Courting the CRANBERRY
Science restores an old medicine.
by Bruce Burnett
By the 1960s, when doctors were dispensing antibiotics like
candy, the use of cranberries to counteract UTIs had fallen
out of favor. Researchers claimed that tests showed that
the acidifying effect of cranberries and cranberry juice
was inadequate to prevent infection.
However, as late as 1994, a Harvard University study
involving 153 elderly women with repeated UTIs showed that
regular consumption of cranberry juice cocktail decreased
the frequency of infections. Recently, in a clinical trial
yet to be published from Weber State university in Utah, a
concentrated cranberry product in dehydrated, capsule form
(equivalent to 12 to 16 six ounce glasses of cranberry
juice a day) was found to be equally effective. Some health
professionals recommend the capsules over cranberry juice
because of the sugar content of cranberry cocktail and the
unpalatable taste of the unsweetened juice.
For many years it was be lieved that cranberries prevented
or cured UTIs by acidifying the urine, thus creating an
inhospitable environment for the Escherichia coli
(E. coli) bacteria usually responsible for UTIs. However, a
benchmark study by a team of scientists at Rutgers State
University, published in the New England Journal of
Medicine on October 6, 1998, disclosed that condensed
tannins, called proanthocyanidins, are the compounds in
cranberries responsible for preventing and treating UTIs.
They work not by making the urine more acid, but by
preventing the bacteria from binding to the wall of the
urinary tract. This inability to adhere renders the
bacteria harmless. The researchers used a process called
bioassay-directed fractiona tion to isolate the compounds,
a process that took almost five years to complete.
In addition to its principal role in combating UTIs,
researchers are finding that cranberries may also have
broad-spectrum antibiotic value against E. coli and other
harmful bacteria. In a study conducted at the University of
California at Irvine, two batches of soy broth, one with
cranberry juice concentrate and one without, were incubated
for a 24-hour period. According to the research letter
published in The Journal of the American Medical
Association, the broth containing the cranberry juice
showed a significantly lower growth of bacteria than the
one without.
Dentists in Israel report that cranberries and cranberry
juice contain specific compounds that can block the
formation of dental plaque and potentially lessen tooth
decay and gum disease. Test tube research at the University
of Wisconsin indicates that cranberry juice may help keep
LDL cholesterol (the bad type of cholesterol) from
oxidizing. If this is true, it means that the consumption
of cranberries or cranberry juice will help prevent the
buildup of cholesterol plaque in arteries, the major cause
of heart disease and stroke.
Cranberries are an excellent source of vitamins A and C and
potassium. Although cranberry juice contains some tannins,
it will not interfere with the absorption of minerals.
Furthermore, cranberry juice consumption appears to enhance
the absorption of vitamin B12, which is good news for older
people with too little stomach acid, or those taking acid
suppressors, who may find that their ability to absorb the
vitamin impaired.
RECOMMENDED DOSAGE
Health professionals recommend one capsule or tablet of a
concentrated cranberry juice extract (400 mg) two to four
times per day. Two to three large (16 oz) glasses of
cranberry juice may also be taken, but avoid the highly
sugared cranberry "cocktails." It's hard to drink too much
cranberry juice. The only contraindication is that diarrhea
may develop with a very high consumption, such as three to
four liters per day.