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-   -   Curcumin: possible benefits for TBI (https://www.neurotalk.org/traumatic-brain-injury-and-post-concussion-syndrome/158444-curcumin-benefits-tbi.html)

greenfrog 10-03-2011 11:45 AM

Curcumin: possible benefits for TBI
 
Has anyone read about curcumin supplements as a possible treatment for TBI? (My naturopath recently recommended taking Meriva, a supplement made by Thorne Research.) There seems to be some buzz in recent years about the potential health benefits - including brain benefits - associated with curcumin.

lindberg711 10-04-2011 01:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by greenfrog (Post 811603)
Has anyone read about curcumin supplements as a possible treatment for TBI? (My naturopath recently recommended taking Meriva, a supplement made by Thorne Research.) There seems to be some buzz in recent years about the potential health benefits - including brain benefits - associated with curcumin.

I have not read about Curcumin. I have, however, read about nootropics such as Piracetam. It is intriguing to say the least, and I am considering trying it out.

ConcussedJ 10-04-2011 08:12 AM

I've heard about curcurmin as a natural anti-inflammatory in an athletic context, but the brain benefits are new to me. Never took it as a supplement though; I just ate more curry.

greenfrog 10-04-2011 09:37 AM

Here is an article on two recent studies involving a compound, CNB-001, derived from curcumin:

http://insciences.org/article.php?article_id=9725

An excerpt:

"Employing the same animal model of stroke that was used to develop TPA, Paul Lapchak, Ph.D., of the Department of Neurology at the Burns and Allen Research Institute at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, collaborated with Schubert's team [from the Salk Cellular Neurobiology Laboratory] in a study that showed that CNB-001 was at least as effective as TPA in preventing the behavioral deficits caused by stroke. The study, published in the Dec. 2, 2010 edition of the Journal of Neurochemistry, also demonstrated that unlike TPA, which reduces clotting in the blood vessels of the brain, the Salk compound has a direct protective effect on nerve cells within the brain. Maher has found that it maintains specific cell signaling pathways required for nerve cell survival.

"Similarly, in a study to be published in early 2011 in Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair, Fernando Gomez-Pinilla, Ph.D., and his colleagues in the Department of Physiological Science and Division of Neurosurgery at the University of California, Los Angeles used a rodent model of TBI to demonstrate that CNB-001 dramatically reversed the behavioral deficits in both locomotion and memory that accompany the brain injury. As with stroke, CNB-001 was again found to maintain the critical signaling pathways required for nerve cell survival, as well as the connections between nerve cells that are lost with the injury.

"The results of these two studies, which used two distinct models of brain injury, indicate that the Salk compound has clinical potential in conditions where there is currently no effective treatment."

Mark in Idaho 10-04-2011 10:35 AM

Curcumin has been discussed extensively in previous threads for its neuro benefits. It is worth a try. Avoid getting caught up in the patented or semi-patented processed formulas that can be quite expensive.

Eowyn 10-04-2011 09:23 PM

I saw it mentioned in an article on rebalancing the thalamus. It was also mentioned alongside acetyl-l-carnitine which I have been taking and subjectively seems to be helping.


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