Dr. Ted Gansler, director of medical content for the American Cancer Society, says complementary therapies such as ginger may work for some patients, but "most oncologists would not recommend counting on them as alternatives--especially for those receiving chemotherapy drugs known to cause the most severe nausea and vomiting."
If you're feeling queasy, Ryan says, consuming fresh ginger root from the grocery store can help, but purified capsules may work better due to their easier absorption in the gastrointestinal tract. In theory, ginger-containing products such as ginger ale, ginger snaps, and other products could reduce nausea, too, but only if they contained real ginger root, not just ginger flavoring.
When dealing with chemotherapy-induced nausea--or any upset stomach--the American Cancer Society recommends eating dry foods such as pretzels and sipping on--you guessed it--ginger ale.
Chemotherapy may cause nausea, which may be alleviated through ginger, a new study says.
The findings were released Thursday and will be presented later this month at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting.
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"We were surprised to find that the lowest doses were the most effective. I am guessing that at one gram the gut reaches maximum absorption," Ryan says.
The reduction in nausea was substantial, she says. The patients taking a placebo reported about a four or five on a seven-point nausea scale, meaning they were extremely nauseated. In comparison, ginger-taking patients tended to report one or two, which is little to no nausea. The supplements reduced vomiting by roughly 5 percent in the study, says Ryan, but very few of the patients had any vomiting due to the anti-emetic drugs they were taking.
Studies have suggested that ginger can also quell nausea caused by pregnancy, motion sickness, and anesthesia.
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