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Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Cherry Juice May Be a New Sports Drink

May 28, 2009 by Peggy Rowland  
Filed under Women's Health

Cherry Juice May Be a New Sports Drink

Fresh cherries are one of my favorite snacks. Yes, they have seeds, but I can overlook that.
I was happy to see that cherry juice is getting praise for its natural anti-inflammation power. A new study from Oregon Health & Science University shows that individuals who consumed tart cherry juice while training for a long-distance run said they had much less pain after exercise than those who didn’t drink the juice. The research was presented at the American College of Sports Medicine Conference in Seattle.

The study included 60 adults ages 18-50. Some of the runners drank 10.5 ounces of CHERRish 100% …read more

Tart Cherries Reduce Metabolic Syndrome And Heart Disease Risk Factors

May 10, 2007 by ruth  
Filed under Recipes

Tart Cherries Reduce Metabolic Syndrome And Heart Disease Risk Factors

A new study presented at the Experimental Biology annual meeting suggest that cherries may help lower the risk of metabolic syndrome (also called insulin resistance syndrome) and cardiovascular disease. In the study, rats were fed whole tart cherry powder equivalent to 1 or 10 percent of their diet for 90 days. That’s estimated to be about 1 ¼ to 1 ½ cups of whole frozen cherries or a little more than ½ cup of dried cherries.
Results showed that the cherry-enriched diets significantly lowered total cholesterol levels, triglycerides, insulin and fasting glucose levels after 90 days. All of these measures are …read more

Tart Cherry Juice May Relieve Muscle Pains

July 26, 2006 by ruth  
Filed under Recipes

Tart Cherry Juice May Relieve Muscle Pains

Muscle pains from too much exercise? Cherry juice might help.
The researchers found that the weakening of the elbow flexion strength in the cherry group was significantly lower than the placebo group. The strength loss after four days, tested on an arm curl bench, was only four per cent for the cherry juice group, but was 22 per cent for the placebo group.
Volunteers who were taking tart cherry juice also reported less muscle pains. The researchers attribute this positive effect of tart cherry juice on the anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties of the flavonoids and athocyanins present in tart cherry juice. Tart …read more


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