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Tart Cherry

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Specifically for Gout

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Why it works for Gout:

1) Lowers serum urate (short-term): Small human studies show cherry intake can transiently reduce serum uric acid (the driver of gout). In healthy adults, two servings of cherries lowered plasma urate within hours. Similar effects have been reported with Montmorency tart cherry concentrate in dose-response trials. Journal of Nutrition (2003)

2) Anti-inflammatory/antioxidant actions: Tart cherries are rich in anthocyanins and other polyphenols that down-regulate inflammatory pathways (e.g., COX-1/COX-2, LOX) and show in vitro inhibition of xanthine oxidase (the enzyme targeted by allopurinol/febuxostat). ScienceDirect

3) Fewer flares observed in real-world data: In a well-known online case-crossover study of >600 people with gout, cherry intake over a 2-day period was associated with a 35% lower risk of gout attacks, and ~75% lower when combined with allopurinol. Nature

How to use for Gout:

Daily prevention (common study protocols):

  • Tart cherry juice concentrate: 30–60 mL/day (2–4 Tbsp), usually diluted in water, for several weeks. ScienceDirect
  • 100% tart cherry juice: ~240 mL/day (8 fl oz). Some trials used once or twice daily for 48 hours in acute settings, but daily use for months is being/has been studied. SpringerLink
  • Capsules/extracts: Commercial products typically provide standardized anthocyanins; study doses vary. A practical, commonly marketed range is ~500–1,000 mg extract/day, but products differ—follow your product’s label and discuss with your clinician. (Evidence base is smaller than for juice.) Arthritis Foundation

During a flare (adjunct only):

  • Some patients use 240 mL juice once or twice daily for 48 hours alongside standard anti-inflammatories. This mirrors short, acute protocols—but rigorous flare-treatment RCT data remain limited. SpringerLink

Dietary cherries: Observational work suggested benefit with ~3 servings (10–12 cherries/serving) over 2 days, and many consumer resources echo “a handful daily” as a reasonable, low-risk habit. Nature

Scientific Evidence for Gout:

Human studies & reviews

  • Case-crossover (observational): Cherry intake linked to 35% fewer flares; 75% fewer when combined with allopurinol. Arthritis & Rheumatism (2012) summary PDF. Nature
  • Serum urate lowering (acute): Two servings of cherries reduced plasma urate within 5 hours in healthy women. Journal of Nutrition
  • Tart cherry concentrate—dose response (biomarkers): Montmorency concentrate lowered serum urate and inflammatory markers in a dose-dependent manner. ScienceDirect
  • Acute dosing across forms: Juice or capsules over 48 h reduced serum urate vs. placebo in healthy adults. SpringerLink
  • Systematic review (2019): Evidence supports an association between cherry intake and lower serum urate and fewer flares, but meta-analysis was limited by heterogeneous, small studies. Evidence-Based Complementary & Alternative Medicine (Hindawi)
  • Patients on ULT (adjunctive RCT): A recent trial of a tart-cherry-plus-citrate mixture during febuxostat initiation suggested improvements in inflammation/renal markers and fewer flares vs. controls. (Note: mixture product ≠ tart cherry alone.) BioMed Central
  • Ongoing/registered RCTs: A 12-month, double-blind RCT is/was designed to test daily Montmorency tart cherry juice for preventing flares in gout. BMJ Open

Mechanistic

  • Enzyme & pathway targets: Anthocyanin-rich tart cherry inhibits xanthine oxidase and inflammatory enzymes (COX-1/COX-2, LOX) in vitro, offering plausible urate-lowering and anti-inflammatory mechanisms. ScienceDirect
Specific Warnings for Gout:

1) Don’t replace prescribed gout meds. Major guidelines (e.g., ACR 2020) prioritize treat-to-target urate-lowering therapy (allopurinol, etc.) plus anti-inflammatory prophylaxis. Tart cherry can be a complement, not a substitute. ACS Publications

2) Sugar/fructose load (especially with juice). Fructose can raise uric acid and worsen gout; tart cherry juice can contain ~20–30 g sugars per 240 mL (varies by brand). Prefer unsweetened juice, dilute concentrates, or consider capsules if you have diabetes/metabolic syndrome. Arthritis Foundation

3) GI side effects & intolerance. Tart cherry products are generally well-tolerated, but diarrhea, gas, or cramping can occur (sorbitol/sugars). Start low and assess tolerance. WebMD

4) Potassium load / kidney disease. Tart cherry juice has meaningful potassium per serving; if you have advanced CKD or are on potassium-sparing meds, discuss with your clinician. Nutrition Value

5) Anticoagulants/bleeding risk—evidence limited. Robust interaction data with warfarin/DOACs are lacking; rare sources speculate on antiplatelet effects from polyphenols, but high-quality clinical interaction studies are not available. If you take blood thinners, clear changes with your prescriber and monitor as advised. (This is a precaution due to uncertainty, not a proven harm.) Arthritis Foundation

6) Allergies & pregnancy/lactation. Avoid if you have known cherry allergy. There’s insufficient high-quality safety data for concentrated extracts in pregnancy/lactation—use food-level intakes only unless your clinician approves. WebMD

General Information (All Ailments)

Note: You are viewing ailment-specific information above. This section shows the general remedy information for all conditions.

What It Is

“Tart cherry” (often Montmorency cherry) refers to the sour, anthocyanin-rich varieties of Prunus cerasus commonly taken as juice concentrate, powder, or capsule. Unlike sweet eating cherries, the appeal is not flavor but dense quantities of polyphenols — especially anthocyanins — often standardized in supplements. Human trials have used intakes ranging from ~30–60 mL of 100 % concentrate twice daily to encapsulated extracts standardized for polyphenol content.

How It Works

The rationale is largely biochemical and inflammatory-modulating:

  • Anthocyanin-mediated inflammation modulation — Anthocyanins influence enzymes such as COX-1 and COX-2, shifting the production of downstream inflammatory mediators. This does not work in the same pharmacologic amplitude as NSAIDs but exerts a diet-scale down-regulation of inflammatory tone.
  • Antioxidant load and redox buffering — Tart cherry polyphenols scavenge reactive oxygen species and indirectly up-regulate endogenous antioxidant defenses, reducing exercise-induced oxidative stress and secondary tissue damage.
  • Urate dynamics — Some trials show reduced serum uric acid and fewer gout flares, likely through inhibition of xanthine oxidase and improved renal clearance of urate; the magnitude is modest but directionally consistent.
  • Possible sleep effect via melatonin — Tart cherries contain small amounts of melatonin and may influence circadian signaling, contributing to better sleep onset or efficiency in some studies.

Why It’s Important

Tart cherry has a rare combination in nutrition science: it is food-derived, low-risk, and prospectively studied in human trials for specific endpoints.

  • Exercise recovery and muscle soreness — Repeated demonstrations in athletes and recreational lifters that delayed onset muscle soreness and strength loss after intense eccentric training can be blunted. This has cultural adoption in endurance sport for multi-day recovery windows.
  • Gout and uric acid-related morbidity — For individuals with gout, even a modest reduction in flare frequency is clinically meaningful because cumulative flares drive progressive joint damage.
  • Low-risk alternative or adjunct to NSAIDs — For individuals who cannot take NSAIDs chronically (renal risk, GI risk, cardiovascular risk), nutritional strategies with partial overlap in mechanism are of outsized interest.
  • Sleep and cardiometabolic implications — If sleep consolidation improves for a subset of users, there may be downstream benefits in metabolic, cognitive, and recovery domains.

Considerations

  • Dose and preparation matter — Most positive trials use concentrated juice or standardized extracts. Drinking “some cherry juice” is not equivalent to controlled anthocyanin intake.
  • Sugar load in juice forms — Liquid concentrates typically deliver considerable carbohydrate; this is relevant for diabetes management, weight loss attempts, and late-evening use if glycemic control is a priority.
  • Interactions and medical nuance — People with gout flares on urate-lowering therapy, chronic kidney disease, or polypharmacy should treat tart cherry as a therapeutic add-on and discuss with a clinician, especially if considering high-dose extract rather than food-level exposure.
  • Expected magnitude — Effects are modest, not curative. Tart cherry shifts probabilities and trajectories — fewer flares, faster recovery, slightly better sleep — rather than transforming baselines.
  • Quality and adulteration — Anthocyanin yield varies widely by cultivar, harvest, processing, and storage. “Cherry-flavored” products are not reliable surrogates for polyphenol content.

Helps with these conditions

Tart Cherry is most effective for general wellness support with emerging research . The effectiveness varies by condition based on clinical evidence and user experiences.

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Gout

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1) Lowers serum urate (short-term): Small human studies show cherry intake can transiently reduce serum uric acid (the driver of gout). In healthy adu...

0 votes Updated 2 months ago 9 studies cited

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