Health Benefits of Cherries
Cherries like many other fruits are packed with antioxidants that
fight free radicals in the body and may help prevent cancer and heart
disease, as well as slow the aging process. Perhaps you’ve heard about
the controversy between the FDA and the cherry industry and wondered
what the fuss was about. Are cherries not as healthy to eat as you
thought they were? Should you stop eating cherries? The answer is no.
The controversy is over certain health claims made by the cherry
industry and those who sell products containing or made from cherries
such as pills, capsules, and juice—and not the health benefits of
cherries. While numerous scientific studies have demonstrated the health
benefits of cherries, the FDA says that makers of products containing
cherries cannot claim that their products prevent, treat, or cure a
specific disease such as gout or cancer. The FDA says that these types
of claims imply that cherries are “drugs” that cure a disease—without
the backing of controlled double-blind clinical trials.
For the general population however, the bottom line is that there’s
no reason not to eat cherries. There are two types of cherries, sweet
and tart or sour cherries. The most popular type of sweet cherry is the
Bing cherry, which is sold fresh in the grocery store. Tart or sour
cherries are canned and used in pies, dried into fruit snacks, and made
into juice concentrate. Like most other fruits, cherries are fat-free,
low in calories and sodium, and high in certain minerals and vitamins
such as potassium, Vitamin C, and B-complex vitamins.
Most of the scientific research has centered on the health benefits
of tart cherries. Sweet and tart cherries contain pigments called
anthocyanins, antioxidants that give cherries their dark red color. Tart
cherries are among the top fruits as far as antioxidant levels go. Tart
cherry juice and dried tart cherries are even higher in antioxidants
than blueberries and more powerful than Vitamin E. Anthocyanins have
powerful anti-inflammatory properties and according to the American
Chemical Society, eating 20 tart cherries (or drinking the equivalent in
juice concentrate) a day could provide the same pain relief that aspirin
or ibuprofen do.
Researchers in Texas recently discovered that tart cherries contain
high levels of melatonin; an antioxidant and substance produced
naturally by the body that is thought to help slow the aging process as
well as fight jetlag and regulate sleep. Eating tart cherries,
particularly Montmorency tart cherries, can actually increase the levels
of melatonin in the body.
Although many of the studies concerning cherries are preliminary and
require additional research, the health benefits of eating cherries,
both tart and sweet, and drinking cherry juice concentrate are indeed
many. Cherries are a potential source of treatment for diabetes achieved
by lowering blood sugar levels, may help prevent colon cancer,
significantly reduce pain due to muscle damage, provide relief from the
pain of gout and arthritis, and lower LDL (low-density lipoprotein)
cholesterol, a contributing factor in heart disease and strokes.
~ Heleigh Bostwick Staff Editor
Growing up in Vermont, her
education and work as a botanist and landscape architect, and now
her job as a
mom of
twins, have all contributed to Heleigh’s “Green Living”
lifestyle. She has a BA in Botany from Connecticut College and a
Master of Landscape Architecture from the University of
Pennsylvania.
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