Geraniol
Inside plants Herbal chemistry
November/December 1997
By C. Leigh Broadhurst, Ph.D., and James A. Duke, Ph.D.
Scented geraniums offer many ornamental and
aromatic pleasures. They also contain compounds that may benefit
human health. One particular compound, geraniol, has slowed the
growth of cancerous tumors in both human cell cultures and
animals.
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A source of essential oils used in the perfume and fragrance
industries, scented geraniums (Pelargonium spp.) are unusual
because their scent comes from their leaves rather than their
flowers. Varieties of scented geraniums include mint, apple, pine,
lemon, nutmeg, and rose. In the sixteenth century, European
explorers found scented geraniums growing wild in South Africa and
took them back to their homeland, where the plants became very
popular. The French discovered that oil from rose-scented geraniums
(P. radens ¥ P. capitatum) could substitute for the more expensive
attar of roses (top-quality rose petal extract) in making
perfume.
Geraniol, one of the principal components of rose geranium oil,
has a sweet, mildly floral aroma, according to the University of
Delaware’s Arthur Tucker, Ph.D., an expert on essential oils and an
Herbs for Health adviser. Geraniol belongs to a large class of
plant chemicals known as isoprenoids, compounds that are
concentrated in essential oils; they include chemicals such as
menthol and vitamin E.
A steady intake of various isoprenoids is believed to be one
reason that diets high in fruits and vegetables decrease the risk
of cancer and cardiovascular disease. Some isoprenoids, including
geraniol, also help detoxify the liver and moderately lower
blood-cholesterol levels.
Preventive care may not be the only benefit of isoprenoids. In
recent studies, isoprenoids have suppressed the growth of
aggressive cancers in human cell cultures. And a review of animal
studies shows that geraniol inhibits tumor growth when given in
controlled amounts in the animals’ food. In one study, liver cancer
didn’t grow when rats received either 400 micromoles of geraniol in
their daily diet or 45 micromoles of geranoic acid through daily
injections. In both groups, some rats survived—tumor-free.
In two other experiments, researchers tested to see whether
isoprenoids could be used to treat pancreatic cancer, which is
usually unresponsive to chemotherapy. (The five-year survival rate
is only 4 percent.) Researchers transplanted pancreatic tumors into
groups of fifteen hamsters. In the first experiment, hamsters were
fed a diet containing geraniol, farnesol (an isoprenoid found in
lemon grass and cumin), or perillyl alcohol for one week before the
transplant and for twenty-five days after. Tumor growth in the
hamsters fed geraniol or farnesol at 20 g per kg of body weight
stopped completely. But 50 percent of the hamsters fed perillyl
alcohol at 40 g per kilogram of body weight developed tumors, and
20 g doses were ineffective.