Anti-Mycobacterial Activity of Garlic

Posted by lynne63 @lynne63, Aug 10, 2021

In addition to my previous post, garlic also shows some promise.

Shared files

Garlic Extract Paper (Garlic-Extract-Paper.pdf)

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the MAC & Bronchiectasis Support Group.

@wolfplanetzero

Here's article about allicin vapors being used against common lung bugs, alone or in combination with antibiotics.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6151386/

"Because of the problems of attaining effective concentrations of allicin where it is needed when it is consumed orally, direct inhalation in the case of lung infections seems an attractive alternative. The successful treatment of tuberculosis patients by inhalation of garlic vapor has been reported."

Jump to this post

notice it also mentions the vapor can damage lung tissue so please be careful

REPLY
@lynne63

An additional article regarding garlic.

Jump to this post

I was just reading an article on FB of all places that said old timers used to cut up garlic jar and fill it with Honey and then use the honey as a tonic for bacterial infections. They also used onions for respiratory infections and sore throats. I dont know if these things work but its cheap enough to try and nothing to loose

REPLY

I have been experimenting with topical skin absorption of fresh garlic oil/allicin to avoid first pass metabolism by the liver. Apparently Allicin is the garlic component that has the most antimicrobial action, but its metabolite has unknown or known less effectiveness? The allicin can be absorbed through the skin.,

CAUTION: topical garlic oil can cause a serious chemical burn so use extreme caution (small amounts distributed over wide skins areas?). A large amount applied to a small area can cause skin breakdown and needing surgical intervention. I found a medical case report about this very issue but as my account is new it won't let me post a link.

REPLY
@bradzepfan

I have been experimenting with topical skin absorption of fresh garlic oil/allicin to avoid first pass metabolism by the liver. Apparently Allicin is the garlic component that has the most antimicrobial action, but its metabolite has unknown or known less effectiveness? The allicin can be absorbed through the skin.,

CAUTION: topical garlic oil can cause a serious chemical burn so use extreme caution (small amounts distributed over wide skins areas?). A large amount applied to a small area can cause skin breakdown and needing surgical intervention. I found a medical case report about this very issue but as my account is new it won't let me post a link.

Jump to this post

thanks for the warning......good to know! welcome to the blog

REPLY
@healthybon

thanks for the warning......good to know! welcome to the blog

Jump to this post

Your welcome! I have seen some discussion about breathing in garlic vapors but that also seems like tricky business as the concentration that kills microbes is just about the same concentration that kills lung epithelial cells. The authors suggested keeping a steady flow of glutathione in the person's system to help offset this problem, but I read elsewhere that microbes can also use glutathione to avoid damage. It is a dizzying and frustrating array of variables to try to account for.

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.