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Bad breath - disease or cure?



Garlic extract offers an innovative treatment for patients with advanced gum disease, report UK researchers.   

This is the first time garlic has been studied against oral bacteria. The active component, allicin, formed when garlic is crushed, works by inactivating enzymes essential for bacterial growth. 

garlic

garlic

Periodontitis, a severe form of gum disease, is often treated with common antibiotics such as amoxicillin, but antibiotic resistance is a growing problem. Finding cures that are less likely to induce resistance is important. 

Ian Douglas at the University of Sheffield's school of dentistry, predicts that resistance to allicin would develop relatively slowly. This is because allicin works against the enzymes needed for bacterial growth and not against the bacteria itself. The agent is not present in raw garlic, but is formed rapidly by the action of allinase on the precursor once the clove is crushed. 

The extract tested contained 220 m g/ml of allicin - equivalent to three garlic bulbs. The extract was highly effective against many oral pathogens, suggesting that garlic extract could be of therapeutic use, said Douglas. But there are around 700 species of bacteria associated with periodontitis, he cautioned. 

Although the data are promising, Douglas and colleagues are already looking to overcome limitations. Allicin is unstable, so a method of stabilising it is needed before it can be fully tested in an animal model. And that's not the only drawback. 'Unfortunately, allicin does smell and "garlic breath" is an issue yet to be resolved,' Douglas conceded. 
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References

I M Bakri and C W I Douglas, Arch. Oral Biol., 2005, 50, 645