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Cinnamon in Excess Amounts Can Interfere With Medications

Cinnamon in Excess Amounts Can Interfere With Medications

Cinnamon has earned a reputation as a health booster. But the researchers behind a new study warn that high doses of the spice, specifically in the form of dietary supplements, may decrease the effectiveness of certain prescription drugs.

“Overconsumption of supplements could lead to a rapid clearance of the prescription medicine from the body, and that could result in making the medicine less effective,” said study author Shabana Khan, PhD, a principal scientist at the National Center for Natural Products Research at the University of Mississippi, in a statement. “Health concerns could arise if excessive amounts of supplements are consumed without the knowledge of a healthcare provider or prescriber of the medications.”

In the research, which was published in the June edition of Food Chemistry: Molecular Sciences, Dr. Khan and her collaborators found that cinnamaldehyde, a compound responsible for cinnamon’s distinctive taste and smell, activates receptors in the body that speed up how quickly medications are metabolized, potentially flushing them out before they have time to work.

Cassia cinnamon bark from southern China poses additional risk, Khan and her team say. In addition to containing cinnamaldehyde, this type of cinnamon has high levels of coumarin, a compound also present in fenugreek seeds that has anticoagulant properties, making it dangerous for people on blood thinners. Coumarin is also known to cause liver damage in large doses.

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