Scientists are reporting evidence that black rice -- a little-known  variety of the grain that is the staple food for one-third of the world  population -- may help soothe the inflammation involved in allergies,  asthma, and other diseases.
Their study appears in ACS' bi-weekly Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.
Mendel Friedman and colleagues point out that their previous research  showed several potential health benefits of eating black rice bran.  Bran is the outer husk of the grain, which is removed during the  processing of brown rice to produce the familiar white rice. Those  experiments, which were done in cell cultures, hinted that black rice  bran suppressed the release of histamine, which causes inflammation.
In the new study, they tested the effects of black rice bran extract  on skin inflammation in laboratory mice. When they injected the extract  into the mice, it reduced skin inflammation by about 32 percent compared  to control animals and also decreased production of certain substances  known to promote inflammation. Brown rice bran extract did not have  these effects, they say. When the scientists fed the mice a diet  containing 10 percent black rice bran, it reduced swelling associated  with allergic contact dermatitis, a common type of skin irritation.
The findings "further demonstrate the potential value of black rice  bran as an anti-inflammatory and anti-allergic food ingredient and  possibly also as a therapeutic agent for the treatment and prevention of  diseases associated with chronic inflammation," the article notes.
 

 
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