New science confirms an ancient remedy outperforms a first-line pharmaceutical — without the side effects or the superbug problem: the amazing garlic! - Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) now kills more people than HIV/AIDS or malaria, with WHO projecting a 70% rise in AMR deaths by 2050. In 2023, one in six lab-confirmed bacterial infections was already drug-resistant. - A randomized controlled trial (RCT) found garlic tablets achieved a 70% reduction in bacterial vaginosis vs. 48.3% for metronidazole — with significantly fewer side effects. - Metronidazole, the antibiotic garlic bested, is classified as a probable human carcinogen by both the U.S. National Toxicology Program and the WHO’s IARC. - Garlic’s active compound allicin inhibited 100% of 30 clinical MRSA isolates at 32 µg/mL — including strains resistant to mupirocin, a front-line topical antibiotic. - A 2026 PRISMA systematic review of 50 studies (2000–2025) confirms garlic acts against MDR bacteria via four simultaneous mechanisms: enzyme inhibition, membrane disruption, quorum sensing interference, and antibiofilm activity. - A 2025 study on aged garlic extract found it biocompatible with gingival fibroblasts at 90% cell viability — while chlorhexidine, the dental gold standard, left nearly zero periodontal cells viable. - Garlic positively reshapes the gut microbiome, increasing Lactobacillus diversity — the opposite of broad-spectrum antibiotic collateral damage. - The evidence base now spans MRSA, MDR tuberculosis, Helicobacter pylori, Pseudomonas, Klebsiella, Salmonella, Aeromonas, Clostridium difficile, and over 20 other organisms.