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Quercetin Fights the H1N1 Flu

    Back in September, 2008, a study was published about how quercetin improved the ability of mice to have a reduced susceptibility to contracting the flu. The study was published by The American Physiological Society. Research data produced by the study showed that stressful exercise increased the probability of mice in the research group contracting the flu. But if the mice ingested quercetin, the mice did not become sick with the flu. Quercetin is a naturally occurring substance found in fruits and vegetables. Quercetin is a close relative to resveratrol, and can be found in onions, red wine, blueberries, tea, grapes and broccoli. Earlier research has shown quercetin to have anti-viral properties in cell culture experiments and some animal studies. None of the earlier studies examined the flu or how it could be treated. Read the rest of this entry »

The Brain Mediates Resveratrol’s Anti-diabetic Actions

Resveratrol, a bioflavonoid, improves diabetes in diabetic rodents when they ingest it orally. This has been substantiated by various research studies. But there was very little known how these beneficial changes are mediated in rodent’s body. Now there is evidence from a new study that answers that question. Endocrinology, journal of The Endocrinology Society, reports the brain has a key role in mediating resveratrol’s anti-diabetic actions. This finding is potentially pointing the direction for future orally-delivered diabetes medications which target the brain. Read the rest of this entry »

The Brain, Resveratrol and Diabetes

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center conducted a research study that found resveratrol lowered blood sugar and improved insulin levels when the resveratrol was injected directly into the brains of mice fed a very high calorie diet. This finding indicates the brain plays a key role in resveratrol’s positive effect on diabetes. It also indicates the benefits could occur independently of diet and body weight.

The research study’s data gives strong evidence that the brain has a principle role in resveratrol’s positive effect on diabetes and that this positive influence could happen independently of diet or weight. If this data is correct it could lead to a brand new type 2 diabetes treatment that would target the brain. Unfortunately, red wine is not likely to improve blood sugar and insulin levels because resveratrol does not cross the blood-brain barrier very easily. Dr. Coppari, member of the research team, stated that drinking red wine is not likely to improve blood sugar. It would not be practical for anyone to drink enough red wine to get the brain to accumulate the amount of resveratrol delivered in the study. It would take many bottles of wine and that would be very unhealthy. Read the rest of this entry »

DISCLAIMER: I am not a Doctor and do not give medical advice; this is a news report and cannot substitute for the advice of a medical professional.