Gember tegen misselijkheid bij chemotherapie?*
Gember staat al eeuwenlang bekend als middel tegen of voorkoming van misselijkheid.
Uit wetenschappelijke onderzoeken blijkt gember een goedkoop middel te zijn dat veilig en met weinig of geen bijwerkingen toegepast kan worden om misselijkheid te bestijden.
Daarom wordt nu in Amerika een landelijk wetenschappelijk onderzoek gestart om te onderzoeken of gember ook de misselijkheid bij chemotherapie kan bestrijden.
Can
ginger control nausea during cancer treatments?
Ginger has been
used for thousands of years to prevent or treat nausea. Now researchers at the
University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center are leading a national trial
to determine if this plant can help people with cancer avoid nausea and vomiting
from chemotherapy .
Typically,
chemotherapy patients take a regimen of anti-nausea drugs that effectively help
most people avoid this unpleasant side effect. But for some people, two to five
days after receiving chemotherapy, a second wave of nausea may hit. Researchers
are studying whether capsules of a standardized form of ginger can help relieve
this delayed nausea.
The trial, which is
currently seeking patients, plans to enroll 180 adults with cancer at 10 sites
throughout the country. Participants are randomly assigned to one of three
groups: low-dose ginger, high-dose ginger or placebo. The study participants
will not know what dose they are getting.
Recent research has
found ginger to be effective at relieving nausea related to motion sickness,
post-operative recovery and pregnancy.
“In most studies
with ginger, it's been shown to be safe and efficacious, so we felt it might be
beneficial for cancer patients as well. It appears from previous studies to be
very safe with very few side effects, and it tends to be inexpensive, whereas
current anti-nausea drugs can be expensive,” says lead investigator Suzanna
Zick, N.D., M.P.H., a research investigator in the Department of Family Medicine
at the U-M Medical School and a member of the U-M Comprehensive Cancer Center .
Study participants
take ginger or a placebo pill twice a day for three days after completing a
chemotherapy infusion. They also receive their standard anti-nausea drugs, which
vary depending on the type of chemotherapy being given. The study will look at
adults age 18 and older with any type of cancer. Study participants must have
experienced nausea or vomiting in a previous round of chemotherapy.
The $450,000 trial
is run through the Community Clinical Oncology Program (CCOP), a program through
the National Cancer Institute to ensure cancer patients treated by community
doctors have access to clinical trials and the latest treatment regimens.
Funding for the trial is from the National Cancer Institute, Office of Cancer
Complementary and Alternative Medicine and the National Center for Complementary
and Alternative Medicine.
In addition to U-M, participating sites are
Michigan Cancer Research Consortium CCOP, Ann Arbor, Mich.; Our Lady of Mercy
Medical Center MBCCOP, Bronx, N.Y.; Northern Indiana Cancer Research Consortium
CCOP, South Bend, Ind.; Grand Rapids Clinical Oncology Program, Grand Rapids,
Mich.; John H. Stroger Jr. Cook County Hospital MBCCOP, Chicago; Upstate
Carolina CCOP, Spartanburg, S.C.; Southern Nevada Cancer Research Foundation
CCOP, Las Vegas, Nev.; William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak,
(Aug. 2005)