2022
DOI: 10.1155/2022/5456855
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Efficacy of Ginger Supplementation in Relieving Persistent Hypothyroid Symptoms in Patients with Controlled Primary Hypothyroidism: A Pilot Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial

Abstract: Primary hypothyroidism is a common disease. Some patients have persistent symptoms despite normal serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels. Ginger is reported to be beneficial in relieving similar symptoms. Our aim was to evaluate the efficacy of ginger supplementation in relieving persistent symptoms in these patients. In this randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial, 60 hypothyroid patients aged 20–60 years with normal serum TSH concentrations were randomly allocated to two equal par… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Duplicates, articles on ginger mixtures with other herbs, not available data or hazard ratio, and undesirable titles and abstracts were excluded. In all, 21 publications were found to be eligible after being matched with our inclusion criteria; however, four of these studies that used ginger and physical activity together were also excluded because we only want to see the effect of ginger intake alone not with combination of any other factor (Ayaz & Roshan, 2012; Farhadi et al, 2020; Karimi et al, 2015; Vahdatpoor et al, 2019), thus leaving 17 articles in our systematic review and meta‐analysis (Arablou et al, 2014; Ashraf et al, 2022; Atashak et al, 2011; Azimi et al, 2014; Babaahmadi‐Rezaei et al, 2020; Carvalho et al, 2020; Ebrahimzadeh‐Attary et al, 2015; Elgayar et al, 2020; Gholinezhad et al, 2019; Gholipoor et al, 2019; Mahluji et al, 2013; Makhdoomi Arzati et al, 2017; Rafie et al, 2020; Rahimlou et al, 2019; Tabibi et al, 2016; Talaei et al, 2012; Talaei et al, 2017). Details and extracted data from each included paper have been listed in Table 1.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Duplicates, articles on ginger mixtures with other herbs, not available data or hazard ratio, and undesirable titles and abstracts were excluded. In all, 21 publications were found to be eligible after being matched with our inclusion criteria; however, four of these studies that used ginger and physical activity together were also excluded because we only want to see the effect of ginger intake alone not with combination of any other factor (Ayaz & Roshan, 2012; Farhadi et al, 2020; Karimi et al, 2015; Vahdatpoor et al, 2019), thus leaving 17 articles in our systematic review and meta‐analysis (Arablou et al, 2014; Ashraf et al, 2022; Atashak et al, 2011; Azimi et al, 2014; Babaahmadi‐Rezaei et al, 2020; Carvalho et al, 2020; Ebrahimzadeh‐Attary et al, 2015; Elgayar et al, 2020; Gholinezhad et al, 2019; Gholipoor et al, 2019; Mahluji et al, 2013; Makhdoomi Arzati et al, 2017; Rafie et al, 2020; Rahimlou et al, 2019; Tabibi et al, 2016; Talaei et al, 2012; Talaei et al, 2017). Details and extracted data from each included paper have been listed in Table 1.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bordia et al (1997) findings also revealed that a higher dose of ginger (4 g/day ginger powder) consumed for a longer length of time (3 months) had no effect on lipids in individuals with coronary artery disease (Bordia et al, 1997). However, due to the small number of studies in some especial cases (there was only one article in each case for hypothyroidism, patients on peritoneal dialysis, NAFLD) (Ashraf et al, 2022; Ebrahimzadeh‐Attary et al, 2015; Tabibi et al, 2016), more studies are definitely needed for a more reliable conclusion.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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