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CHOCOLATE FOR COUGHS
An ingredient in chocolate may actually be a
more effective cough medicine than traditional remedies.
UK-based research showed that the cocoa-derived compound
had none of the side effects associated with standard
drug treatments for persistent coughs. These sorts
of coughs, often lasting for weeks after a viral
infection, can be difficult to treat, especially since it
is not possible to give large doses of opiate-based
medication to patients due to the side effects,
said Peter Barnes, professor of thoracic medicine at
Imperial College London, UK, who led the study.
Barnes and colleagues gave 10 healthy volunteers tablets
containing: theobromine, a constituent of cocoa or;
codeine, the cough suppressant against which other drugs
are measured or; a placebo. The volunteers were then
asked to inhale a gas containing capsaicin, a derivative
of chilli peppers, which induces coughing and is used as
an indicator to test the effectiveness of cough
medicines. Those given theobromine needed about one-third
more capsaicin to produce coughing than those who took
codeine. Codeine was only marginally more effective than
the placebo at preventing coughing.
Dame Helena Shovelton, chief executive of the British
Lung Foundation, said, "The results of this research
sound very promising. Persistent coughing often affects
lung disease patients so this could be a progressive step
in treating it. But she advised that patients
to speak to their family doctor before changing their
medication or treating their cough with chocolate",
as tempting as that may be.
Notably, theobromine appeared to have no unwanted side
effects. This is not true of codeine, which is a narcotic
and lists drowsiness and constipation among its negative
effects. We gave them the equivalent of about two
cups of cocoa, Barnes explains, The next
stage will be to look at different doses. The
researchers believe theobromine acts on the sensory nerve
endings of the vagus nerve, which runs through the
airways in the lungs to the brain. Capsaicin stimulates
these endings to provoke coughing.
The team explored their hypothesis by looking at
theobromines action on the vagus nerve in separate
experiments involving guinea pigs and excised human
trachea tissue. Their results confirmed that theobromine
does indeed inhibit the capsaicin-induced sensory nerve
depolarisation in the vagus nerve.
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