Updated June 2026 · Ireland Health Shop · The Honey Pot, Clonmel
Turmeric (Curcuma longa) is the root of a plant in the ginger family, native to South Asia. It's used extensively in Indian and South-East Asian cuisines and in Ayurvedic and traditional Chinese medicine for millennia. The root contains a family of yellow compounds called curcuminoids — of which curcumin is the most abundant and most studied, making up approximately 2–5% of turmeric powder by weight.
When people talk about the health benefits of turmeric, they almost always mean the benefits of its curcumin content specifically. This distinction matters enormously when choosing a supplement: a standard turmeric powder capsule contains only 2–5% curcumin, while a curcumin extract supplement contains 95% or more. The same dose of curcumin from a standardised extract is dramatically more potent than an equivalent weight of raw turmeric powder.
Curcumin is a pleiotropic molecule — meaning it affects multiple molecular pathways simultaneously. Its primary mechanisms include:
NF-κB (nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells) is a protein complex that controls transcription of DNA for over 200 genes involved in inflammation. It's the master switch for many inflammatory and immune responses. Curcumin is one of the most potent natural inhibitors of NF-κB, which partly explains its broad anti-inflammatory effects across multiple systems and conditions.
Like NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen), curcumin inhibits cyclooxygenase (COX) enzymes — particularly COX-2, the enzyme that produces prostaglandins responsible for pain and inflammation. It also inhibits LOX (lipoxygenase) enzymes that produce leukotrienes. This dual action gives curcumin a broader anti-inflammatory profile than most pharmaceutical NSAIDs, and without the gastrointestinal side effects of long-term NSAID use.
Curcumin is a potent antioxidant — it directly scavenges free radicals and upregulates the body's own antioxidant enzymes (superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase). Chronic inflammation and oxidative stress are closely linked; curcumin addresses both simultaneously.
Here's the fundamental challenge with curcumin: in standard form, it is very poorly absorbed from the gut. Studies using unenhanced curcumin find extremely low plasma concentrations even at high doses. It is rapidly metabolised and excreted. This is why simply adding turmeric to your food — however delicious — doesn't deliver meaningful therapeutic levels.
Fortunately, several strategies dramatically improve curcumin bioavailability:
Piperine — the active compound in black pepper — inhibits certain liver enzymes (CYP3A4) and intestinal efflux transporters (P-glycoprotein) that normally rapidly metabolise and excrete curcumin. Adding just 20mg of piperine to a 2,000mg curcumin dose has been shown to increase curcumin bioavailability by up to 2,000% (a 20-fold increase). This is the basis of the traditional Ayurvedic practice of combining turmeric with black pepper — and it works. Look for supplements that list "piperine" or "BioPerine®" on the label.
Binding curcumin to phosphatidylcholine (a phospholipid) creates a complex that is more fat-soluble and better absorbed through the intestinal wall. Meriva® (by Indena) and similar phytosome technologies have demonstrated 20–29 times higher absorption than standard curcumin in clinical studies. This form is particularly effective and well-researched — look for "curcumin phytosome" or "Meriva" on supplement labels.
Micronising curcumin into nano-particles dramatically increases surface area and solubility. CurcuWIN®, theracurmin, and other nano-formulations show substantially higher bioavailability than standard curcumin.
Since curcumin is fat-soluble, taking it with a fatty meal significantly improves absorption. Taking any curcumin supplement with your main meal of the day (which typically contains some fat) is always better than taking it on an empty stomach.
Joint pain and stiffness are among the most common health complaints in Ireland. Arthritis affects over 900,000 Irish people — approximately 20% of the population. The predominant forms are osteoarthritis (age-related joint wear) and rheumatoid arthritis (autoimmune). For both conditions, curcumin has meaningful evidence:
Multiple randomised controlled trials have found that bioavailable curcumin supplementation (particularly Meriva® phytosome at 200mg twice daily) significantly reduces knee pain and improves function in osteoarthritis patients. A well-cited trial by Belcaro et al. found that Meriva® curcumin was significantly superior to placebo for pain, walking distance, and quality of life — with effects comparable to those of NSAIDs in some trials, without the gastrointestinal side effects.
A pilot study comparing curcumin (500mg) to diclofenac sodium (50mg) in rheumatoid arthritis found that the curcumin group actually showed greater improvements in Disease Activity Score and ACR criteria than the diclofenac group, with no adverse events. While larger trials are needed, the mechanistic rationale for curcumin in RA is strong — RA is fundamentally an NF-κB-driven inflammatory disease.
"We regularly recommend curcumin for customers with joint pain and arthritis — particularly those who can't tolerate anti-inflammatory medications or who want a complementary approach alongside their treatment. The key is choosing a bioavailable form." — Pat Coffey, Naturopath, The Honey Pot
Curcumin has significant evidence for reducing symptoms of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) — both Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. Several trials have found curcumin helps maintain remission in ulcerative colitis when used alongside conventional treatment. It also appears to reduce symptoms of IBS and functional dyspepsia.
Curcumin crosses the blood-brain barrier (the fat-soluble, nano- and phytosome forms more effectively) and exerts neuroprotective effects. Research suggests it may reduce amyloid plaque formation (associated with Alzheimer's) and reduce neuroinflammation. Early clinical trials are exploring its role in depression, where it appears to modulate serotonin and dopamine signalling.
Curcumin has shown benefits for blood sugar regulation, insulin sensitivity, lipid profiles, and endothelial function in people with metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes.
Curcumin at typical supplemental doses is extremely safe with an excellent track record in clinical trials. Potential considerations:
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