 |
 |
 |
 |
Antibacterial |
 |
Antiviral (HIV) |
 |
Antifungal |
 |
Prevents Cancer |
 |
Potentiates the Therapeutic effects of chemotherapeutic
agents against Cancer |
 |
Lowers Blood Cholesterol |
 |
Prevents Alzheimer |
 |
Exhibits potent Antiinflammatory effects |
 |
Accelerates Wound-healing |
 |
May prevent skin wrinkling/aging |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
Curcumin Research Update |
| |
July 11, 2005, 12:22AM
In cancer fight, a spice brings hope to the table
M.D. Anderson researchers see a potent weapon in
curcumin, used in Indian cooking
By TODD ACKERMAN Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle
RESOURCES
IS CURCUMIN
THE SPICE OF LIFE?
Ground from the root of the Curcuma
longa plant, curcumin is a member of the ginger
family.
It has long had multiple uses in India
and other Asian nations: food preservative,
folk medicine, coloring agent, body cleanser
and food flavorer (2 to 5 percent of turmeric
is curcumin, for instance). |
The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center,
the epitome of the conventional cancer establishment,
is reporting promising test results on an unconventional
weapon: a common spice used in Indian cooking.
In a host of studies, M.D. Anderson researchers
are showing that curcumin, the pungent yellow spice
in both turmeric and curry powders, has potent anti-cancer
properties. They say it may prove effective for
both prevention and treatment.
"Curcumin's promise is enormous," said
Bharat B. Aggarwal, a professor of cancer medicine
in M.D. Anderson's department of experimental therapeutics.
"It appears to inhibit multiple pathways by
which cancer grows, and we know it's nontoxic."
Aggarwal added that "in a day when Vioxx and
Bextra are off the table, curcumin may be one of
the best new hopes on the table" a reference
to popular painkillers (Cox-2inhibitors) taken off
the market after reports they increased the risk
of heart disease. Cox-2 inhibitors were considered
potential cancer prevention agents because they'd
been shown to inhibit tumor growth.
The latest study on curcumin is available today
on the journal Cancer's Web site.
In it, M.D. Anderson researchers demonstrate in
the laboratory how curcumin stops melanoma cells
from proliferating along two key pathways and induces
them to essentially commit suicide. The cells were
taken from patients.
A month ago, the same researchers reported that
in mice, curcumin helped stop the spread of breast
cancer to the lungs. It outperformed the cancer
drug Taxol in the study, though the best results
came with a combination of curcumin and Taxol.
Putting it to the test
The results of those studies have led to ongoing
Phase I human trials at M.D. Anderson testing curcumin's
ability to stop the growth of pancreatic cancer
and multiple myeloma.
Still to come are a human trial for breast cancer
and an animal trial for melanoma.
Elsewhere, researchers are studying curcumin with
lung, colon, head and neck, oral and prostate cancers.
Aggarwal said the thing distinguishing curcumin
from other natural products touted for their medicinal
properties is the science behind it.
Herbs such as garlic, saw palmetto and gingko may
receive more ink, but there have been about 2,000
studies on curcumin, says Aggarwal, easily more
than any other natural product.
It is rich in antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and
anticarcinogenic properties.
Most intriguing, the rate of colon, breast, prostate
and lung cancer is 10 times lower in India than
in the United States.
Financial obstacles
In the melanoma study, the M.D. Anderson team found
curcumin shut down nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kB),
a powerful protein known to promote an abnormal
inflammatory response that leads to a variety of
disorders, including arthritis and cancer; the protein
known as IKK that switches NF-kB "on;"
and STAT3, another pathway involved in the spread
of tumors.
Aggarwal noted that the greatest obstacle to further
study of curcumin is financial. No pharmaceutical
company is likely to develop a natural product that
can't be patented so the only sources of funding
are government agencies.
Curcumin is available in capsule form at health
food stores, though the purity of some brands may
be in question because herbs aren't regulated. Aggarwal's
team worked with a 96 percent pure product.
"Curcumin's efficacy for treating cancer is
still to be proven," Aggarwal said. "But
I would recommend it for prevention right now, based
on animal studies. People have been eating it for
thousands of years so we know it's safe." |
| |
|
|
|
 |
 |
|