Bioenhancer Assessment of Black Pepper with Turmeric on Self-Reported Pain Ratings in Adults: A Randomized, Cross-Over, Clinical Trial
Leandra Durham, Robert A. Oster, Matthew Ithurburn, Chelsi Reynolds, James O. Hill, Daniel L. Smith

TL;DR
This study found that eating turmeric, with or without black pepper, can reduce self-reported pain in adults with chronic pain.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that dietary amounts of turmeric may help manage chronic pain without needing high medicinal doses.
Findings
Pain ratings significantly decreased over the 21-day trial (p < 0.001).
Turmeric with or without black pepper showed similar pain reduction effects.
Different turmeric doses did not significantly differ in pain ratings.
Abstract
Background: Chronic pain, which affects over 50 million adults in the United States, has stimulated growing interest in natural and nutrition-based remedies as adjuncts to pharmacologic therapies. Evidence suggests that turmeric and related extracts (i.e., curcuminoids) may provide pain relief, albeit often at levels above dietary ranges, while piperine from black pepper exhibits bioenhancer characteristics of relevance with dietary exposures. Objective: To test the effectiveness of dietarily relevant amounts of turmeric with and without black pepper on self-reported pain ratings among adults with chronic pain. Methods: A randomized, crossover clinical trial tested the effectiveness of turmeric only (one of three amounts within culinary ranges) or turmeric with black pepper to influence pain in adults ≥ 40 years of age. Participants (n = 30, with moderate pain: 4–7 on 0–10-point scale)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPiperaceae Chemical and Biological Studies · Ion Channels and Receptors · Curcumin's Biomedical Applications
