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Anthony Gucciardi Natural Society
Lisa Garber
NaturalSociety
June 21, 2012
Anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, antiviral, antibacterial, antifungal, anticancer—that’s quite a lot to expect of a humble root of the ginger family. Like ginger, turmeric and curcumin (the powdered and supplement form, respectively, of the Curcuma longa plant) play center stage in millenia-old Asian medicine and cuisine. It wasn’t until 1949, however, that the West studied its scientific properties. In the magazine Nature, authors E. Schraufstatter and H. Bernt reported on the root’s ability to fight strains of Staphylococcus aureus, Salmonella paratyphi, Trichophyton gypseum, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and our curiosity hasn’t been sated since. Research always shows how turmeric can be especially effective at preventing chronic disease.
You might have caught Dr. David B. Agus on The Daily Show earlier this year. In his book, The End of Illness, he summarizes that low-grade inflammation is the root of most diseases, from heart disease to diabetes, Alzheimer’s to arthritis, cancer to allergies and acne. Turmeric—as you’ll see in the following research—therefore seems like a worthy ally in the fight against illness and disease, can can be used for preventing chronic disease.
Dr. Andrew Weil (founder and director of the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine), and other experts say that plants are usually better than drugs for overall health and preventing chronic disease, excepting extreme cases. With this in mind, you can incorporate a moderate amount of turmeric into your diet right in the kitchen. (And no, you don’t have to eat curry every day.)
Additional Sources:
Agus, David B. The End of Illness. Free Press, 2012.
Yes, post number 47584747 in a week making the same claim for the same two spices. Qualifiers abound in “preliminary,” “slows,” and “may inhibit.” So main ingredients in curry you say? Let’s apply our critical thinking skills here BIN, you slack-jawed sheeple. If these are the main ingredients in curry and the world’s largest (by orders of magnitude) consumer of curry is India, the why does India have the highest rate of cancer on Earth? Go ahead… look it up. Now, how do you reconcile these facts?
I would say its because india has some of the nastiest slums on earth. It doesnt matter if your nation is the highest rate of curry consumption if you cannot afford food that didnt come out of a dumpster because you’re an “untouchable”.
Given turmeric and cercumin may inhibit cancer but comparing the required amounts to treat cancer and the amounts derived from a curry meal is folly.
So before you attack someone, based on a single fact you googled, you slack minded psuedo intellectual, do some critical thinking about what a cancer inhibiting substance really is apart from the meals its used as a spice in.
I’ll jump right on that as soon as OP cites some reputable sources. Go be a sheep somewhere else.