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nv03101Blood Sugar Control |
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CINNAMON
EXTRACT
100 tablets
500 mg each
Inactive ingredients:
Dicalcium phosphate, microcrystalline cellulose,
Silicon dioxide, Stearic Acid, Magnesium
Stearate
You may also be interested in the combination
formula
GLUCONTROL, which contains cinnamon |
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Read the latest USDA research on
Cinnamon and Diabetes here. The USDA is
actually applying for a use patent on the compounds in
Cinnamon Extract,
which shows how impressed they are, but makes me wonder
what the Government is doing trying to patent a natural
health enhancer!! See more below. Here is a
quote from the article" Several compounds isolated from
cinnamon may one day become the key natural ingredients
in a new generation of products aimed at lowering blood
sugar levels. Agricultural Research Service scientists
extracted the complexes from cinnamon bark.
In test tube assays, the compounds, called polyphenolic
polymers, increased sugar metabolism in fat cells
twenty fold. Millions of people have impaired sugar and
fat metabolism, which can lead to Type 2 diabetes and
cardiovascular disease."
The Vitamin Lady®
writes about
Insulin Resistance and
Diabetes
This report states the following:
Agricultural Research Service
scientists are seeking a patent on compounds extracted
from cinnamon that make cells much more sensitive to
insulin in test tube studies.
Nearly 6 percent of the U.S. population—15.7 million
people—have diabetes, and one-third of them don't even
know it. The large majority of diabetes cases are type
2—the kind that usually begins in midlife. It is
characterized by the failure of body cells to recognize
and respond to insulin as well as they once did. This
leads to elevated blood sugar because insulin's job is
to prompt cells to take in glucose.
Another 13.4 million people have elevated fasting blood
sugar levels below the threshold indicating diabetes but
are at high risk for developing the disease. Lack of
exercise, being overweight, and genetic predisposition
are often cited as contributing factors involved in the
high incidence of diabetes in western countries.
Worldwide, this silent killer claims more than 100
million lives annually. It is the seventh leading cause
of death in the United States. And for many people,
drugs or other forms of treatment are unavailable.
The search for a natural way to keep blood sugar levels
normal began more than a decade ago when ARS chemist
Richard A. Anderson and co-workers at the Beltsville
(Maryland) Human Nutrition Research Center assayed
plants and spices used in folk medicine. They found that
a few spices—especially cinnamon—made fat cells much
more responsive to insulin, the hormone that regulates
sugar metabolism and thus controls the level of glucose
in the blood.
With help from Walter F. Schmidt in ARS's Nuclear
Magnetic Resonance Laboratory at Beltsville, the
researchers identified the compounds in cinnamon
responsible for its activity. The patent application
names Anderson, his co-workers C. Leigh Broadhurst and
Marilyn M. Polansky, and Schmidt as the inventors.
Cinnamon is among the world's most frequently consumed
spices and is relatively inexpensive. Anderson and
colleagues found that its most active compound—methylhydroxy
chalcone polymer (MHCP)—increased glucose metabolism
roughly 20-fold in a test tube assay of fat cells.
The researchers tested 50 some plant extracts and found
that none of them came close to MHCP's level of
affecting glucose metabolism—a process in which cells
convert glucose to energy. If in future research MHCP
proves to do the same in people, it might provide a
natural remedy against diabetes.
What's more, MHCP prevented the formation of damaging
oxygen radicals in a blood platelet assay.
"That could be an important side benefit," notes
Anderson. "Other studies have shown that antioxidant
supplements can reduce or slow the progression of
various complications of diabetes."
MHCP is the first chalcone, a type of polyphenol or
flavonoid, reported in cinnamon. MHCP and other active
compounds are water soluble and are not found in the
spice oils sold as food additives.
Anderson pointed out that the water extract reduced
blood pressure in hypertensive rats even before it
increased insulin sensitivity. And compounds in a water
extract are less likely to be toxic in large doses than
those in an oil extract, he says.—By Judy McBride,
Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
This research is part of Human Nutrition, an ARS
National Program (#107) described on the World Wide Web
at http://www.nps.ars.usda.gov/programs/appvs.htm.
Richard A. Anderson is at the USDA-ARS Nutrient
Requirements and Functions Laboratory, Bldg. 307, Room
224, 10300 Baltimore Ave., Beltsville, MD 20705-2350;
phone (301) 504-8091, fax (301) 504-9062.
"Cinnamon Extracts Boost Insulin Sensitivity" was
published in the July 2000 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.
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Keywords: cinnamon diabetes,
cinnamon insulin resistance, cinnamon extract,
cinnamon extract 500 mg, cinnamon insulin usda |
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