Cranberry
- PMID: 22593931
- Bookshelf ID: NBK92762
Cranberry
Excerpt
Cranberries are low-growing, woody, perennial vines with small, alternate, and ovate leaves. The plant produces stolons (horizontal stems) having a height of up to 6 feet (2 m). Short, vertical branches, or uprights, 2–8 inches (5–20 cm) in height, grow from buds on the stolons, and these can be either vegetative or fruiting. Each fruiting upright may contain as much as seven flowers. Pollination is primarily via domestic honeybees (Cranberry Institute, East Wareham, Massachusetts). Cranberries were first used by Native Americans, who discovered the wild berry’s versatility. Native Americans used cranberries in a variety of foods, the most popular being pemmican, a high-protein combination of crushed cranberries, dried deer meat, and melted fat. They also used it as a medicine to treat arrow wounds and as a dye for rugs and blankets.
Copyright © 2011 by Taylor and Francis Group, LLC.
Sections
- 6.1. CRANBERRY: INTRODUCTION AND TRADITIONAL ORIGINS
- 6.2. PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION
- 6.3. PHYTOCHEMICAL COMPOSITION
- 6.4. BIOAVAILABILITY OF CRANBERRY PHYTOCHEMICALS
- 6.5. HUMAN STUDIES RELEVANT TO HEART DISEASE AND DIABETES
- 6.6. INVESTIGATION OF CRANBERRY CONSTITUENTS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO IN VITRO ANTICANCER ACTIVITY
- 6.7. POSSIBLE CHEMOPREVENTIVE MECHANISMS AND EFFECTS
- 6.8. CRANBERRIES AND URINARY HEALTH
- 6.9. FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR RESEARCH ON CRANBERRIES AND DISEASE
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
- REFERENCES
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