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Showing Original Post only (View all)The New Antibiotics Might Be Essential Oils [View all]
The New Antibiotics Might Be Essential Oils
Faced with increasingly drug-resistant bacteria, scientists and farmers are now looking to plant extracts to keep people and animals healthy.
TORI RODRIGUEZJAN 16 2015, 7:35 AM ET
Essential oils often evoke thoughts of scented candles and day spas, but their benefits beyond relaxation are less well-known. Essential oils are ultimately just plant extractsand those are used in countless cleaning and personal-care products, and are the main ingredient in some pest-control products and some over-the-counter medications, like Vicks VapoRub and some lice sprays. Theyre used in the food industry because of their preservative potency against food-borne pathogensthanks to their antimicrobial, antibacterial, and antifungal properties. Various oils have also been shown to effectively treat a wide range of common health issues such as nausea and migraines, and a rapidly growing body of research is finding that they are powerful enough to kill human cancer cells of the breast, colon, mouth, skin, and more.
A handful of promising, real-life studies have been conducted with humans and other animals, though most of the research in that realm thus far has been conducted in the lab. More controlled trials will be required before some of these applications will be available to the public, but meanwhile, scientists have turned up exciting results in another area of use: countering the growing antibiotic-resistance crisis. The loss of antibiotics due to antimicrobial resistance is potentially one of the most important challenges the medical and animal-health communities will face in the 21st century, says Dr. Cyril Gay, the senior national program leader at the United States Department of Agricultures (USDA) Agricultural Research Service.
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Whether farmers choose to use it or not, there is a strong alternative on the horizon. Numerous recent studiesincluding several done by the USDAhave shown great promise in using essential oils as an alternative to antibiotics in livestock. One of their studies, published in October 2014 in the journal Poultry Science, found that chickens who consumed feed with added oregano oil had a 59 percent lower mortality rate due to ascites, a common infection in poultry, than untreated chickens. Other research, from a 2011 issue of BMC Proceedings, showed that adding a combination of plant extractsfrom oregano, cinnamon, and chili peppersactually changed the gene expression of treated chickens, resulting in weight gain as well as protection against an injected intestinal infection. A 2010 study from Poultry Science produced similar findings with the use of extracts from turmeric, chili pepper, and shiitake mushrooms. A multi-year study is currently underway at the USDA that includes investigations into the use of citrus peels and essential oils as drug alternatives.
Researchers have also directly compared the effects of commonly used antibiotics with those of various essential oils. One such study, from the March 2012 issue of the Journal of Animal Science, found that rosemary and oregano oils resulted in the same amount of growth in chickens as the antibiotic avilamycin, and that the oils killed bacteria, too. Additional findings have shown that essential oils help reduce salmonella in chickens, and another study found that a blend of several oils can limit the spread of salmonella among animals. One of the co-authors of that study, Dr. Charles Hofacre, a professor at the University of Georgias College of Veterinary Medicine, says its such a new area of research that they dont yet know exactly how the essential oils work, but there is some strong evidence that they are functioning by both an antibacterial action in the intestine and also some have an effect to stimulate the intestinal cells ability to recover from disease more quicklyeither by local immunity or helping keep the intestinal cells themselves healthier.
http://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2015/01/the-new-antibiotics-might-be-essential-oils/384247/
Here in the US, there is not enough research on essential oils because they are considered "woo-woo" and are disparaged by Big Pharma, et al. Essential oils are dangerous and can kill you if you do not know what you are doing. In Germany, you can get a degree in Aromatherapy and are allowed to prescribe essential oil in health issues. Europeans also use essential oils in their food, which is considered a big no-no here.
Fantastic that essential oils are starting to get the recognition that they deserve.