Smelling Citrus Oils Prevents Asthma in Rats
Tue Dec 21,11:20 AM ET Health - Reuters
By Alison McCook
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A key ingredient in the aroma from citrus fruits
such as oranges and lemons appears to protect rats from the symptoms of
asthma, new research shows.
Study author Dr. Ehud Keinan explained that the citrus ingredient is called
limonene, and it likely protects against asthma by "burning" inhaled ozone,
which can increase inflammation in the lungs.
Other scents - such as those emitted from pine trees, geraniums and roses -
contain similar ingredients to limonene, Keinan said, which may help explain
why asthma is much more common in urban areas that lack vegetation.
"In rural populations, people are very much exposed to these compounds," he
said.
The researcher, who is based at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology
in Israel, told Reuters Health that squeezing an orange peel releases liquid
that contains a high concentration of limonene. He said he has heard stories
of people who say they experienced relief from asthma and other lung
diseases after spending time around limonene.
He added that he and his colleagues, who report their current findings in
the journal Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry, are currently investigating
how limonene and similar substances may help alleviate asthma in humans.
A growing body of research suggests that ozone, which is a key component of
air pollution, can encourage changes in the body that result in persistent
inflammation in the airways.
Limonene helps rid the body of ozone because it reacts with ozone, muting
its toxic effects, Keinan explained.
To investigate whether limonene could protect lungs from asthma, Keinan and
his team induced the symptoms of asthma in rats, them let them smell
limonene or eucalyptol, the key ingredient in the odor of eucalyptus, which
does not react with ozone.
The researchers checked the rats for asthma symptoms repeatedly over a
period of 20 hours to five days. They found that only rats exposed to
limonene "didn't show any symptoms of the disease," Keinan said.
These results suggest that inhaling limonene may protect people from
developing asthma, or alleviate symptoms in those already diagnosed, he
noted.
SOURCE: Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry, December 8, 2004.
JoeG - 22 Dec 2004 08:13 GMT
> Smelling Citrus Oils Prevents Asthma in Rats
Interesting article -- I'm eaten oranges ..
Alison Chaiken - 30 Dec 2004 01:31 GMT
>He added that he and his colleagues, who report their current
>findings in the journal Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry, are
>currently investigating how limonene and similar substances may help
>alleviate asthma in humans.
My first reaction was that I've never heard of this journal. However,
the publisher is the respected Elsevier Press and the on-line articles
look perfectly reasonable. On the other hand, the journal's web page
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=JournalURL&_cdi=5221&_auth=y&_acct=C000
050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=4d7f63d9702dd06df3ed7f0f2535aed4
doesn't seem to have this article. There are four old articles by
Ehud Keinan. Perhaps the article in question hasn't appeared yet.
>Limonene helps rid the body of ozone because it reacts with ozone,
>muting its toxic effects, Keinan explained.
This part is silly -- everything reacts with ozone.

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HE - 30 Dec 2004 04:26 GMT
This deserves a LOT of attention.
The key investigator, Keinan, may be on the fast track to a Nobel.
The key information is not "react with ozone" - it's "scavenge ozone".
The key result is that the presence of a relatively low concentration of
limonene molecules (a well-studied and safe compound) interrupts a
process upon which asthma is dependent. Not always, and not in everyone
- not even in every mouse. But the percentages are encouraging.
But in my home and office for the last year, and in the homes and
offices of many who know Keinan, there's a baby food jar with a hole
punched in the lid and a cotton wick - filled with ordinary industrial
grade D-limonene. It's available at $30/gallon plus freight from many
sources. My first gallon is still more than half there after a year, and
after filling baby food jars for dozens of friends. People visiting my
home or office don't even smell enough of it to comment - it's at a
barely detectable level.
As for safety?
The active ingredient in many household "citrus cleaners" and industrial
solvents is limonene. It's well-studied, well understood, very safe. Get
the MSDS (Material Safety Data Sheet). Just don't drink it or take a
bath in it.
Smell?
Citrus. Pleasant.
Here's the challenge - there's no way to commercialize this!