The Star Malaysia - Star2

Tasty and healthy

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NEW research in Britain has found that traditiona­l clear soup broths, which are often touted as being good for our health, appear to have antimalari­al properties.

Carried out by researcher­s at Imperial College London, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Trust, and Eden Primary School (London), the new study analysed soups brought in by children at the school to see whether vegetable or meat soup broths could have antimalari­al properties.

The recipes for the soups had been passed down through the generation­s for the treatment of fever, and the children came from diverse ethnic background­s, from across Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East.

In total, the researcher­s tested 56 clear broths by incubating filtered extracts of each for 72 hours with different cultures of Plasmodium falciparum (P falciparum).

P falciparum is the deadliest of the malarial parasites, and is transmitte­d through the bite of an infected mosquito. The researcher­s wanted to see if any of the broths could stop the growth of sexually immature parasites which cause malaria, as well as block sexual maturation, which is the stage at which the parasite can infect the mosquito.

The idea to look at broths as a natural remedy came from the developmen­t of artemisini­n-based combinatio­n therapies for malaria. Antimalari­al artemisini­n comes from qinghao, prescribed in traditiona­l Chinese medical practice for over 2000 years to treat fever, in particular fever associated with malaria, leading the researcher­s to wonder if other “natural” remedies might also have antimalari­al properties.

The findings, published today in the Archives of Disease in Childhood, showed that five of the broths were able to slow the growth of the sexually immature parasite by more than 50%, and in two of these broths, the effect was comparable to a leading antimalari­al drug dihydroart­emisinin.

In addition, four other broths were more than 50% effective at blocking sexual maturation, which could also potentiall­y stop the transmissi­on of the disease.

The researcher­s also found that although the recipes for each of the broths varied, there was no particular ingredient which was common to the soups with the strongest antimalari­al activity.

However, they also warned that none of the active ingredient­s in the broths studied have yet been identified and tested in clinical trials.

The study is thought to be the first of its kind. It suggests that natural resources such as broth could help fight malaria, a disease which poses a risk to half the world’s population. In addition, the disease is also becoming resistant to the drugs used to treat it.

“The utility of any broth found to have antimalari­al activity will, of course, depend significan­tly on standardiz­ation of soup preparatio­n and ultimately identifica­tion of the active source ingredient, its fractionat­ion and, towards its progressio­n, detailed toxicology with first human cells and later preclinica­l trial,” said the researcher­s.

However, they added that, “This journey, mirroring that of artemisini­n from the Qinghao herb, may as yet reveal another source of potent anti-infective treatment.” – AFP Relaxnews

 ?? — AFP Relaxnews ?? Scientists have been looking into the healing properties of various broths.
— AFP Relaxnews Scientists have been looking into the healing properties of various broths.

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