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    <title>Ginger quells nausea from chemotherapy - Lifestyle of Health and Sustainability - tribe.net</title>
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      <title>Ginger quells nausea from chemotherapy</title>
      <link>http://lohas.tribe.net/thread/79a44f08-8d8a-44f5-9bd8-d33a9ed8548f#b5a743c5-1cb6-486b-8f33-4e954a695640</link>
      <description>Taking the supplements before chemotherapy may be key to success&#xD;
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Ginger capsules can help ease nausea from chemotherapy, according to the largest study of its kind of the folk remedy.&#xD;
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About 70 per cent of people with cancer who receive chemotherapy complain of nausea and vomiting, the researchers said.&#xD;
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While there are drugs to effectively control vomiting, nausea is often worse because it lingers, said the study lead's author, Julie Ryan of the University of Rochester in New York.&#xD;
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In a placebo-controlled, double-blind study of 644 cancer patients, those who took lower doses of ginger supplements showed a 40 per reduction in nausea levels compared with those who took dummy capsules.&#xD;
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"We were slightly beside ourselves," said Ryan, who will present the findings at the American Society of Clinical Oncology's annual meeting in Orlando, Fla., on May 30.&#xD;
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People with cancer may cut their treatments short or refuse chemo because of the nausea, according to the society.&#xD;
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While ginger has long been touted for morning sickness and motion sickness, studies have shown mixed results.&#xD;
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Pre-empting nausea&#xD;
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The latest trial suggested timing may be key.&#xD;
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Unlike earlier studies in which patients waited until their treatment day to start taking ginger, in this experiment participants started taking the capsules three days beforehand.&#xD;
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"It was just a different way of thinking to treat nausea, to try and pre-empt it," Ryan said.&#xD;
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About two-thirds of the study participants had breast cancer and the rest had other forms of the disease.&#xD;
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Participants were given one of three doses of ginger extract (0.5, 1 and 1.5 grams) or dummy capsules along with standard anti-vomiting drugs. They rated their nausea levels on a seven-point scale at various times of day during chemotherapy treatment and three days after.&#xD;
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No side-effects reported&#xD;
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Those receiving 0.5 gram or 1 gram of ginger showed the best results, with no side-effects reported.&#xD;
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It could be that earlier absorption of ginger into the body may have anti-inflammatory effects, Ryan proposed.&#xD;
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The researchers used capsules containing concentrated, purified ginger extract. It is not known whether ginger teas or powdered ginger spice could also help, since they were not tested.&#xD;
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The American Cancer Society warns people should talk to their doctor before trying ginger because it can interfere with blood clotting during cancer treatment or surgery.&#xD;
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The U.S. National Cancer Institute paid for the study. The researchers had no ties to the manufacturer of the ginger capsules, Aphios Corp.&#xD;
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Source: http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2009/05/15/ginger-chemotherapy-nausea.html</description>
      <pubDate>Sat, 20 Jun 2009 18:03:55 GMT</pubDate>
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      <dc:creator>Sinja</dc:creator>
      <dc:date>2009-06-20T18:03:55Z</dc:date>
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