Cranberries and Urinary Tract Infections

ProanthocyanidinIt’s not the acidity of cranberry juice that prevent urinary track infections and cystitis, it’s natural chemicals in the tarty juice that prevent pathogenic bacteria from adhering to the cells that line the urinary tract. That’s according to research in the Journal of Medicinal Food.

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) cost $2b annually in the US and are a major burden on healthcare systems. They are common in patients with a urinary catheter in place, but some people are also more susceptible to such infections than others, particularly after sexual activity, although the infections are rarely sexually transmitted in nature.

Adhesion of Escherichia coli bacteria (which live in the lower gut) to cells lining the urinary tract is the first step in the development of a UTI. Chemicals found in cranberry products called proanthocyanidins (PACs) prevent this microbe from adhering to these urinary tract epithelial cells by affecting the surface properties of the bacteria.

Paola Pinzón-Arango, Yatao Liu, and Terri Camesano, from Worcester Polytechnic Institute, in Massachusetts, exposed E. coli grown in culture to either light cranberry juice cocktail or cranberry PACs and measured the adhesion forces between the bacteria and a silicon surface using atomic force microscopy. They demonstrated that the longer the bacteria were exposed to either the cranberry juice or the PACS the less able were the bacteria to adhere.

Cranberries, one of only three species of fruits native to North America, have a long history of medicinal food use. Native Americans used the fruit for the treatment of bladder and kidney ailments.

Read the full story here...

This post originally appeared in full in David Bradley's ChemSpider.com hosted Spinneret blog (geddit?). Hopefully, any molecular structures and links are hooking up to the Chemspider database correctly, please let us know if you have problems with mol files, InChI code etc

If you're lucky, the following quote may be relevant in some way to the post above, but then again...

Religion is a matter which lies solely between man and his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the legitimate powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions. I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should 'make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise therof,' thus building a wall of separation between Church and State.
 - Thomas Jefferson

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