NEW YORK - People
who regularly drink cranberry juice or take cranberry capsules are less likely
to get urinary tract infections, a new review of past evidence suggests.
Researchers found cranberry products seemed especially helpful for women who
had trouble with recurrent UTIs.
Although cranberry juice and capsules are popular
antidotes to the common bacterial infections, researchers haven't always been
sure whether or how they might work. Recent evidence suggests certain compounds
in cranberries - and maybe other berries as well - might prevent bacteria from
attaching to tissue in the urinary tract, thereby warding off infections.
"What this is doing is solidifying what has been
folklore for quite some time," said Dr. Deborah Wing, who has studied
urinary tract infections at the University of California, Irvine.
"Finally, the science is catching up to what our
mothers have been telling us for so many decades," she told Reuters
Health.
Still, Wing noted some women have trouble drinking a
lot of cranberry juice or don't like swallowing the large capsules. There's
also a lack of data about what form of cranberries - juice versus capsules, for
example - is easier to take and better for reducing UTI risk, said Wing, who
wasn't involved in the study.
For the new analysis, researchers led by Dr. Chih-Hung
Wang from National Taiwan University Hospital consulted 10 earlier studies of
about 1,500 people, mostly women, who were randomly assigned to take daily
cranberry products, cranberry-free placebo products or nothing.
The amount of cranberry compounds used in the studies
varied greatly, from one-gram capsules to close to 200 grams of cranberry juice
daily. Overall, participants assigned to cranberry products had 38 per cent
fewer UTIs, the research team reported Monday in the Archives of Internal
Medicine.
For women with a history of multiple infections, in
particular, the risk of UTI was reduced by 47 per cent while on cranberry
products. For example, in one study of Canadian women with recurrent
infections, there were 19 UTIs among 100 women taking both cranberry capsules
and juice over a year, compared to 16 infections in 50 women who were assigned
to cranberry-free imitation juice.
Because of differences between the trials and
questions of how well participants and doctors were "blinded" to who
was getting what product, Wang and colleagues said the findings "should be
interpreted with great caution."
"Is (cranberry) the natural cure-all for urinary
tract infections? Of course not," said Bill Gurley, a pharmaceutical
researcher who has studied dietary interventions at the University of Arkansas
for Medical Sciences in Little Rock.
"For individuals that do have problems with
recurrent UTIs, incorporating a little cranberry juice in your diet certainly
can't hurt," added Gurley, who wasn't part of the new research team.
Still, he told Reuters Health, "We still don't know exactly what the
correct dose should be, or what the correct form should be."
Wing said certain women are predisposed to UTIs. Those
who are born with a malformed urinary tract or engage in anal sex, for example,
are also at higher risk of recurrent infections.
Cranberry juices and capsules are an attractive option
for preventing UTIs because unlike with antibiotics, taking the products for
long periods of time doesn't increase the risk that drugs used to treat
infections will stop working when bacteria build up resistance.
Cranberry tablets are also relatively cheap, starting
at about 25 cents per day. However, one recent study found antibiotics were
still more effective at preventing infections in Dutch women with recurrent
UTIs.
High doses of cranberry products can also cause
stomach aches - and the sugar in juice might be a problem for people with
diabetes, the researchers noted.
Until the science catches up, Wing said, for women who
want to try cranberry products the decision of juice versus capsules "is a
matter of personal preference" - as long as they look carefully at product
labels and know that not all over-the-counter juices and capsules are created
equal.
Reuters
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