A dried yeast fermentate prevents and reduces inflammation in two separate experimental immune models

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Abstract

Diverse and significant benefits against cold/flu symptoms and seasonal allergies have been observed with a dried fermentate (DF) derived from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (EpiCor) in multiple published randomized trials. To determine if DF may influence other immune conditions, two separate animal studies were conducted. Study 1 examined the ability of DF to prevent or reduce inflammation when given orally for 14 days to rats prior to receiving 1 carrageenan (localized inflammation model). DF significantly (P<0.05) reduced swelling at all time points (1, 2, 3, 6, 12, and 24 hours) versus the control. Edema severity and PGE2 levels were reduced by approximately 50 and 25 (P<0.05), respectively. Study 2 examined the ability of DF to treat established inflammation induced by type-2 collagen in mice over 4 weeks (autoimmune arthritis model). Significantly reduced arthritis scores, antibody response to type-2 collagen, and interferon-gamma levels were observed compared to controls (all parameters P<0.05). DF favorably impacts multiple acute and potentially chronic immunologic inflammatory control mechanisms and should be further tested in clinical trials. Copyright © 2012 Malkanthi Evans et al.

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Evans, M., Reeves, S., & Robinson, L. E. (2012). A dried yeast fermentate prevents and reduces inflammation in two separate experimental immune models. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/973041

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