British researchers tested the activity of homemade soups children
brought to school and found that some of the broths, which had a
reputation for bringing down fevers, could actually block growth of
the malaria parasites, according to a report in Archives of Disease
in Childhood.
The new findings affirm that "we should be open to the idea of new
treatments finding their origins in traditional medicines," said
coauthor Jake Baum, a professor of cell biology and infectious
diseases at Imperial College London. "Kids, and hopefully adults
too, can grasp that what separates natural remedies from medicine is
evidence."
It was important to the researchers to share credit with their young
colleagues, so first on the author list of the new study are The
Children of Eden Primary School.
"If you can show me evidence under controlled conditions that
something 'works' then we can start to call it a medicine," Baum
explained in an email. The soup experiment, Baum said, grew out of
an effort to get kids thinking about "the difference between herbal
remedies/alternative therapies and conventional medicine. It came
down to the word 'evidence.'"
One caveat, Baum allowed, is that he and his colleagues have yet to
determine which soup ingredient is active against malaria.
To learn whether traditional broths had any effect against malaria,
Baum and his colleagues asked students at the Eden School in North
London to bring soups that had a reputation for bringing down fevers
to the classroom. The students brought samples of homemade clear
soup made with recipes from across Europe, North Africa and the
Middle East.
Of the 56 broths tested, five were found to exert greater than 50%
growth inhibition against asexual blood stages of the parasite, with
two having comparable inhibition to that seen with a leading
antimalarial drug, the researchers report. Four other broths were
found to have greater than 50% transmission blocking activity,
preventing male parasites from maturing sexually.
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"We wanted to include the kids every step of the way that we could,"
Baum said. "The sampling, processing, etc., was done in the school
classroom, testing on parasites in my lab. Given the results were
surprising we thought we'd write it up as a paper."
Although the researchers didn't ask children for their family
recipes, they note that discussion with the kids about the
constituents of the soups did not reveal any particular ingredients
the antimalarial broths had in common.
Future studies will need to isolate the active ingredients in the
soups and then test those compounds for safety and effectiveness,
Baum said.
The possibility of a natural remedy for malaria is "great,"
especially if "it's one you could cook up in your own kitchen," said
Dana Hunnes of the Fielding School of Public Health at the
University of California, Los Angeles, who is a senior dietician at
the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center.
"However, since the authors weren't clear on what the specific
compounds were that fought malaria in these broths, it's hard to
suss out from this study what exactly was in them that was
responsible for attenuating the malaria," Hunnes said in an email.
"I am all for natural remedies that fight off illness, especially
ones I can cook up myself and for something as widespread as
malaria, but I think the study would be more robust if they had been
able to identify the exact compounds responsible."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/346cHPK Archives of Disease in Childhood,
online November 19, 2019.
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