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Tart cherries
are one of
the twenty two ingredients contained in SenSatiaFruit.
Tart cherries, which are
sometimes called sour, red cherries, or pie cherries are best
known as the key ingredient in desserts.
For centuries, the cherry has been a source of medicine for
indigenous peoples.
Native Americans prized cherries
as pain relievers, especially for sore throats.
The good news about the health
benefits of cherries continues to increase.
According to ongoing research,
Montmorency tart cherries are a rich source of antioxidants, which
can help fight cancer and heart disease.
In addition, there are beneficial compounds in Montmorency tart
cherries that help relieve the pain of arthritis and gout.
Other fruits and vegetable do not
have the pain relief of tart cherries.
While the research on the exact mechanisms that give the pain
relief is ongoing, many consumers are discovering that tart cherry
juice can stave off pain.
Recent research suggests drinking
a glass of tart cherry juice might help defuse arthritis pain.
Researchers from Michigan State
University found anthocyanins, the same chemicals that give tart
cherries their color, may have more powerful anti-inflammatory
effects than aspirin.
Here are a few of the Tart Cherry
studies that have been conducted so far:
A small randomized controlled trial in the British Journal of
Sports Medicine examined the effectiveness of a tart cherry juice
blend in preventing symptoms of exercise-induced muscle damage.
Fourteen male college students drank 12 fl oz of a cherry juice
blend or a placebo, twice per day for eight consecutive days.
Strength loss was significantly lower in people taking the cherry
juice (4%) compared with the placebo (22%). Pain was also
significantly lower in people taking the cherry juice.
Jill M. Tall, Ph.D., research fellow at Johns Hopkins, was the
lead researcher of a study that tested the effectiveness of orally
administrated anthocyanins from tart cherries on
inflammation-induced pain in rats. The results of the study
suggested that tart cherry anthocyanins may have a beneficial role
in reducing inflammatory pain.
One small study published in the Journal of Nutrition supported
the anti-gout effectiveness of cherries. assessed the effects of
Bing cherry (a sweet cherry) consumption on healthy women and
found that cherry consumption decreased blood urate levels, and
there was a marginal decrease in inflammatory markers c-reactive
protein and nitric oxide.
Want to research
Tart cherry further?
There are
1,140,000 references to
Tart cherry on Google as of December 2006.
Continue to the
Raspberry page.
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