Join dLife Today!
Get a Free A1C Home Test. Plus, get free recipes, newsletters, savings, and so much more!
Membership is FREE!



advertisement

A Ton of Bitter Melon Produces Sweet Results for Diabetes

Posted by dlife on Wed, Mar 26, 08, 13:01 PM 7 Comments

March 26, 2008 (EurekAlert) - Scientists have uncovered the therapeutic properties of bitter melon, a vegetable and traditional Chinese medicine, that make it a powerful treatment for Type 2 diabetes.Teams from the Garvan Institute of Medical Research and the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica pulped roughly a tonne of fresh bitter melon and extracted four very promising bioactive components. These four compounds all appear to activate the enzyme AMPK, a protein well known for regulating fuel metabolism and enabling glucose uptake. The results are published online today in the international journal Chemistry & Biology.

"We can now understand at a molecular level why bitter melon works as a treatment for diabetes," said Professor David James, Director of the Diabetes and Obesity Program at Garvan. "By isolating the compounds we believe to be therapeutic, we can investigate how they work together in our cells."

People with Type 2 diabetes have an impaired ability to convert the sugar in their blood into energy in their muscles. This is partly because they don't produce enough insulin, and partly because their fat and muscle cells don't use insulin effectively, a phenomenon known as 'insulin resistance'.

Exercise activates AMPK in muscle, which in turn mediates the movement of glucose transporters to the cell surface, a very important step in the uptake of glucose from the circulation into tissues in the body. This is a major reason that exercise is recommended as part of the normal treatment program for someone with Type 2 diabetes.

The four compounds isolated in bitter melon perform a very similar action to that of exercise, in that they activate AMPK.

Garvan scientists involved in the project, Drs Jiming Ye and Nigel Turner, both stress that while there are well known diabetes drugs on the market that also activate AMPK, they can have side effects.

"The advantage of bitter melon is that there are no known side effects," said Dr Ye. "Practitioners of Chinese medicine have used it for hundreds of years to good effect."

Garvan has a formal collaborative arrangement with the Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica. In addition to continuing to work together on the therapeutic potential of bitter melon, we will be exploring other Chinese medicines.

Professor Yang Ye, from the Shanghai Institute and a specialist in natural products chemistry, isolated the different fractions from bitter melon and identified the compounds of interest.

"Bitter melon was described as "bitter in taste, non-toxic, expelling evil heat, relieving fatigue and illuminating" in the famous Compendium of Materia Medica by Li Shizhen (1518-1593), one of the greatest physicians, pharmacologists and naturalists in China's history," said Professor Ye. "It is interesting, now that we have the technology, to analyse why it has been so effective."

"Some of the compounds we have identified are completely novel. We have elucidated the molecular structures of these compounds and will be working with our colleagues at Garvan to decipher their actions at a molecular level. We assume it's working through a novel pathway inside cells, and finding that pathway is going to be very interesting."

Comments

You are a good specialist in

You are a good specialist in this matter. At least what you write surely deserves attention. I'd like you to have a look at my creation search engine on torrent files and say what you really think about it. Thanks!

What about a type 2 turne

What about a type 2 turned type one?

What about how it will wo

What about how it will work?

Where can I find more inf

Where can I find more information regarding dosage/quantites, availability etc

I have type two diabetes

I have type two diabetes and I just read about fish oil tablets that it might effect readings is this true?

If you're on insulin and

If you're on insulin and a type 2, that does NOT make you a type one. If your doctor has run a test called a C-peptide and this shows you are making NO insulin then physiologically you may have "converted" to type 1, but for all intents & purposes are still considered type 2. Problem--if you're on insulin you're told you are type 1; WRONG.

Shirley: Nordic Naturals

Shirley: Nordic Naturals with lemon will help lower your cholesterol and triglycerides; my lab reslts have proven this. Diabetes & stress can cause increase in triglycerides---even when I'm sleeping. I know this now after many fasting blood samples. I also have IGA Nephropathy since 1983; diabetes came to me about 2004. My father passed on at 44 yo after massive heart attack---the cholesterol thing for me is hereditary. Nordic Naturals is expensive about $25 for 60 capsules, but it's high pharmacy grade; I tried a lesser expensive fish oil for 3 months---my labs came out terrible but the Doctor & I both knew what changed it. Also, Niaspan works to control triglycerides, but it has side effects and I had to quit taking it. The fish oil is good for my kidneys, my heart, my eyes (prescription went down from 7.25 to 6.75), brain, and not to forget your overall health. I can't stand to eat fish, that's why I had to have the lemon type. Anyway, Shirley, hope this helps! God Bless you & yours! Mark

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options