| Cinnamon great for Type 2 diabetes patients
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2004-01-30
The aromatic bark can lower blood
sugar, triglycerides and cholesterol levels, as well as improve
insulin functioning, particularly in Type 2 diabetics, researchers
have found. Richard Anderson, lead scientist at the Human Nutrition
Research Center in Beltsville, Md. (USA), calls its medicinal
properties the most significant nutritional discovery in 25 years.
'I don't know of anything else,' he said, other than drugs,
'that can change glucose, triglycerides and cholesterol levels nearly
so much.'
The most recent study, which appears in the
December issue of the journal Diabetes Care, showed that, after 40
days, 30 diabetics who had taken 1 to 6 grams of cinnamon extract
daily reduced their risk factors for cardiovascular disease.
Specifically, their mean fasting glucose fell 18 percent to
29 percent, their triglycerides 25 percent to 30 percent, their LDL
('bad') cholesterol 7 percent to 27 percent and their total
cholesterol 12 percent to 26 percent.
Only a little cinnamon
was necessary, said Anderson, who helped conduct the study. A
30-person placebo group showed no change.
Other experts say
they're reserving judgment until more extensive studies on humans
confirm the results.
If Anderson's findings are confirmed by
wider studies, the spice could help fight the soaring U.S. rate of
Type 2 diabetes. Also known as adult-onset diabetes, it afflicts an
estimated 16 million people in the United States.
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=5595
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