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Ginger: A Root of Ancient Medicine

Beliefnet
by Rick Alan

Ginger rootLooking for a natural substance that can help you with nausea? Well, ginger may be your herb.

Native to southern Asia, ginger is a 2- to 4-foot-long perennial that produces grass-like leaves up to a foot long and almost an inch wide. Although it's called ginger root in the grocery store, it actually consists of the underground stem of the plant, with its bark-like outer covering scraped off.

Ginger has been used as food and medicine for millennia. Chinese medical texts from the fourth century B.C. suggest that ginger is effective in treating nausea, diarrhea, stomachaches, toothaches, bleeding, and rheumatism. Modern science gives some support to at least one of these uses: nausea.

Ginger for Motion Sickness

In the early 1980s, a scientist named D. Mowrey noticed that ginger-filled capsules reduced his nausea during an episode of flu. Inspired by this, he performed the first double-blind study of ginger. The results were positive. On the basis of this and other highly preliminary evidence, Germany approved ginger as a treatment for indigestion and motion sickness.

Subsequent studies have tended to support the use of ginger for motion sickness. For example a double-blind, placebo-controlled study of 79 Swedish naval cadets found that one gram of ginger could decrease vomiting and cold sweating (although without significantly decreasing nausea and sensation of vertigo). Benefits were also seen in a double-blind study of 36 individuals given ginger, dimenhydrinate (a standard motion sickness drug), or placebo.

In addition, a double-blind comparative study that followed 1,489 individuals aboard a ship found ginger to be equally effective as various medications (cinnarizine, cinnarizine with domperidone, cyclizine, dimehydrinate with caffeine, meclozine with caffeine, and scopolamine). Another double-blind study found equivalent benefit of ginger at a dose of 500 mg every four hours and dimenhydrinate 100 mg every four hours in a group of 60 passengers aboard a ship. Similar results were also seen in a small double-blind study involving children.