Chocolate May Hold Cure for Coughs
An ingredient in chocolate could be
used to stop persistent coughs and lead to more effective medicines,
researchers said.
The study found that theobromine,
found in cocoa, was nearly a third more effective in stopping
persistent coughs than codeine, currently considered the best
cough medicine.
The researchers, from Imperial
College London (ICL), said the discovery could lead to more effective
cough treatments.
"While persistent coughing is not
necessarily harmful it can have a major impact on quality of life,
and this discovery could be a huge step forward in treating this
problem," said Professor Peter Barnes of ICL and Royal Brompton
Hospital.
Ten healthy volunteers were either
given theobromine, codeine or a dummy pill during the trial, which
also involved Royal Brompton Hospital and St Bartholomew's Hospital.
To measure the effect of the different
pill the researchers measured levels of capsaicin, which is used
in research to cause coughing and as an indicator for the effectiveness
of medicines.
The team found when the volunteers
were given theobromine, the concentration of capsaicin needed
to produce a cough was around a third higher than in the placebo
group.
When they were given codeine they
needed only marginally higher levels of capsaicin to cause a cough
compared with the placebo.
The researchers, writing in the
online FASEB Journal, said that theobromine worked by suppressing
vagus nerve activity, which is responsible for causing coughing.
They also found that unlike standard
cough treatments, theobromine caused no adverse effects on the
cardiovascular or central nervous systems, such as drowsiness.
Reference
Source 89
November 22, 2004
For
more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|