a HUGE amount of curcumin to have anticancer effect Nevertheless one of my fave recipes is powdered turmeric and poultry seasoning on skinless chicken breasts in the toaster oven, covered container, 450degrees for about 25 minutes for a huge frozen chick boob.
    A doctor from India I used to work for said that they don't see many migranes in India.......maybe because of this. Can't hurt.Tastes yummy
    J
  • plh4gail
    plh4gail Member Posts: 1,238 Member
    Lisa
    Interesting information, thank you. I'm afaid I have been too slow to start studying up on all the info I should be looking into about cancer and food health. I know I should be doing this and don't know why I haven't. So, I'm going to use this as my start up incentive and get going on it!

    Thank's, Gail
  • Nana b
    Nana b Member Posts: 3,030 Member
    plh4gail said:

    Lisa
    Interesting information, thank you. I'm afaid I have been too slow to start studying up on all the info I should be looking into about cancer and food health. I know I should be doing this and don't know why I haven't. So, I'm going to use this as my start up incentive and get going on it!

    Thank's, Gail

    Good info
    I use Tumeric in food and take supplements.
  • Friendinpenn
    Friendinpenn Member Posts: 70
    Turmeric
    I take two capsules of turmeric each day except when getting chemo

    I've done ALOT of research on several websites and they pretty much all say that this spice does have an effect on helping to prevent cancer and also to kill those stubborn little cells that may arise later on...

    The other one I began taking is "PAW PAW" not to be confused with papya fruit...

    This stuff is really supposed to help again with knocking out the bad cells that chemo is resistent to...

    Google "Paw Paw" with the word cancer and alot of information should come up....

    I am only suggesting this...please check with your doctors for their advice on this...

    Friend
  • lisa42
    lisa42 Member Posts: 3,625 Member

    Turmeric
    I take two capsules of turmeric each day except when getting chemo

    I've done ALOT of research on several websites and they pretty much all say that this spice does have an effect on helping to prevent cancer and also to kill those stubborn little cells that may arise later on...

    The other one I began taking is "PAW PAW" not to be confused with papya fruit...

    This stuff is really supposed to help again with knocking out the bad cells that chemo is resistent to...

    Google "Paw Paw" with the word cancer and alot of information should come up....

    I am only suggesting this...please check with your doctors for their advice on this...

    Friend

    Paw paw
    I will look into the paw paw too- thanks!

    Lisa