Tasty Curry Might Have a Fringe Benefit
                                      By 
                                        Kathleen Fackelmann 
                                      Five 
                                        years ago Darci Jayne hardly ever touched 
                                        a vegetable and pretty much lived on pizza, 
                                        pasta and fast food. 
                                      That 
                                        diet led to weight gain and health problems, 
                                        including severe joint pain. "I was 
                                        close to 200 pounds and getting scared," 
                                        she says. 
                                      By 
                                        cutting portion sizes she lost 50 pounds 
                                        but always felt as if she were on a diet. 
                                        Then Jayne took an Indian cooking class 
                                        that emphasized fresh vegetables and curry 
                                        spices. 
                                      She 
                                        began to whip up an Indian dinner once 
                                        or twice a week -- and soon she noticed 
                                        she wasn't always looking for a late-night 
                                        snack. And the curry in the food offered 
                                        her a bonus: It seemed to ease the pain 
                                        and swelling in her joints. 
                                      "I 
                                        have arthritis," says Jayne, 55. 
                                        "But 
                                        I'm moving better now."
                                      Preliminary 
                                        research suggests Jayne may be right. 
                                        A study in the November issue of Arthritis 
                                        & Rheumatism suggests turmeric, one 
                                        component of curry spice, almost completely 
                                        prevented joint swelling in rats with 
                                        arthritis. Other studies have suggested 
                                        that the spice could protect against diseases 
                                        such as heart disease, cancer and Alzheimer's, 
                                        a degenerative brain disease that afflicts 
                                        nearly 5 million people in the USA. 
                                      Rates 
                                        of Alzheimer's in India are about four 
                                        times lower than in the USA, says Gregory 
                                        Cole, a researcher at the University of 
                                        California-Los Angeles. His studies suggest 
                                        that curry contains a powerful substance 
                                        that might protect the brain from damage 
                                        that leads to Alzheimer's. 
                                      Surprising 
                                        findings in mice 
                                        Can scientists prove curry wards off such 
                                        diseases as Alzheimer's or cancer? Not 
                                        yet, says Bharat Aggarwal at the University 
                                        of Texas-Houston. But he says the growing 
                                        file on curry includes compelling evidence 
                                        gleaned from animal and human studies. 
                                        
                                      The 
                                        findings from Western science fit with 
                                        what traditional Indian healers have long 
                                        said about turmeric. "They call it 
                                        the spice of life," says P. Murali 
                                        Doraiswamy, an Alzheimer's expert at Duke 
                                        University in Durham, N.C. 
                                      For 
                                        centuries, doctors trained in Ayurvedic 
                                        medicine, a traditional medical system 
                                        in India, have turned to turmeric to treat 
                                        inflammatory diseases such as arthritis, 
                                        says Janet Funk, a researcher at the University 
                                        of Kansas. In the USA, many people with 
                                        arthritis take over-the-counter supplements 
                                        that contain curcumin, the active ingredient 
                                        in turmeric. 
                                      In 
                                        the November study, Funk and her colleagues 
                                        gave rats that were bred to develop rheumatoid 
                                        arthritis injections of turmeric. "The 
                                        turmeric almost completely prevented the 
                                        onset of arthritis," Funk says. The 
                                        spice also seemed to help stop joint destruction 
                                        in rats that had already started to develop 
                                        the disease, she says. 
                                      Curry 
                                        also may offer some protection against 
                                        cancer. "Indians eat from 100 to 
                                        200 milligrams of curry every day, and 
                                        that might be enough to prevent cancer," 
                                        says Aggarwal of the M.D. Anderson Cancer 
                                        Center at the University of Texas. 
                                      The 
                                        curcumin in curry seems to shut down genes 
                                        that trigger the development and the spread 
                                        of breast cancer, animal studies in Aggarwal's 
                                        lab suggest. And a preliminary human study 
                                        suggests curcumin supplements might -- 
                                        in a handful of cases -- be able to stabilize 
                                        pancreatic cancer, he says. 
                                      Epidemiology 
                                        studies in humans also have linked frequent 
                                        use of turmeric spice to lower rates of 
                                        breast, prostate and colon cancer, he 
                                        says. 
                                      Large 
                                        clinical studies still needed 
                                        Other research suggests curry might shield 
                                        the brain from Alzheimer's, Cole says. 
                                        
                                        The studies on curry and Alzheimer's include: 
                                        
                                        
                                        *A test-tube study by researchers at UCLA 
                                        in October showed that curcumin could 
                                        help clear the human brain of toxic protein 
                                        deposits thought to cause the memory loss 
                                        and confusion of Alzheimer's. 
                                      *A 
                                        study of more than 1,000 older men in 
                                        Singapore last year found that those who 
                                        ate lots of curry-spiced food did better 
                                        on memory tests than those who rarely 
                                        ate the spice. 
                                        
                                        The findings from Singapore suggest curry 
                                        may help keep the aging brain in top shape. 
                                        But to get the proof that curcumin fights 
                                        cancer or Alzheimer's or arthritis, researchers 
                                        will have to conduct large clinical trials, 
                                        Cole says, and those studies will be expensive 
                                        and take years to complete. 
                                      Americans 
                                        don't need to wait for the proof on curry 
                                        to enjoy a diet that includes more of 
                                        this spice, says Alamelu Vairavan, co-author 
                                        of the book Healthy South Indian Cooking. 
                                        "You don't need to gulp supplements," 
                                        she says, adding that cooks can find turmeric 
                                        in Indian specialty shops and in most 
                                        grocery stores. 
                                        
                                        Americans should give Indian food a try, 
                                        Vairavan says. "This kind of food 
                                        is very tasty and satisfying.
                                      "Eating 
                                        more Indian food has worked for Jayne, 
                                        who lives with her family in a small town 
                                        outside Milwaukee. A family physician 
                                        who recently retired because of disabling 
                                        arthritis pain, Jayne says she knows there's 
                                        no hard evidence of curry's health benefits. 
                                        But that won't stop her from enjoying 
                                        a lunch of tuna masala or an Indian stir-fry 
                                        for dinner. She says the food seems to 
                                        warm her joints and helps keep her in 
                                        a size 8 dress. 
                                        
                                        "You can't argue with success," 
                                        she says. 
                                      Source: 
                                        USA TODAY