|
RAW Garlic For Parasites and Viral Infections
By: DR. MERCOLA
The following article is abstracted from the European
producers of a freeze-dried garlic preparation that is used for the animal
industry. It is a translation from German so the grammar is not terrific
in some areas. The article explains why nearly every commercial garlic
preparation that you purchase is virtually worthless. If you are going to
use garlic you need to use fresh RAW garlic.--Dr. Mercola
When we talk about allicin there is a group of compounds
that are formed when you crush the garlic clove which are called the
thiosulphanates. Of the thiosulphanates, allicin is the dominant
one. About 70 to 80% of the
thiosulphates is allicin.
We tend to talk about allicin as the antimicrobial agent but
there is other thiosulphates in there that are also antimicrobials, but much
less work is being done on them. And this is why we use the whole clove
rather than trying to synthesize things like allicin.
Enteroguard
The developers call it a new antimicrobials complex for the
feed industry. They developed Enteroguard from two active natural
ingredients to replace the use of antibiotics at low levels that are
incorporated in animal feed. Feed like pig feed, poultry fee, milk
replacement for calves, because we've known for a long time and it is been
recognized that having these antibiotics in feed at
low levels is causing resistance problems in the human population.
So it is this cross resistance in
there.
Antibiotics like Virginiamycin, Tylosiin, Spiramycin have
been used at low levels in the feed as growth promoters simply in there to
promote growth of the animal. But these growth promoters belong to a family
of antibiotics of which there is a human equivalent. So Virginiamycin is a
Streptogramin in the antibiotics category. An example of this on the human
side is synercid.
So the possibility then or the potential then is the
cross resistance into the human population where you build up a
reservoir of organisms that then have resistance.
So in Europe in January of 1999, these six growth
promoters were banned across the whole of the EEC. They could not be
used as growth promoters. They allowed them four months into which to work
out their stocks, then that was it.
There are still left two, that they are trying to get rid of
but the main grouping is gone. At that stage people became interested in our
equivalent to see if it would work in this big feed industry where they
produce one half to one million tons of feed at a time. And looking for that
growth enhancement of the animals as well as some disease protection in
there. That is where we came in.
Enteroguard is a combination of two
potent plant derived antimicrobials.
And what I would like to do is to take you through
individually the two active ingredients in there in terms of why we selected
them and what are known about them. The first one is allicin from garlic and
I'll come on to that one in a minute, but the second one is also a natural
and it's cinnamaldehyde from the oil of cinnamon.
The researchers first came across allicin about 10 years
ago. They screened over 200 natural plant substances for antimicrobials
activity. They determined allicin from garlic to be a potent sulfur
containing antimicrobial. Its chemical name is thiosulphonate. Its only
found in small concentrations in a group of food plants called the Allium
group which contains onions as well as garlic. But the largest concentration
of alliin is actually found in garlic which is why they selected garlic as
the source of allicin.
This is the structure of allicin or diallyl thiosulphonate.
In some ways it almost resembles an antibiotic- two cysteine derived
molecules on the ends, but it is this S-S double bond which is the very
potent part of the molecule that gives it its very strong antimicrobials
activity.
Why Do They Actually Freeze Dry The
Garlic?
This comes down to the fact that if you take a garlic clove
and you peel it very carefully and you smell it. There is very little smell.
But as soon as you crush it...boom! You get an instantaneous smell. This is
a clean smell, that is allicin that is produced.
And the reason is that in garlic itself you don't find
allicin but what you do find is a precursor molecule called alliin. And
alliin is found within the garlic clove within the mesophyl cells and also
in the garlic clove you then find around the phloem in the cells around the
vascular bundle you find an enzyme called alliinase.
And these two are physically separated within the cell. When
you crush it these two come into contact and immediately the combination
of the two produce allicin, and the other thiosulphonates.
Thiosulphonates As A Group Are
Antimicrobials
Allicin constitutes between 70 to
80% of those thiosulphonates because they providethe total
antimicrobial activity. One interesting thing is that the amount of enzyme
is almost the same as the amount of alliin. This is very unusual because
enzyme systems usually require very little enzyme to make a conversion. But
in garlic it is absolutely stocked with the enzyme.
So the same amount of enzyme there is, is equivalent to is
alliin; which is one of the reasons you get that instantaneous conversion.
And the conversion of all the alliin to allicin in the garlic occur within
20 seconds. When you crush it.
As far as the plant is concerned, the plant uses this as an
antimicrobials because you can imagine the garlic clove which becomes the
seed of the plant. If it is invaded by bacteria or a single cell pathogen
will start to break down the cells. So when the cells start to break down
you get alliin and alliinase coming together locally with a little puff of
allicin and boom you knock out the protozoa or bacteria or yeast.
The developers import garlic from China as the soil is very
rich in sulfur there, which contributes to increase activity. The product
has been analyzed at the University of Bonn in Germany which found one of
the highest garlic concentrate in tems of alliin content.
Imported Frozen Garlic From China
They make sure it raised in an area and a way that gives it
the highest alliin content, but they then hand peel the garlic so in the
fields there are 700 women sitting at tables gently peeling the cloves by
hand. Now you could get a machine to do this but it would cause too much
allicin to be released through cell damage which causes the alliin to react
with the alliinase.
Then allicin over a period of days will actually start to
break down. So after it is hand peeled they blast freeze it. It is frozen
very quickly. It goes into these big stores where they pump cold air into it
at -30 degrees and they are frozen solid. It is then imported from China to
a factory in UK as frozen garlic cloves.
It is shipped in 12-ton containers where they keep it frozen
all the way through. They then take those frozen cloves and put them through
a machine that chops them three or four times, some of the small cloves are
not chopped at all. This chopping just helps in moisture removal. Then this
garlic then goes into a freeze-drying facility.
It is put into trays and put straight into the freeze dryer.
And the freeze dryer removes all that moisture in a virtual vacuum. So in a
vacuum at -30 degrees C the moisture doesn't actually turn into a liquid. It
goes straight off as moisture to gas. It is rather like frozen CO2. When
that is warmed it doesn't go a liquid phase it comes immediately into a gas
phase.
They use this process as a gentle method of removing water.
Now with the moisture removed, the alliin and the alliinase are separated
and totally inactive because they can only react in the presence of
moisture. So they can then take the dried clove out of the freeze dryer and
mill them into a powder.
If the garlic were milled while the moisture content was
still high in the garlic then they would react to produce allicin and the
allicin would disappear in a few days. This is the problem with all the
garlic products that are on the market. There is no allicin left.
For when they milled their product there was moisture in it.
When Enteroguard is taken in by the animal or the human as it is rehydrated
as it makes its way down the digestive track is becomes active the alliin
reacts with the alliinnase and allicin is produced just where you want it in
the gut.
The allicin appears to be effective
against
-
E. coli.
-
Staphylococcus aureus
-
Clostridium perfringens
-
Salmonella spp.
However the lactic organisms and the enterococci are
virtually unaffected by garlic. Why is this good? Because this group
contains the beneficial bacteria in the gut. So here you have an organism
that is anti yeast and anti fungi, anti gram negative and gram positive
bacteria, and yet against a group of very beneficial organism it doesn't
have any activity.
Not only does garlic kill pathogenic bacteria but it also
kills rotavirus infection which is responsible for many cases of diarrhea.
At concentrations of 20 parts per million garlic totally protects these
mammalian cells from being invaded pathogenic viruses.
It has also been helpful in protoza infections like
Cryptosporidium parvum. It was first discovered in the USA in 1971 in the
following 22 years in has become absolutely endemic on the dairy farms; 90%
of all dairy farms are infected by Crypto. And as soon as you get 100+ dairy
cows on a unit all of them are infected.
Every in these cow/calve operations where the calves are
raised with their mothers out in the fields, 40% of them are infected
because the heifers before they are weaned they shed these oocysts through
their saliva into the pastures and these little oocyst just stay around and
the next generation gets them.
It is the single major cause of
contaminating the human water supply.
The Enteroguard is now sold to vets in the USA for Rotavirus
and Crypto.
During the First World War, garlic was the major battle
field wound dressing. They made a paste of it and rapped wounds with it. So
when the antibiotics were developed all the publications on garlic stopped.
Allicin is active interracially in the gut and once absorbed
it is quickly converted into diallyl suphides in the liver. Diallyl
sulphides have low antimicrobials activity and these are then expressed
through the urine, through the breath and through the skin. The diallyl
sulphides is the smell you get when you cook garlic or when you eat lots of
garlic.
But the allicin is the clean smell you get when you crush it
which is a different smell than the diallyl sulphides which is stronger in
smell and what you get when you cook it. Allicin is a cascade molecule and
as it breaks down there have been 150 different breakdown molecules from a
molecule of allicin. So you get allicin slowly degrading into other
molecules which themselves react with each other to form molecules which may
be very active against protozoa like giardia and trichomonous.
Garlic also appears to be very active against
Helicobacter pylori.
Toxicity
You would have to eat ten to twenty grams per kilo weight
which means you would have to eat a trunk load of garlic to have any toxic
effect.
Mode Of Action
How does it kill bacteria cells? This is what is called the
macroeffect. What we know is that allicin disrupts the cell membrane
biosynthesis. It inhibits DNA polymerases and inhibits RNA synthesis. So it
is disrupting the whole enzyme system that is responsible for cell
replication.
Allicin also destroys the SH groups in proteins. These
sulfur containing groups are found in thiol enzymes which are a large part
of the physiology of lower organisms- bacteria, virus, and protozoa.
Antibiotics tend to target a single metabolic pathway in an organism and
take apart this pathway. Now as far as the bacteria is concerned a single
gene mutation with just the random mutations that go on all the time, can
often find an alternative way from getting from A to B. When an antibiotic
destroys that ability from getting from A to B the cell is killed.
So when this cell has a successful mutation then resistance
is accomplished. When you take something like an allicin which is affecting
groups which are found in many enzymes in the lower organisms, they are
being destroyed.
But these enzymes are building proteins that go into the
cell membrane, or proteins are part of other enzyme systems that are then
used in the DNA polymerase and the RNA polymerase synthesis system. And they
are the building blocks of all sorts of proteins. Now it is impossible for
the bacteria to spontaneously find its way around all these different enzyme
systems and to find alternative ways of doing it. So they can't get
resistance with natural compounds like allicin.
Resistance to the allicin in garlic can't be induced. When
you think about it, is makes sense for as far as a plant is concerned it
just needs a simple mechanism which will kill microorganisms without
allowing them to develop resistance for if they develop resistance them the
plant will be destroyed. It would no longer be around after 10,000 years.
Garlic is around so there are no resistant pathogens that have developed
that are resistant to allicin.
Why Doesn't The Garlic Harm
Mammalian Cells
If you take a mammalian cell, we don't use S-H compounds
extensively used. Additionally S-H group can be protected. Glutathione is
known to protect groups. You can demonstrate this in a test tube. You can
take a sulfur containing enzyme. This mechanism of protection is the same
for the lactic acid organisms. So they have developed the same protective
mechanisms. If this was not so then in the garlic eating nations they would
have eradicated their lactic acid bacteria long ago, which is certainly not
the case.
So in summary with Allicin you have
a broad spectrum of activity against bacteria, virus, and protozoa.
No resistance can be built up so it
is an absolutely safe product to use.
It has no effect on mammalian
cells, and no effect on the lactic acid bacteria.
DR. MERCOLA'S COMMENT:
Garlic is one food that you should be eating every day.
Dr. Klinghardt and I are very impressed with its ability to optimize bowel
flora and kill pathogenic organisms.
It is important to note that the garlic
MUST be fresh. The active ingredient
is destroyed within one hour of smashing the garlic. Garlic pills are
virtually worthless and should not be used. When you use the garlic it will
be important to compress the garlic with a spoon prior to swallowing it if
you are not going to juice it. If you swallow the clove intact you will not
convert the allicin to its active ingredient.
One problem, of course, is the smell, but generally a few
cloves a day are tolerated by most people. If one develops a socially
offensive odor then all you do is slightly decrease the volume of garlic
until there is no odor present.
Copyright |