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Ginger vs Ibuprofen for Period Pain: 4 RCTs Show Equal Efficacy

Four randomized controlled trials (Ozgoli 2009, Rahnama 2012, Jenabi 2013, Shirvani 2015) on 462 women found ginger equally effective as ibuprofen for menstrual cramps.

How Period Pain Works

Dysmenorrhea = excess prostaglandins (PGF2α, PGE2) in the endometrium → uterine contractions → ischemia → pain. Ibuprofen blocks COX-1/COX-2 → fewer prostaglandins. Ginger does the same thing, naturally.

The Evidence

  • Ozgoli 2009: 150 women, double-blind. Ginger (250mg×4/day) vs ibuprofen (400mg×4/day). No significant difference (p>0.05).
  • Rahnama 2012: 120 women. 71% reported improvement with ginger vs placebo.
  • Jenabi 2013: 70 women. Pain reduced 62% (ginger) vs 36% (placebo).
  • Shirvani 2015: 122 women. Ginger = ibuprofen efficacy, fewer GI side effects.

The Sugar Paradox

Excess sugar increases systemic inflammation → more prostaglandin production → worse cramps. A "ginger shot" with 33g sugar/100ml fights inflammation with one hand and feeds it with the other.

INTI — 1.1g sugar. The anti-inflammatory ginger works without the pro-inflammatory sugar.

⚠️ See your gynecologist for severe or worsening menstrual pain. Ginger complements, it doesn't replace medical care.


When a spice matches a billion-unit drug in 4 clinical trials, maybe we should fund more research.

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