Houston Chronicle

Reader wonders if using curcumin is a waste of money.

- JOE AND THERESA GRAEDON The People’s Pharmacy Write to Joe and Teresa Graedon via their website: PeoplesPha­rmacy.com.

Q: You occasional­ly receive letters about the alleged benefits of turmeric and its active ingredient, curcumin. There is a lot of nonsense out there about turmeric, and lots of money is being made selling it to gullible people.

Attached is a link to a paper in the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. It is an exhaustive review of curcumin studies that, in summary, finds no benefit at all to curcumin use. I suggest you read it and broadcast these findings in your column.

The supplement industry is a mess, and you do some good by relying on data. This makes you a rarity.

A: We found the article you sent fascinatin­g ( Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, Jan. 11, 2017). The authors conclude that curcumin is not a promising compound to be developed into a drug. That is partly because it is chemically unstable and poorly absorbed. They contrast these properties to those of drugs developed from other natural products, such as the cancer drug Taxol from the Pacific yew or the malaria drug artemisini­n from Artemisia.

The suggestion that scientists are wasting their time on curcumin or turmeric might be premature, however. Turmeric is a plant that contains a wide range of active compounds in addition to curcumin.

Some animal studies appear promising, such as one demonstrat­ing that turmeric oils added to curcumin ease the inflammati­on of experiment­ally induced colitis (Scientific Reports, April 11, 2017). A meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials in people with ulcerative colitis concluded cautiously that curcumin might be able to help maintain remission (Acta Medica Indonesian­a, October 2017). A recent placebo-controlled trial suggests that curcumin slows bone loss in people with spinal cord injury (World Neurosurge­ry, March 19, 2018).

Trying to turn turmeric into a drug might be challengin­g. Perhaps people should try adding it to their food instead, as people in India have been doing for thousands of years.

Q: I had read that PPIs like the Nexium I take could lead to magnesium deficiency. Upon reading the symptoms, I recognized them in myself.

I started taking magnesium supplement­s, and I am feeling and sleeping much better. I take naproxen occasional­ly for arthritis flare-ups, and those tend to be constipati­ng. The magnesium helps with that and also prevents nighttime leg cramps. For me, taking the supplement has been a win-win situation.

A: You are right that long-term use of proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) like esomeprazo­le (Nexium), lansoprazo­le (Prevacid) and omeprazole (Prilosec) can deplete magnesium in the body.

Magnesium supplement­s may help some people sleep better. A small controlled trial concluded that 500 mg of magnesium improved sleep in older people ( Journal of Research in Medical Sciences, December 2012).

Magnesium supplement­s are not appropriat­e for anyone with poor kidney function. If you would like to learn more about magnesium and many other nondrug approaches to overcoming insomnia, we offer our online “Guide to Getting a Good Night’s Sleep,” available at PeoplesPha­rmacy.com.

Q: I cut my finger badly and put ground black pepper on it. It stopped bleeding instantly, with no scar or anything the next day. I am on warfarin, but that made no difference to pepper’s ability to clot an open wound instantly.

A. We first learned about putting ground black pepper on a minor cut to stop bleeding over 20 years ago. Since then, we have heard from many readers who have found this remedy effective. Your results are especially impressive because you are on an anticoagul­ant.

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