Curcumin and Crohn's Disease
              
           Featured in the Daily Mail (UK): A common ingredient of
    curry may be a new treatment for bowel disorders.
    Doctors who treated patients with curcumin, a compound
    found in    turmeric, the spice that helps give curry its colour,
    found most patients improved in a few days.
    It is thought it has an anti inflammatory effect.



    In a trial at Columbia university in New York, a pure
    curcumin preparation was given to five patients with
    Ulcerative proctitis and a similar number with Crohn's
    Disease, both inflammatory disorders.
    All proctitis patients improved, and reduced
    medication, and four out of five Crohn's patients had
    reduced symptoms.
    The researchers say results are encouraging and that
    they now need to be followed up.
    Just how curcumin could be protective is not clear,
    but one theory is that it interferes with the body's
    production of cells that are involved in inflammation

    Curry spice key to treating Inflammatory Bowel Disease

    8/26/2003 - Traditional curry spice curcumin may provide an inexpensive, well-tolerated,
    and effective treatment for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) - Crohn's and ulcerative colitis
    - report researchers.

           The National Institutes of Health estimates that some two million Americans suffer from
    IBD. Although its origin is unknown, scientists believe IBD could be caused by a
    combination of genetic, environmental, and immunologic factors.
    The two debilitating illnesses - Crohn's and ulcerative colitis - are characterised by chronic
    recurrent ulceration of the bowel, abdominal pain, digestive problems, diarrhoea or
    constipation.
    Curcumin is a component of the spice turmeric - Curcuma longa - used in curries and
    mustard. Its anti-inflammatory properties have already been recognised, as has its role in
    the reduction of colonic cancer in animal models.
           Although effective, current available agents to combat IBD are expensive and not
    without side effects, say the researchers, led by by B. Salh, at the Jack Bell Research
    Centre at the Vancouver General Hospital, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. They
    suggest there is a need for alternative agents that may be equally or more effective as well
    as being cheaper.
    The researchers used the dinitrobenzene sulfuric acid (DNB) murine model of colitis, which
    has been previously validated. Seven-week-old mice had inflammation induced with
    instillation of 100 µl of DNB (60 mg/ml) in 50 per cent ethanol with control animals receiving
    100 µl of 50 per cent ethanol alone. After this, they were kept in position for 30 seconds
    before being returned to their cages.
           On day 5, post-induction was conducted for evaluation of the colitis. Test groups of five
    mice had curcumin added to their diet at a concentration of 0.25 per cent beginning five
    days before the DNB instillation. Animals were weighed daily after induction of colitis.
    The study results revealed a clear reduction in the amount of weight loss in the animals
    pretreated with curcumin, according to Salh. Curcumin was found to improve intestinal cell
    function in DNB-induced colitis, while mucosal ulceration, thickening of the wall, and
    significant infiltration with inflammatory cells in the DNB-treated animals were all reduced in
    those animals pretreated with curcumin.
           The team also noted that when animals were pretreated with curcumin, there was a
    clear reduction in DNA binding, thus proving that curcumin does indeed inhibit NF-kappa B
    activation in the colon in vivo. These findings indicate for the first time that curcumin is able
    to impact on an important transcriptional mechanism in the gastrointestinal tract, they
    added.
    However Salh adds that the team is not entirely certain how curcumin achieves its effects.
    He therefore concludes that as it has been shown to possess free radical scavenging -
    antioxidant - properties in addition to its effects on the activation of NF-kappa B, its in vivo
    effects may well rely on a complementation of these two and other activities.
    Finally, although curcumin has been shown to be safe up to levels as high as 10 per cent
    (100,000 ppm), the researchers said it showed effectiveness at a concentration as low as
    0.25 per cent, a dose which was well tolerated with no reduction in dietary intake.
    The team's findings 'Curcumin Attenuates DNB-Induced Murine Colitis' appear in the July
    2003 edition of the American Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology.
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