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Pain Relief in the Produce Aisle

Pineapple EnzymesIf you’re looking for pain relief you might find it at your local grocery store. Not in the pharmacy or over-the-counter medicine aisle, but discreetly tucked into the produce section.

The people of Guadeloupe introduced Christopher Columbus to this tasty tropical healer in 1493, but native South and Central American tribes had discovered its amazing attributes long before he sailed in. Today we call it the pineapple.

What makes the pineapple special are enzymes found throughout the plant called bromelain. Bromelain is a protease, or proteolytic enzyme, which means it breaks down protein. That’s why you’ll find it commonly used as a meat tenderizer.

You may be thinking tenderizing your already sore muscles is the last thing you want. But there’s another type of protein bromelain eats up too. It’s a protein called Circulating Immune Complex (CIC). Let me explain.

Our cells talk to each other through receptors. When we’re injured they tell our immune system to produce CIC proteins. The CICs are rushed to the scene of injury or irritation. Pain signals are generated to alert your body to trouble while inflammatory substances are called to build a protective wall around the injured area. These continue until our body sends proteolytic enzymes to counteract the CIC-induced inflammation.

The problem is our body may not produce enough proteolytic enzymes to tell the CICs to stop producing pain and inflammation when they should. That’s because by our mid-20s production of proteolytic enzymes drops off dramatically leaving us vulnerable to runaway inflammation. Left unchecked, inflammation increases the risk of heart attack, stroke, arthritis and dementia related disorders like Alzheimer’s. It causes hidden damage to tissues and organs throughout your body. And it just plain makes it harder for our bodies to heal and stop hurting.

Fortunately there’s a simple answer. Since the cause of runaway inflammation is a lack of proteolytic enzymes, the natural response is to get more of those into our system. That’s why pineapple with its natural proteolytic enzymes in the form of bromelain is such a great find. Eating pineapple increases the supply of proteolytic enzymes present in your body. You do have to eat the pineapple raw though. Cooking or heating destroys the enzymes’ effectiveness. This means canned pineapple won’t work either.

The highest concentration of bromelain is found in the stem of the plant. I’ll admit you would have to really love pigging out on tough raw pineapple stems every day to get the most benefit. Or you can just take a proteolytic enzyme supplement with bromelain harvested from pineapple by peeling and crushing the stem then purified and dried into a powder form to be taken orally without getting the sore mouth.

By the way, pineapple isn’t the only source of proteolytic enzymes. You can also find them in papaya (papain), figs (ficin) and kiwi fruit (actinidin). Good supplements will usually combine various forms of the enzymes for maximum effect. Restoring your body’s proteolytic enzyme levels will go a long ways towards reducing inflammation and ending chronic pain.

Related references:
Murachi, T and Neurtil, H.; Dept. of Biochemistry, University of Washington; Fractionation and Specificity on Stem Bromelain
Blumenthal, M., Goldberg, A., Brinkman, J.; ed. Herbal Medicine, Expanded Commission E monographs; Boston, Mass: Integrative Medicine Communications; 2000:33-35
Kapes, B.; Encyclopedia of Alternative Medicine; Bromelain, April 6, 2001
Vukovic, L.; Better Nutrition: Pineapple Power; July 2007

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This entry was posted in Anti-Inflammatory, Pain and Inflammation, Proteolytic Systemic Enzymes, Supplements and tagged , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.

7 Comments

  1. Sandra Zawada
    Posted April 18, 2010 at 11:11 am | Permalink

    Just want to know if you know about Protandim by LifeVantage. Does it work in your opinion?

  2. Posted April 18, 2010 at 7:40 pm | Permalink

    I HAVE TRIED BROMELAIN (enzyme from PINEAPLE),but did not have help for my chronic headache.

  3. Seg
    Posted April 19, 2010 at 7:49 am | Permalink

    Try rubbing a few slices of lemon around your temples

  4. Girl Gone Healthy
    Posted April 20, 2010 at 1:01 am | Permalink

    This is the first time I’ve heard pineapple as a source of pain relief. Eating more of this is not a problem at all!

  5. KiwiRob
    Posted April 20, 2010 at 3:28 am | Permalink

    A glass of pineapple juice a day has been helping with arthritis pain…

  6. David C Shereda
    Posted August 12, 2010 at 4:50 pm | Permalink

    Just wanted to add a little secret to sweetening up your pineapple. When you get it home from the store, twist off the top and place it upsidedown on a platter. Put it in the sun til all the green turns brown, it will be so sweet when you open it.

  7. Ken
    Posted August 12, 2010 at 6:07 pm | Permalink

    Pineapple or bromelain supplements will benefit digestion. The only way to significantly affect inflamation is to use enteric coated bromelain (as from lef.org). That way, it’s protected from stomach acid and will be absorbed in the intestines and help moderate inflamation.
    If you enjoy trying new drinks, here’s something I’ve done- attempt at your own risk. Thoroughly wash pineapple. When ready to eat, peel as usual. Put all peelings and core in some clean water in a covered container. Keep warm a couple days or so. It will start to ferment and is rather tasty once drained and filtered to remove the unappealing white scum that forms on the surface of the water.

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