I thought this was great news for us chocolate lovers! I love the DARK 70% or 80% chocolate!
You've heard of DM cough syrups. How about DC cough remedies? DM is  an abbreviation for an over-the-counter cough suppressant called  dextromethorphan. What is DC? It.s the nickname given by members of the  DrGreene.com community to dark chocolate. Codeine is stronger against  coughs than DM. Could DC be even more effective? And if so, how much  chocolate would it take? Research published in the The FASEB Journal  in February 2005 makes a strong case that dark chocolate can be a  powerful cough suppressant. FASEB is the Federation of American  Societies for Experimental Biology, a coalition of biomedical and life  scientists committed to enhancing life through solid scientific  research. This is a mainline technical scientific group, not a wishful  thinking group. They first published some of the results on chocolate  and cough online on November 17, 2004 in FJ Express.
A cough is a healthy, protective reflex - part of the body's way of protecting and healing itself. But sometimes coughs can interfere with other important paths to health, such as sleep. Sometimes kids cough more or longer than useful for them, and parents turn to cough medicines to seek relief. In the United States alone, more than $2 billion dollars are spent each year on over-the-counter  cough remedies. The evidence that the benefits of these outweigh the  side effects is inconclusive. When stronger relief is desired, parents  often turn to prescription cough medicines  containing codeine or a similar compound. Wouldn't it be interesting if  dark chocolate were even more powerful? Researchers at the National  Heart and Lung Institute in London gave a series of disguised capsules  to healthy volunteers. One week the capsules contained 60 mg of codeine,  one week they contained 1000 mg of theobromine, an ingredient in  chocolate, and one week they contained an inert placebo. The volunteers  then inhaled increasing amount of capsaicin, an ingredient in red  peppers used to stimulate coughing in research subjects. The codeine was effective at preventing coughs,  but the cocoa ingredient was 33 percent more effective, preventing  cough effectively for 4 hours, and had no side effects. The same results  were seen in coughing guinea pigs, and when looking directly at the  guinea pig and human vagus nerve, a nerve that triggers coughing.
How much chocolate would this be? Chocolate preparations vary widely,  depending on their cocoa content, but dark chocolate often has up to  about 450 mg of theobromine per ounce. Milk chocolate has far, far less.  Two ounces of dark chocolate was about the amount of theobromine used  for the adults in the study. Half that may be plenty for kids (but of  course there is still a lot to learn about this marvelous food). Will  that much chocolate keep them awake? Even though theobromine is  structurally related to caffeine, studies have shown it doesn.t  interfere with sleep at those amounts. I used some fine dark chocolate  for my own family during our latest viral cough illness, and our coughs disappeared nicely. What a pleasant way to get through a cold!
 
 
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