Limbrel: A New Weapon Against Arthritis

Will it Relieve Pain and Inflammation Without Side Effects?

A new "medical food" recently hit the market as a treatment for osteoarthritis. It's Limbrel, manufactured by Primus Pharmaceuticals, and it allegedly offers pain relief in a different and safer way than standard arthritis drugs.

"Medical foods" like Limbrel are regulated by the Food and Drug Administration and are available only by prescription. They differ from standard drugs in that they are made up of ingredients "generally recognized as safe" according to FDA terminology. Because of this, they don't have to
 go through the long process of testing and approval required of other prescriptions. The makers of medical foods do have to show that they are an effective treatment for a specific condition.

So just what type of foods ingredients are in Limbrel? According to the maker, Limbrel contains highly concentrated and refined natural flavonoids similar to those found in green tea, cocoa, cauliflower, kale, red wine, soy and peanuts. It would be impossible to simply eat enough of the foods containing the beneficial flavonoids to get the concentration found in Limbrel. Not to imply that the drug company processes all those foods in manufacturing Limbrel; the actual sources of the flavonoids are root and bark extracts of the plants Scutellaria baicalensis and Acacia catechu. Scutellaria is also know as Baikal scullcap and serves in Chinese herbalism to effectively treat a wide range of conditions. Acacia is utilized around the world in herbal medicine as an anti-inflammatory. The patented blend of flavonoids that goes into Limbrel is called flavocoxid.

Dr. Jonathan Cluett, About.com's orthopedics guide states, "The flavonoid extracts found in Limbrel appear to have anti-inflammatory properties by inhibiting enzymes that cause inflammation. These enzymes, called COX (cyclooxygenase) and LOX (lipooxygenase) create molecules that cause inflammation and pain."1 Limbrel affects the metabolic processes that cause arthritic damage.

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Great info here

Posted on 02/05/2009 at 10:02:52 PM

i have been taking it for about a month i do notice a difference thank God

Posted on 09/09/2008 at 11:09:34 PM

Ahhh I have Rheumatoid. I shy away from all these prescription drugs after the horrors of massive weight gain with Prednisone. Evil stuff, that.

Posted on 10/18/2007 at 1:10:00 AM

Great article with tons of useful information!

Posted on 08/17/2007 at 10:08:00 AM

Sounds promising!

Posted on 08/07/2007 at 8:08:00 AM

Great article and very informative. I myself have a bit of arthritis and I think its good to be informed on the topic. :-)

Posted on 08/06/2007 at 6:08:00 PM

Good to know this kind of stuff. Who knows if and when we will all face this kind of problem.

Posted on 08/03/2007 at 2:08:00 PM

:)

Posted on 07/30/2007 at 11:07:00 AM

This is encouraging news. It sounds like "whole food supplements" but under a medical auspice. This sounds very promising. My mom had some sort of crippling arthritis when she was a teenager and her dad went to town every week to bring her back loads and loads of grapefruits. She ate them according to an anti-arthritis diet that was popular then and she says that because of the grapefruits she was able to leave the wheelchair she was confined to and walk again--and dance at Arthur Murray's Dance Studio where she bought herself a life-time membership.

Posted on 07/27/2007 at 3:07:00 PM

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