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MSM—Joint Health and Beyond

by Jeremy Appleton, N.D.

Methylsulfonylmethane (MSM) is a naturally occurring sulfur compound present in small amounts in many foods and beverages. MSM is also known as dimethyl sulfone, or DMSO2, a name that reflects its close metabolic relationship to dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). MSM is the first oxidized metabolite of DMSO in the environment and in humans.

MSM is widely distributed in nature. It is found in selected fruits, vegetables, grains and beverages. Milk is the most abundant known source of dietary MSM, containing between 3.3 parts per million (ppm) to 8.2 ppm. Other dietary sources of MSM include coffee, tomatoes, tea, Swiss chard, beer, corn and alfalfa. Trace amounts of MSM have also been detected in asparagus, beets, cabbage, cucumber, oats, apples and raspberries. MSM is found naturally in the human body in small concentrations.

MSM is a source of dietary sulfur, containing approximately 34 percent sulfur by weight. Sulfur is the fourth most abundant mineral in the body, after calcium, phosphorus and potassium. A 154-pound human body contains approximately 200 grams of elemental sulfur, slightly less than one percent of the total body weight. The sulfur component of MSM has been shown to be taken up by sulfur-containing amino acids in the body.

Sulfur is a major component of connective tissues, amino acids and vitamins required for various enzyme reactions (i.e., coenzymes). It is most abundant in skin and cartilage. Sulfur helps maintain the structure of intracellular proteins by forming crosslinkages through disulfide bonds. Sulfur is also a constituent of glutathione, the most important and abundant intracellular antioxidant in the body.

The mechanisms by which MSM exerts its many effects are not well known. However, its primary metabolic precursor, DMSO, has been studied extensively. DMSO has several pharmacologic properties that it likely shares with MSM. These include effects on pain receptors, increase of local blood supply, action on mediators of inflammation, effects on collagen and reduction of muscle spasm. Oral MSM appears to be well absorbed and may even become incorporated in the synovial fluid of the joints. Three studies suggest that intact MSM is incorporated into human brain tissue. The authors of these studies found no adverse effects of MSM in the brain. In fact, MSM’s non-toxicity, combined with its ability to cross the bloodbrain barrier, may prove to be beneficial as neurologic applications for the supplement emerge.

MSM Clinical Trails in Humans
Most people think of MSM as a supplement strictly for joint health. However, the first clinical trial of oral MSM to be published in a peer-reviewed medical journal evaluated the efficacy of MSM, not for arthritis, but for seasonal allergic rhinitis (hay fever). Fifty subjects completed the open-label study. Participants consumed 2,600 mg of MSM (OptiMSM, Cardinal Nutrition, Vancouver, Washington) orally per day for 30 days. After one week of supplementation, upper and total respiratory symptoms were reduced significantly. Lower respiratory symptoms were significantly improved after three weeks. All respiratory improvements were maintained through the end of the study. No adverse effects on various laboratory parameters occurred.

Only one double-blind trial of MSM for osteoarthritis has been reported to date. In 1998, an abstract appeared in the International Journal of Anti-Aging Medicine. In this abstract, the author presented the results of a preliminary study in which patients suffering from degenerative arthritis were given either 2,250 mg per day of MSM (Adaptin, no manufacturer specified). The author reported “a better than 80 percent control of pain within six weeks of beginning the study.” No formal publication of the full study or follow-up has occurred. Randomized, controlled clinical trials of MSM are needed to confirm and extend the results of this preliminary report.

Intravesicular MSM has also been used by medical doctors to treat interstitial cystitis, a painful inflammatory condition of the bladder.

Stanley W. Jacob, M.D., of Oregon Health and Science University, conducted a trial of MSM nasal drops for the control of snoring. In this study, 80 percent of the subject’s mates reported the lessening or absence of snoring in their partners, while 20 percent reported no benefit.

Dr. Jacob has treated over 18,000 patients with MSM. A selection of case histories is available in MSM—The Definitive Guide. The vast majority of health conditions treated successfully with MSM are inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, repetitive stress injuries (e.g., carpal tunnel syndrome, tendinitis, bursitis), scleroderma, lupus, fibromyalgia, myasthenia gravis and asthma. Anti-inflammatory effects of MSM have also been suggested in animal studies. In addition to the conditions described here, Dr. Jacob has also used MSM with success to treat chronic pain syndromes and many lesser-known clinical entities.

Toxicity Research
The first toxicity study of MSM to be published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal appeared in 2002. The study assessed both the acute and subchronic oral toxicity of OptiMSM in rats. No adverse effects, clinical signs of toxicity or deaths occurred at the human equivalent of more than 100 grams, or about five ounces, per day. Most people take a small fraction of the amounts used in this study. A typical dose of MSM as a dieta

Conclusion
Information on MSM in the public domain is largely unreliable. Retailers and consumers should be skeptical of extravagant claims, claims that one form of MSM is more “natural” than another and of reports of potential drug and nutrient interactions with MSM. Published data does not exist to confirm or refute most of these claims. Nevertheless, scientific data does exist to support many of the current uses of MSM for human and animal health.

Retailers and consumers should be on the alert for substandard or contaminated MSM, which has become more prevalent. MSM should be produced in a dedicated facility that complies with Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) as set forth by the National Nutritional Foods Association (NNFA). Every batch of MSM should be distilled for maximum purity and subjected to the most up-to-date laboratory analysis for microbiological and heavy metal contamination. TH

References available upon request. Send a SASE to totalhealth.

Jeremy Appleton, N.D., is a licensed naturopathic physician, writer and educator in the field of evidence-based natural medicine. He is co-author, with Stanley Jacob M.D., of MSM—The Definitive Guide (Freedom Press). Dr. Appleton is nutrition department chair at the National College of Naturopathic Medicine and director of scientific affairs at Cardinal Nutrition. His articles have appeared in numerous journals and newswire services.
 
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