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Garlic
Tackles Child Infections
South
African researchers may have found a simple and effective way
of tackling dangerous infections - garlic.
The Child's
Health Institute in Cape Town has found that garlic has antifungal
and antibiotic powers.
Sid Cywes,
Professor of paediatrics at the Red Cross Children's Hospital,
discovered the garlic's power by chance while indulging in his
favourite pastime, breeding and hybridising disas, an orchid type
plant common on Table Mountain and the environs of Cape Town.
The beakers
storing his cuttings became infected with a fungus. Consulting
an old reference book, he tried garlic solution to control it.
The effect
was astonishing and he immediately wanted to try it on human infections.
He and colleague
Peter de Vet are now ready to try the formula on the hospital
ward.
Mr de Vet
said: "I make it two parts water to one part garlic, and then
put it in the centrifuge to get rid of the lumps."
"The aqueous
solution is then administered to babies and children either mixed
in with their milk bottle or some orange juice."
In the burns
unit, two millilitres of the garlic solution are administered
every four to six hours.
They don't
like it, sometimes they complain about the taste or the smell,
but there are no other side effects
Sister Avril
Rivonia, who works on the unit, said: "They don't like it, sometimes
they complain about the taste or the smell, but there are no other
side effects."
The garlic
is used in conjunction with antibiotic creams in the burns unit,
as it has yet to undergo a full clinical trial, although Mr de
Vet says the results in reducing infection have been very encouraging.
"We use it
to treat children that are resistant to multi-action antibiotics,
and children that have been on antibiotics for a long time and
have developed oral thrush, with great success."
It is even
proving to be effective on streptococcus infections, something
that could have profound implications in a country where incidence
of HIV/AIDs is one of the highest in the world.
Mr de Vet
is hoping to start full clinical trials on HIV babies with candida
infections in the near future. However, those who hope that an
extra bit of garlic sauce on their spaghetti might help will be
disappointed.
The active
property of garlic, allicin, is only released on crushing and
is destroyed by the heating process, so the garlic must be taken
in its raw and somewhat smelly form.
Reference
Source 99
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