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Cinnamon spice Helps
Diabetics
Just half a teaspoon of cinnamon a day significantly reduces blood sugar
levels in diabetics, a new study has found. The effect, which can be produced
even by soaking a cinnamon stick your tea, could also benefit millions
of non-diabetics who have blood sugar problem but are unaware of it.
The discovery was initially made by accident, by Richard Anderson at the
US Department of Agriculture's Human Nutrition Research Center in Beltsville,
Maryland.
"We were looking at the effects of common foods on blood sugar,"
he told New Scientist. One was the American favourite, apple pie, which
is usually spiced with cinnamon. "We expected it to be bad. But it
helped," he says.
Sugars and starches in food are broken down into glucose, which then circulates
in the blood. The hormone insulin makes cells take in the glucose, to
be used for energy or made into fat.
But people with Type 1 diabetes do not produce enough insulin. Those with
Type 2 diabetes produce it, but have lost sensitivity to it. Even apparently
healthy people, especially if they are overweight, sedentary or over 25,
lose sensitivity to insulin. Having too much glucose in the blood can
cause serious long-term damage to eyes, kidneys, nerves and other organs.Molecular
mimic The active ingredient in cinnamon turned out to be a water-soluble
polyphenol compound called MHCP. In test tube experiments, MHCP mimics
insulin, activates its receptor, and works synergistically with insulin
in cells.
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To see if it would work in people, Alam Khan, who was a postdoctoral fellow
in Anderson's lab, organized a study in Pakistan. Volunteers with Type
2 diabetes were given one, three or six grams of cinnamon powder a day,
in capsules after meals.
All responded within weeks, with blood sugar levels that were on average
20 per cent lower than a control group. Some even achieved normal blood
sugar levels. Tellingly, blood sugar started creeping up again after the
diabetics stopped taking cinnamon.
The cinnamon has additional benefits. In the volunteers, it lowered blood
levels of fats and "bad" cholesterol, which are also partly
controlled by insulin. And in test tube experiments it neutralised free
radicals, damaging chemicals which are elevated in diabetics.Buns and
pies "I don't recommend eating more cinnamon buns, or even more apple
pie - there's too much fat and sugar," says Anderson. "The key
is to add cinnamon to what you would eat normally."
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