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Cardio-Vascular Diabetes Functional Foods

Garlic Oil May Slash Cardiovascular Risks Among Diabetics

13 years, 6 months ago

8512  0
Posted on Oct 15, 2010, 6 a.m.

Taiwanese researchers find that garlic oil may help to prevent cardiomyopathy, a type of heart disease that is a leading cause of death in people with diabetes.

People with diabetes have at least twice the risk of death from heart disease as non-diabetics, and cardiomyopathy is a type of heart disease that causes inflammation and weakening of the heart muscle tissue – increasing the risk of cardiovascular-related death among diabetics.  Wei-Wen Kuo, from China Medical University (Taiwan), and colleagues conducted a test among laboratory animals modeling the diabetes condition, giving them either garlic oil or corn oil.  Animals given garlic oil experienced beneficial changes associated with protection against heart damage. The changes appeared to be associated with the potent antioxidant properties of garlic oil, with researchers positing the effect as a result of over twenty substances in garlic oil that may be responsible for it.  The team concludes that: “Garlic oil possesses significant potential for protecting hearts from diabetes-induced cardiomyopathy.”

Hsiu-Chung Ou, Bor-Show Tzang, Mu-Hsin Chang, Cheng-Tzu Liu, Hui Wen Liu, Chong-Kuei Lii, Da-Tian Bau, Pei-Min Chao, and Wei-Wen Kuo.  “Cardiac Contractile Dysfunction and Apoptosis in Streptozotocin-Induced Diabetic Rats Are Ameliorated by Garlic Oil Supplementation.”  J. Agric. Food Chem., 2010, 58 (19), pp 10347–10355, September 13, 2010.

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