Garlic has both bacteriostatic and bactericidal properties.
Garlic contains many complex sulphur-containing compounds. One of these is a substance called alliin. When garlic is damaged by cutting,crushing etc, the alliin reacts with an enzyme called allinase. The allinase then chemically changes the alliin to allicin.
Allicin is the "magical" ingredient of garlic. It interferes with lipid synthesis at cellular level as well as hindering production of RNA.
Without correct lipid synthesis, the phospholipid layer of a cell wall cannot develop correctly in most bacteria and the bacteria die soon after fission.
Without RNA, cells find it almost impossible to synthesize proteins although this can also occur with diminished RNA production.
The reason this happens is that every stage of RNA production would be stopped by the absence of messenger RNA, ribosomal RNA and transfer RNA.
You are probably aware that if proteins and their constituent amino acids cannot be produced, then an organism cannot develop and grow as they are vital for every part of a cell.
There have been some papers published in recent years discussing the effect of garlic on viruses. It is known that raw garlic destroys viral origin pneumonia, herpes, cytomegalovirus, vaccinia and meningitis infections both in vivo and in vitro. Many other viruses are also susceptible.
As a result of these many methods of hindering growth, Allicin may be regarded as a very effective bacterial and viral "antiseptic"
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