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Spoonful of Cinnamon
Helps Treat Diabetes
People with diabetes can help keep their
bodies healthy by simply adding a dash of spice to their diet,
new research reports.
In a study, diabetics who incorporated
one gram -- equivalent to less than one-quarter teaspoon -- of
cinnamon per day for 40 days into their normal diets experienced
a decrease in levels of blood sugar, cholesterol and blood fats.
And for people with diabetes, the
less of those substances in the body, the better.
Type 2 diabetes arises when the
body loses sensitivity to insulin, a hormone that shuttles the
sugars from food into body cells to be used for energy. As a result,
the amount of sugar, or glucose, in the blood remains high, leading
to fatigue and blurred vision. Over the long term, excess blood
glucose can increase the risk of heart disease, kidney failure
and blindness.
The current findings suggest that
a small amount of cinnamon can help protect diabetics from these
and other potential complications of their condition, study author
Dr. Richard A. Anderson of the Beltsville Human Nutrition Research
Center in Maryland said.
Diabetics could add a dash of cinnamon
to their morning servings of coffee, orange juice or cereal, Anderson
noted. "You can also make a cinnamon tea by simply boiling water
with stick cinnamon," he suggested.
Anderson noted that cinnamon may
also help stave off the onset of type 2 diabetes in people at
risk of the condition.
He added that cinnamon contains
some substances that can be toxic in high amounts, so people should
be sure not to get too much of a good thing. "Certainly, a gram
per day is not a high amount," he reassured.
During the study, Anderson and
his colleagues asked 60 people with type 2 diabetes to consume
1, 3, or 6 grams of cinnamon each day for 40 days, or the equivalent
amount of wheat flour, as a placebo. Both the cinnamon and wheat
flour were administered in capsule form.
Reporting in the journal Diabetes
Care, Anderson and his team found that all cinnamon-takers experienced
a drop in blood levels of glucose, fats and cholesterol by up
to 30 percent. No change was seen in the people taking placebo
capsules.
Anderson explained that cinnamon
contains compounds that help make insulin more efficient, improving
the hormone's ability to bring glucose to the cells that need
it.
As an added bonus, cinnamon contains
virtually no calories, Anderson said, allowing diabetics to add
zest to their meals without adding to their waistlines.
Cinnamon contains less than 3 calories
per gram, "negligible in the total dietary intake," Anderson said.
Previous research has shown that
cinnamon appears to help fat cells recognize and respond to insulin.
In test tube and in animal studies, the spice increased glucose
metabolism by about 20 times.
SOURCE: Diabetes Care, December
2003.
Reference
Source 89
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