Comparative Study on the Prokinetic Effects of Ginger, Caraway, and Peppermint in Relieving Gastrointestinal Disturbances in Pulmonary TB Patients: A Clinical Trial
Asma Latif, Hajra Ahmad, Imran Bashir

TL;DR
This study found that ginger and peppermint can help reduce gastrointestinal issues in TB patients undergoing treatment.
Contribution
The study introduces ginger and peppermint as effective nutraceuticals for alleviating gastrointestinal disturbances in pulmonary TB patients.
Findings
Ginger and peppermint showed significant reduction in gastrointestinal disturbances during the washout phase.
All three nutraceuticals alleviated GI symptoms in TB patients on ATT.
Ginger had the highest total phenolic and flavonoid content, contributing to its prokinetic effects.
Abstract
Anti‐tuberculosis treatment (ATT) leads to adverse gastrointestinal disturbances (vomiting, nausea, postprandial distress) due to its prolonged duration in TB patients. This study assessed the prokinetic effects of ginger, caraway, and peppermint nutraceuticals in alleviating these symptoms in pulmonary TB patients on ATT. The selected nutraceuticals were procured, cleaned, dried, and crushed to perform proximate analysis, TPC, TFC, DPPH, ABTS, and FRAP. Further, a randomized clinical trial (Registered No. NCT06157034) involved 200 participants divided into four groups (placebo = 48, ginger = 47, caraway = 48, peppermint = 46), with 11 dropouts. Participants received varied dosages of selected nutraceuticals (Ginger: 1 g, Caraway: 2 g, and Peppermint: 3 mL daily), and data were collected at baseline, intervention (after 3 months), and washout (after 1 month) phases. Ginger and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGinger and Zingiberaceae research · Tuberculosis Research and Epidemiology · Mycobacterium research and diagnosis
