Data-driven analysis of biomedical literature suggests broad-spectrum benefits of culinary herbs and spices.

Spices and herbs are key dietary ingredients used across cultures worldwide. Beyond their use as flavoring and coloring agents, the popularity of these aromatic plant products in culinary preparations has been attributed to their antimicrobial properties. Last few decades have witnessed an exponenti...

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Main Authors: N K Rakhi, Rudraksh Tuwani, Jagriti Mukherjee, Ganesh Bagler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5973616?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-a5dfea7c86e44da4872034e60b6e069e2020-11-25T00:02:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01135e019803010.1371/journal.pone.0198030Data-driven analysis of biomedical literature suggests broad-spectrum benefits of culinary herbs and spices.N K RakhiRudraksh TuwaniJagriti MukherjeeGanesh BaglerSpices and herbs are key dietary ingredients used across cultures worldwide. Beyond their use as flavoring and coloring agents, the popularity of these aromatic plant products in culinary preparations has been attributed to their antimicrobial properties. Last few decades have witnessed an exponential growth of biomedical literature investigating the impact of spices and herbs on health, presenting an opportunity to mine for patterns from empirical evidence. Systematic investigation of empirical evidence to enumerate the health consequences of culinary herbs and spices can provide valuable insights into their therapeutic utility. We implemented a text mining protocol to assess the health impact of spices by assimilating, both, their positive and negative effects. We conclude that spices show broad-spectrum benevolence across a range of disease categories in contrast to negative effects that are comparatively narrow-spectrum. We also implement a strategy for disease-specific culinary recommendations of spices based on their therapeutic tradeoff against adverse effects. Further by integrating spice-phytochemical-disease associations, we identify bioactive spice phytochemicals potentially involved in their therapeutic effects. Our study provides a systems perspective on health effects of culinary spices and herbs with applications for dietary recommendations as well as identification of phytochemicals potentially involved in underlying molecular mechanisms.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5973616?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author N K Rakhi
Rudraksh Tuwani
Jagriti Mukherjee
Ganesh Bagler
spellingShingle N K Rakhi
Rudraksh Tuwani
Jagriti Mukherjee
Ganesh Bagler
Data-driven analysis of biomedical literature suggests broad-spectrum benefits of culinary herbs and spices.
PLoS ONE
author_facet N K Rakhi
Rudraksh Tuwani
Jagriti Mukherjee
Ganesh Bagler
author_sort N K Rakhi
title Data-driven analysis of biomedical literature suggests broad-spectrum benefits of culinary herbs and spices.
title_short Data-driven analysis of biomedical literature suggests broad-spectrum benefits of culinary herbs and spices.
title_full Data-driven analysis of biomedical literature suggests broad-spectrum benefits of culinary herbs and spices.
title_fullStr Data-driven analysis of biomedical literature suggests broad-spectrum benefits of culinary herbs and spices.
title_full_unstemmed Data-driven analysis of biomedical literature suggests broad-spectrum benefits of culinary herbs and spices.
title_sort data-driven analysis of biomedical literature suggests broad-spectrum benefits of culinary herbs and spices.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Spices and herbs are key dietary ingredients used across cultures worldwide. Beyond their use as flavoring and coloring agents, the popularity of these aromatic plant products in culinary preparations has been attributed to their antimicrobial properties. Last few decades have witnessed an exponential growth of biomedical literature investigating the impact of spices and herbs on health, presenting an opportunity to mine for patterns from empirical evidence. Systematic investigation of empirical evidence to enumerate the health consequences of culinary herbs and spices can provide valuable insights into their therapeutic utility. We implemented a text mining protocol to assess the health impact of spices by assimilating, both, their positive and negative effects. We conclude that spices show broad-spectrum benevolence across a range of disease categories in contrast to negative effects that are comparatively narrow-spectrum. We also implement a strategy for disease-specific culinary recommendations of spices based on their therapeutic tradeoff against adverse effects. Further by integrating spice-phytochemical-disease associations, we identify bioactive spice phytochemicals potentially involved in their therapeutic effects. Our study provides a systems perspective on health effects of culinary spices and herbs with applications for dietary recommendations as well as identification of phytochemicals potentially involved in underlying molecular mechanisms.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5973616?pdf=render
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