cherry juice and pmr

i was reading an article on inflamation  and cherry juice.    how it helps  fibro,   gout , athritis,

and lots more  illness    could it help  inflamation  caused  by  pmr.   i cannot recall  it ever been mentioned on the forum   before.  does anyone  know the answer please 

It has definitely been mentioned before (but finding the relative posts is difficult].  There are many natural products that help inflammation - the ‘experts’ on these will no doubt be along to advise.

I’ve heard that cherries and berries can help calm chronic inflammation. 

I'd love tokow as well, as I have fibromyalgia.

I am interested in this. If anyone knows how much cherry juice one would have to consume to have an effect, please let me know.  I don’t like cherry juice but I’ll try it if it might help.

My husband has gout that occasionally flares up if he overindulges, we were looking for a natural remedy and cherry juice was recommended. He tried it, and was pleased when it reduced the redness and pain. He also puts celery seed in his tomato juice, and that seems to keep the gout from flaring up. Not sure how either product would work with other conditions, but it’s worth a try.

Cherry juice is supposed to be good for PMR but it must be Montmorency cherries which are sour cherries. I have a glass every day as I love cherry juice! 

Highly unlikely! If it sounds too good to be true - it probably is!

Fibromyalgia is NOT inflammatory.

1  tumbler   per day   there was lots  of  infoe on how good it is.  so we will see   i bought 4 litres from  sainsburys.  but i recon it will take a couple of weeks to  kick in  

oh well,  maybe i  got it wrong  about  inflamation   in fibro , but it did say  cherry juice  helped,  i will give it a  go and let you know.    but after saying  that    i am now  down to 1.5     and  2   mg.. so maybe i wont have much inflamation xx

I think it's one of those things which may make some people feel better, but probably most won't notice a difference.  It could depend on a lot of other factors too, including your nutritional status - some people may for whatever reason have some sort of deficiency which is helped by (fill in the blank) cherry juice, turmeric, ginger, aloe vera, etc.  I'd say, give it a try, and if it doesn't work no harm done, if it does, great!  I've used aloe vera and found it helpful, but only to a point, think it is no longer having any effect.  But on the other hand after a very difficult summer last year and a so-so winter, I'm definitely feeling better now.  So did the aloe vera help?  Maybe it did!  I certainly seem to have found it easier to reduce when taking it, but now I'm pretty sure I'm close to my best lowest dose, and the aloe very can't take me further.  I suspect it helps with withdrawal pains, but doesn't really do anything about the PMR itself.   

I believe cherries help reduce inflammation a great deal. I add unsweetened dried cherries to salads and anything else that sounds good and drizzle unsweetened cherry concentrate on my plain Greek yogurt.