Please Scroll Down to See Forums Below
napsgear
genezapharmateuticals
domestic-supply
puritysourcelabs
Research Chemical SciencesUGFREAKeudomestic
napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplypuritysourcelabsResearch Chemical SciencesUGFREAKeudomestic

Garlic

Garlic is a wonderful food for every body

here are 2 articles on garlic's benefits (though not especially to BBers):

Garlic lowers blood pressure a little.
Garlic lowers LDL Cholesterol a little.
Garlic helps reduce atherosclerotic buildup (plaque) within the arterial system.
Garlic lowers or helps to regulate blood sugar.
Garlic helps to prevent blood clots from forming, thus reducing the possibility of strokes and thromboses (It may not be good for hemophiliacs).
Garlic helps to prevent cancer, prevents certain tumors from growing larger and reduces the size of certain tumors.
Garlic helps to remove heavy metals such as lead and mercury from the body.
Raw Garlic is a potent natural antibiotic and, while far less strong than modern antibiotics, can still kill some strains of bacteria that have become immune or resistant to modern antibiotics.
Garlic has anti-fungal and anti-viral properties.
Garlic dramatically reduces yeast infections due to Candida species.
Garlic has anti-oxidant properties and is a source of selenium.
Garlic probably has other benefits as well.
 
Another one:

The Chemistry of Garlic Health Benefits

Interview With Professor Eric Block Ph.D.
Interviewed By Richard A. Passwater Ph.D.

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

I have been sharing my interest in selenium- and sulfur-containing nutrients for some time. Recently, I shared with you a conversation with selenium expert, Professor Gerhard Schrauzer, Ph.D. Now, I thought you would like to share a recent conversation I had with sulfur-chemistry expert, Professor Eric Block, Ph.D.

Dr. Block has conducted extensive research on the sulfur compounds of garlic at the State University of New York at Albany. In 25 years of studying sulfur-containing compounds, he has authored more than l20 scientific articles. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University with Nobel Laureate E. J. Corey.

Passwater: We have known of garlic's health benefits for thousands of years, but recently I've noticed an increased interest in garlic research. Now that you and other scientists have elucidated the key aspects of the chemistry of garlic that help explain how garlic actually brings about these benefits, garlic is beginning to receive wider attention from nutritionists. Besides "folklore," what suggestions or evidence have we had that garlic has major health benefits?

Block: Epidemiological and medical studies suggest that individuals regularly consuming garlic show a lower incidence of stomach cancer, have longer blood clotting times and show lower blood lipid levels (which indirectly translates into reduced risk of stroke and cardiovascular disease).

Passwater: Do these people generally eat raw or cooked garlic, or both?

Block: Garlic is generally processed in some way, such as by cooking, or is cut and mixed with salad oil. Some people do eat garlic raw although this is not recommended.

Passwater: You don't recommend eating raw garlic?

Block: Not by itself. Raw garlic can be very irritating and could injure the digestive tract.

Passwater: Sulfur compounds tend to be very fragile and volatile. Do many of the beneficial garlic sulfur compounds survive cooking?

Block: Some do and some don't. In point of fact, cooking can convert the more fragile sulfur compounds into other sulfur compounds which are also beneficial and at the same time are a bit more robust.

Passwater: Okay, let's talk about the sulfur compounds present in garlic and what happens to them.

Block: Sulfur compounds from fresh garlic can be divided into five categories:


l. The stable, odorless derivatives of the natural, sulfur-rich amino acid known as cysteine, found in unbroken garlic cloves and bulbs. Alliin (pronounced al-lean) is an example of this type of compound.

2. Compounds with a very brief existence called intermediates (the chemical equivalents of shooting stars), formed when we cut, crush, or chop garlic cloves thereby freeing an enzyme (allinase is the name of the garlic enzyme), which acts on the cysteine compounds such as alliin. We know little about the intermediates for they disappear in a fraction of a second after being formed and can never be stored even at low temperatures.

3. The isolable but none-the-less unstable and reactive compounds having a typical fresh garlic aroma and taste, formed by very rapid joining together of intermediates and found both in garlic juice as well as in the air above chopped garlic. Allicin, (pronounced "alice-in") is a well known example of compounds of this type. Actually our recent research has shown that as many as nine "chemical cousins" of allicin are also formed when garlic is cut. These other compounds also have a typical garlic aroma and taste. While allicin and its "cousins" can be prepared in pure form and studied in the research laboratory, they are termed "unstable compounds" meaning that at room temperature they have a very limited shelf life (a few hours) and cannot be stored without using special low temperature refrigerators.

4. More stable products are formed when allicin and its "cousins" stand at room temperature for a few hours or days. A good example of this situation is macerate of garlic, a product formed when garlic is chopped ("macerated") with salad oil or other edible oils. Macerate of garlic is a rich source of "naturally-formed" garlic-derived compounds having the scientific names ajoene, methyl ajoene, and dithiins. These products are stable enough to be stored at room temperature for more than a year, for example when dissolved in an edible oil.

5. Materials prepared by heating garlic in boiling water and condensing (collecting) the steam as it becomes a vapor, a technique known as steam distillation. The product is termed the distilled oil of garlic. The scientific name for the major component of distilled oil of garlic is diallyl disulfide. It has a strong, slightly medicinal, "artificial" smell of garlic. Distilled garlic oil is used as a food flavoring agent.



In summary, when we cut or crush fresh garlic, we release an enzyme called allinase which rapidly converts odorless alliin to allicin, the latter having the typical odor and taste of fresh garlic. Allicin is unstable and rapidly reverts to ajoene (pronounced ah-hoe-ene) and dithiins (pronounced di-thigh-eins) in the presence of edible oils (e.g. macerates) or to diallyl disulfide on standing or heating in water. I explain more about the sulfur compounds in garlic in my article in "Scientific American (March l985, pages ll4-ll9).

Passwater: Are you saying that it is not the alliin and allicin themselves that are important, but compounds that are formed from these compounds, either in the body or by certain types of cooking?

Block: If by "important" you mean "having a positive health benefit" the answer to that question is still actively being sought by researchers. There seem to be health benefits associated with most of the sulfur-rich components of garlic following its normal use in cooking and consumption. For example, I've already mentioned that ajoene and dithiins are naturally formed when garlic is macerated with various edible food oils.

Passwater: You mentioned "ajoenes". I had seen several recent articles describing their benefits, but I was not familiar with them. In fact, I didn't even remember ever studying "ajoenes," and they didn't seem to fit into standard terminology, so I had to check the Merck Index for details.

Block: Don't feel too bad. I discovered them in 1984 and named them in honor of my collaborators in this research from Venezuela. "Ajo" is the Spanish word for garlic. I'm quite proud that ajoene has been included in the latest edition of the Merck Index. By the way, alliin and allicin are derived from the botanical Latin name for garlic, Allium sativum (pronouncedal-e-um sa-ti-vum).

Passwater: Okay, I feel better! How many papers have been published about ajoenes since you discovered and named them?

Block: I have seen more than a dozen scientific papers from laboratories around the world dealing with medical benefits of ajoene. I have also seen quite a few papers dealing with ajoene analysis and occurrence. These latter papers indicate that macerated garlic is the only form of garlic where significant quantities of ajoenes and dithiins have ever been detected.

Passwater: What health benefits do ajoenes provide?

Block: Well as I said, ajoenes and dithiins are among the most active compounds formed from fresh garlic. Ajoenes have been shown to: possess antithrombotic (anticlotting) activity in human platelet suspensions [l-8]; possess antitumor activity [9]; display significant antifungal activity, inhibiting the growth of Aspergillus niger , Candida albicans , Paracoccidioides-Brasiliensis , and Fusarium species [10-12]; inactivate human gastric lipase, a sulfhydryl enzyme involved in the digestion and adsorption of dietary fats [13]; function as antioxidants by inhibiting the interactions of leukocytes which mediate release of superoxide anion [14].

In one interesting study, administration of ajoene to dogs under extracorporeal circulation (as used in open heart surgery) prevents the thrombocytopenia induced by contact of blood with artificial surfaces. In this same study, ajoene showed excellent activity in preventing loss of platelets and in increasing rate of restoration of platelet clotting activity [1-5].

Exciting advances have also been reported for dithiins as well. For example, A U. S. patent was recently awarded to a scientist at the Los Alamos National Laboratory for the invention of a copolymer involving the same dithiin formed from garlic for an "antithrombogenic and antibiotic composition for use as a coating for artificial prostheses and implants which remain in contact with blood" [15]. Thus, basic research on garlic chemistry has led to the development of a new type of plastic in which a stable garlic-derived anticlotting and antibiotic agent provides unique properties of potential use in heart valves, artificial blood vessels and other implant devices.

Passwater: Are the ajoenes and dithiins the only garlic components that are actively being studied for possible protection against heart disease?

Block: As far as I am aware.

Passwater: Now, when we are talking about the health benefits from garlic and garlic's sulfur-containing compounds, is it your view that we are not talking about sulfur-compound nutriture, such as with the sulfur-containing amino acids cysteine or methionine, but with the "herbal" properties of garlic which are health benefits beyond those of nutrients?

Block: I would like to respond with a qualified yes. In addition to those compounds formed from garlic such as allicin and ajoene, there are various cysteine derivatives from garlic related to alliin containing allyl groups attached to cysteine sulfur which may also have health benefits. However to be of value, these allylic compounds wouLd have to be present in significant quantities in what is consumed.

Passwater: You mentioned that we get the most beneficial compounds from cooked garlic or garlic prepared with edible oils and not directly from raw garlic -- what about garlic supplements?

Block: My basic research through the years has focused on fresh garlic and compounds such as ajoene directly derived from fresh garlic and on the biological activity of pure samples of ajoene and related compounds. I myself have not been involved in the preparation or evaluation of different commercial garlic supplements so I can only answer your question based on what I have read in the open literature.

There are quite a variety of different garlic products on the market. There is certainly a need for independent testing and evaluation of these different products and careful examination of their claims. Some products talk about allicin content, allicin potential or allicin yield. Since there is no way to stabilize allicin itself, any claims concerning actual allicin content in a product cannot be correct. Intact garlic cloves themselves do not contain allicin either, although upon cutting or crushing under ordinary circumstances allicin is formed.

Thus one can talk about the allicin potential or allicin yield from garlic cloves. If garlic cloves are frozen in dry ice, pulverized with acetone in the absence of water, and the powder is then briefly heated with alcohol, not a trace of allicin can be detected following addition of water because these conditions destroy or "denature" the allinase enzyme which is required for allicin production.

These very conditions were employed 50 years ago by Chester Cavallito, the discoverer of allicin, to demonstrate that an active enzyme is a requirement for allicin formation. In this particular case the allicin potential is unfulfilled because the enzyme has been denatured.

With a garlic supplement claiming allicin potential, I would assume one is talking about some type of preparation in which water has been removed from garlic and the resulting product then pulverized and encapsulated. I further assume that when the contents of the capsule are exposed to water, allicin is produced. The critical question is whether or not the required enzyme is destroyed during the actual digestive process at the time when the coating of the capsule dissolves. Just as hot alcohol can denature the sensitive allinase enzyme so too can the strong acid present in our stomach.

While allicin itself is highly unstable and can only be produced when both the precursor alliin and the enzyme allinase are present under non-denaturing conditions, the situation with ajoene-containing products such as garlic macerates is somewhat different. Since ajoene and dithiins are already present in the macerate, no sensitive enzyme is required. To the best of my knowledge the only commercial products which have been unequivocally shown to contain significant quantities of ajoene and dithiins are macerates of garlic.

Passwater: Is there a direct relationship between the amount of beneficial garlic compounds in your system and being able to detect their presence on your breath.

Block: Garlic breath has been a matter of concern since garlic was first cultivated and used as a seasoning thousands of years ago. The fact is that the human nose is extraordinarily sensitive to the very types of sulfur compounds formed when we digest garlic and its derived products such as allicin, ajoene, and diallyl disulfide. When the sulfur compounds are digested they are broken down into simpler sulfur compounds, a portion of which enters the bloodstream and is then exhaled from the lungs or eliminated through our pores when we sweat. Since the human nose can detect less than one part of these sulfur compounds in one billion parts of exhaled air , it doesn't require much garlic or garlic compounds to give us garlic breath. It has even been reported that babies born to mothers who consumed garlic prior to giving birth have garlic breath. Not that the babies complain! In fact other studies suggest that babies actually prefer slightly garlicky mother's milk. If we can assume that it is the sulfur compounds of garlic that are primarily responsible for its health benefit, then it seems illogical to expect benefit from a product where not a trace of garlic breath can be detected after consumption.

Passwater: What do you see happening with garlic research? What is your next garlic or sulfur chemistry problem to solve?

Block: At the present time the use of garlic in cooking and, in processed form, by the food industry constitutes the largest market for the "stinking rose." There is still a need for better analytical methods to accurately and rapidly measure the amounts of allicin and related compounds in freshly cut garlic and to understand the fate of garlic flavorants under a variety of processing or culinary conditions. At the same time we need to better understand the biological properties of the various types of sulfur compounds formed from garlic and, in particular, to rigorously establish the effect of these different compounds on human health and in the prevention of disease. Since there is great interest in garlic and its health benefits I believe we will be seeing significant and exciting progress in all of these areas during the next few years.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
REFERENCES


l. A. Apitz-Castro, S. Cabrera, M.R. Cruz, E. Ledezma, M. K. Jain, Thrombosis Res. 32 (1983) 155-169.

2. R. Apitz-Castro, E. Ledezma, J. Escalante, F. M. Pinate, J. Moreno-Rea, G. Carrillo, O. Leal, M. K. Jain, Thrombosis Res . 42 (1986) 303-311.

3. R. Apitz-Castro, E. Ledezma, J. Escalante, M. K. Jain, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun . 141 (1986) 145-150.

4. R. Apitz-Castro, E. Ledezma, J. Escalante, F. M. Pinate, J. Moreno-Rea, G. Carrillo, O. Leal, M. K. Jain, Drug Res. 38 (1988) 901-904.

5. R. Apitz-Castro, M. K. Jain. F. Bartoli, E. Ledezma, M. C. Ruiz, R. Salas, Biochem. Biophys. Acta 1094 (1991) 269-280.

6. F. Rendu, M. K. Jain, D. Daveloose, J. C. Debouzy, R. Apitz-Castro, N. Bourdeau, S. Levy-Toledano, Biochem. Pharm . 38 (1989) 1321-1328.

7. J. C. Debouzy, D. Daveloose, J. M. Neumann, J. Viret, M. Herve, R. Apitz-Castro, European Biophys . J. 17 (1989) 211-216.

8. M. P. Jamaluddin, L. K. Krishnan, A. Thomas, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun . 153 (1988) 479-486.

9. K. Scharfenberg, R. Wagner, K. G. Wagner, Cancer Lett . 53 (1990) 103-108.

10. G. Sanblas, F. Sanblas, F. Gil, L. Marino, R. Apitz-Castro, Antimicrob. Agents Chemother . 33 (1989) 1641-1644.

ll. U. P. Singh V. N. Pandey, K. G. Wagner, K. P. Singh, Can. J. Bot. 68 (1990) 1354-1356.

l2. S. Yoshida, S. Kasuga, N. Hayashi, T. Ushiroguchi, H. Matsuura, S. Nakagawa, Applied and Environ. Microbiol. 53 (1987) 615-617.

13. Y. Gargouri, H. Moreau, M. K. Jain, G. H. deHaas, R. Verger, Biochem. Biophys. Acta 1006 (1989) 137-139.

14. G. F. Sud'ina, A. V. Tatarintsev, A. A. Koshkin, S. V. Zaitsev, N. A. Fedorov, S. D. Varfolomeev, Biochem. Biophys. Acta 1091 (1991) 257-260.

15. R. E. Hermes, U. S. Patent 4,917,921 (April 17, 1990).
 
Indeed! Garlic tastes great! My mom includes it into her entrees.

I was just wondering if it has any effect on testosterone levels? Because recently, I have been eating a fair amount of it.
 
chillin408 said:
Indeed! Garlic tastes great! My mom includes it into her entrees.

I was just wondering if it has any effect on testosterone levels? Because recently, I have been eating a fair amount of it.

unfortunately, no !

Researchers from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York worked with a line of cells that retains many of the features characteristic of those in the diseased prostate. For instance, they multiply faster when exposed to testosterone, the primary male sex hormone, or to DHT, a far more potent analog that the body produces from testosterone.
.....
His group exposed the cells to S-allylmercaptocysteine (SAMC), a sulfur compound that forms as garlic ages. It caused the cancer cells to break down testosterone two to four times more quickly than normal -- and through a route that does not produce DHT, notes John T. Pinto, a coauthor of the study. In this sense, he told Science News, the garlic-derived compound "is doing the same thing that testosterone deprivation would do."
 
Top Bottom