Cranberries But Not The Juice Help Urinary Tract Infections

For many, the first port of call when urinary tract infection hits is a box of cranberry juice.
However, new research published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology suggests that while cranberry capsules can help, cranberry juice may be little more than a panacea.
The team studied 160 patients aged 23-88 years who were likely to develop a UTI following a gynecological surgery. Half of the patients received two cranberry juice capsules twice daily - the equivalent in strength to two 8-ounce servings of
cranberry juice - for 6 weeks after surgery. The others took a placebo.
Cranberry capsules lowered the risk of UTIs by 50%.
However, the researchers point out that since a cranberry capsule provides the equivalent of 8 ounces of cranberry juice, a patient would need a lot of pure cranberry to prevent an infection.
One of the researchers explained that it takes an extremely large concentration of
cranberry to prevent bacterial adhesion and this amount of concentration is not found in the juices we drink.

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