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2/17/2012

Scutellaria baicalensis

Scutellaria baicalensis


Baikal skullcap
Baikal skullcap (Scutellaria baicalensis Georgi), also known as Chinese skullcap or Huang-qin in Pinyin, is a perennial plant with pretty violet flowers of the mint (Lamiaceae) family. It is related to the mad-dog skullcap (Scutellaria lateriflora) but with an entirely different range of indications.
The root of the Baikal skullcap is used in traditional Chinese medicine to clear 'Heat and dry Dampness'. Diseases with 'Heat' are associated with symptoms such as fever, irritability, thirst, cough and expectoration of thick, yellow sputum. Damp diseases may be associated with diarrhoea, a feeling of heaviness of the chest and painful urination.
From a modern perspective this suggests that Baikal may be useful for infection and inflammation of the respiratory, digestive and urinary systems and scientific investigations have indeed shown that Baikal skullcap and its constituents have antibacterial, antiviral, anti-inflammatory, hepatoprotective and diuretic actions

Baikal is also an ingredient in the very popular traditional Chinese/Japanese formulation, Minor Bupleurum Combination known as Xiao Chai Hu Tang (Chinese) and Sho-saiko-to (Japanese).
Minor Bupleurum Combination has been used in China for about 3000 years for the treatment of pyretic diseases. In Japan, Sho-saiko-to is now a prescription drug approved by the Ministry of Health and Welfare and widely used in the treatment of chronic viral liver diseases.
Since 1999, Sho-saiko-to has been administered to 1.5 million patients with chronic liver diseases due to its ability to significantly suppress cancer development in the liver. (Yamashiki et al. 1999a) Saiboku-to is also used for the treatment of bronchial asthma in Japan.


Phytochemistry
Baikal skullcap contains numerous flavonoids and their glycosides. The main flavonoids are baicalin and its aglycone, baicalein and wogonin. Baicalin itself is poorly absorbed from the gut, but is hydrolysed to its aglycone, baicalein, by intestinal bacteria and then restored to its original form from the absorbed baicalein in the body.
Resin and tannins are also present. The root also contains melatonin. It has been shown that dietary melatonin directly contributes to the circulating level of the hormone. The clinical effects of plant-derived melatonin remains to be investigated
 

Anti-inflammatory activity
The anti-inflammatory activity of Baikal skullcap has been well documented by in vitro and in vivo studies. The main constituents responsible are baicalein and wogonin.
In a study using mice, baicalein 50 mg/kg has been shown to ameliorate the inflammatory symptoms of induced colitis including body weight loss, blood haemoglobin content, rectal bleeding and other histological and biochemical parameters.
The methanolic extract of the baikal skullcap root and its flavonoids wogonin, baicalein and baicalin have been shown to inhibit lipo-polysaccharide induced inflammation of the gingivae (gums) in vivo.
The three flavonoids exerted an anti-inflammatory effect similar to prednisolone. In addition, the flavonoids exerted a moderate inhibition (33-36%) of collagenolytic activity, comparable to 40% inhibition by tetracycline.
Meanwhile, the cellular activity of fibroblasts was augmented remarkably (40%) by baicalein and slightly by baicalin and wogonin. Consistent with the cellular activation, the flavonoids enhanced the synthesis of both collagen and total protein in fibroblasts in vitro. The anti-inflammatory mechanisms are varied and summarised in table 3.


Antifibrotic and hepatoprotective activity
Minor Bupleurum Combination has been shown to play a chemopreventive role in the development of hepatocellular carcinoma in cirrhotic patients in a prospective study and several studies have demonstrated the preventive and therapeutic effects of Sho-saiko-to on experimental hepatic fibrosis.
Sho-saiko-to has been shown to inhibit the activation of hepatic stellate cells, the major collagen-producing cells. Sho-saiko-to has potent antifibrotic effect by inhibiting oxidative stress in hepatocytes and hepatic stellate cells.
It is proposed that the active components are baicalin and baicalein. Baicalin and baicalein has chemical structures very similar to silybinin, the active compound in Silybum marianum (St Mary's thistle) that exhibits anti-fibrotic activities.

In addition, Sho-saiko-to has been shown to inhibit chemical hepatocarcinogenesis in animals, acts as a biological response modifier and suppresses the proliferation of hepatoma cells by inducing apoptosis and arrests the cell cycle. These effects may be due to baicalin, baicalein and saikosaponins (from Bupleurum falcatum), which have the ability to inhibit cell proliferation.


A methanolic extract of Baikal skullcap has been shown to inhibit fibrosis and lipid peroxidation in rat liver induced by bile duct ligation or carbon tetrachloride. Bile duct ligation in rodents is an experimental model for extrahepatic cholestasis caused by e.g. cholelithiasis (gall stones).
Liver fibrosis was assessed by histological observations and by measuring levels of liver hydroxyproline, lipid peroxidation based on malondialdehyde production, and serum enzyme activities. Treatment with Baikal skullcap significantly reduced the levels of liver hydroxyproline and malondialdehyde, with improved histological findings.
Baicalein, baicalin and wogonin have been shown to have hepatoprotective effects in vivo. The flavonoids decreased the toxicity produced by a variety of chemicals.
Significant protective effects were seen by comparing the serum glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase (sGOT), serum glutamate pyruvate transaminase (sGPT) and histopathologic examination.
Baikal flavonoids inhibit hepatic CYP1A2, suggesting that Baikal extract may be hepatoprotective via prevention of CYP1A2-induced metabolic activation of toxins.



 
Antioxidant activity
Several studies have shown Baikal skullcap constituents to be antioxidant in vitro and in vivo. Flavones produced a concentration-dependent protection of liposome membrane against UV-induced oxidation.

The ability to scavenge free radicals and protect against the effects of lipid peroxidation (here caused by sunlight irradiation) may in part account for the herb's underlying mechanism of action.
Fourteen flavonoids and flavone glycosides have been demonstrated to possess good free radical scavenging properties in vitro. Baicalin has been found to have the most potent antioxidant effect.
Baicalin's antioxidant effect has been found to mainly be based on scavenging superoxide radicals whilst baicalein was a good xanthine oxidase inhibitor. Xanthine oxidase inhibitors are known to be therapeutically useful for the treatment of hepatitis and brain tumour.
Oxidative stress plays an important role in the pathological process of neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease. The protective effects of Baikal flavonoids on the oxidative injury of neuronal cells has been demonstrated in vitro.


Antiallergic activity
Flavonoids have anti-allergic activities and are known to inhibit histamine release from basophils and mast cells. Luteolin and baicalein have been shown to inhibit IgE antibody-mediated immediate and late phase allergic reactions in mice. In an in vitro study, luteolin and baicalein inhibited IgE-mediated histamine release from mast cells.
The compounds also inhibited IgE-mediated TNF-alpha and IL-6 production from mast cells. However, the compounds did not affect the histamine, serotonin or platelet activating factor-induced cutaneous reactions in rats.
Baicalein has been found to be 5-10 times more potent than the antiallergic drug, azelastine. Baicalein significantly suppressed leucotriene C4 release by polymorphonuclear leukocytes obtained from asthmatic patients compared to healthy subjects.


Neuroprotective activity
Cerebral ischaemia can cause a significant elevation in the concentrations of amino acid neurotransmitters in the cerebral cortex.

Baicalin administration can attenuate the elevations of glutamic acid and aspartic acid induced by cerebral ischaemia. This research demonstrates that baicalin may act as a neuroprotectant during cerebral ischaemia.
Wogonin has been shown to exert neuroprotective effect by inhibiting microglial activation, which is a critical component of pathogenic inflammatory responses in neurodegenerative diseases.
Wogonin inhibited inflammatory activation of cultured brain microglia by diminishing lipopolysaccharide-induced tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin-1β and nitric oxide (NO) production.
Wogonin inhibited NO production by suppressing inducible NO synthase (iNOS) induction and NF-kappaB activation in microglia. The neuroprotective effect of wogonin has also been shown in vivo using two experimental brain injury models.

Baikal skullcap is used in traditional Chinese medicine for the treatment of stroke. Methanol extracts from the dried roots (0.1-10 mg/kg) administered intra-peritoneally significantly protected neurons against 10 minute transient forebrain ischaemia.
The extract inhibited microglial tumour necrosis factor-alpha and nitric oxide production, and protected cells from hydrogen peroxide-induced toxicity in vitro.



 
Vascular activity
Treatment with baicalein also lowered the blood pressure in hypertensive but not in normotensive rats. Baikal extract and baicalein have been shown to lower blood pressure in rats and cats.
The exact mechanisms underlying the hypotensive action are unclear. Monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1), a potent chemoattractant for monocytes, plays a crucial role in case of early inflammatory responses including atherosclerosis.
Wogonin has been shown to inhibit MCP-1 induction by endothelial cells in a dose dependent manner. Wogonin and baikal skullcap may be potentially beneficial in inflammatory and vascular disorders.

Baikal flavonoids have been shown to inhibit platelet aggregation in vitro (Kubo, Matsuda, & Tani 1985) and baicalein and baicalin inhibited the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin induced by thrombin.
Baicalein inhibited the elevation of Ca2+ induced by thrombin and thrombin receptor agonist peptide. These findings suggest a potential benefit of baicalein in the treatment of arteriosclerosis and thrombosis. One in vivo study has shown that Scutellaria baicalensis extract produces peripheral vasodilatation.


Cholesterol reduction
Flavonoids are known to reduce cholesterol. A 30-day study of induced hyperlipidaemia in rats found that baicalein, quercetin, rutin and naringin reduced cholesterol with baicalein being the most potent. Baicalein was also the most effective flavonoid in reducing triglyceride levels.


Anxiolytic activity
Wogonin, baicalein, scutellarein and baicalin (in reducing order of potency), which all contain a certain flavonoid phenylbenzopyrone nucleus, have been shown in vitro to bind with the benzodiazepine site of the GABA-A receptor.
Oral administration of wogonin (7.5-30 mg/kg) has been shown to interact with GABA-A receptors and produce an anxiolytic response that was similar to diazepam in the elevated plus-maze.
Unlike benzodiazepines, wogonin was able to reduce anxiety without causing sedation or myorelaxation.
Baicalin (10 mg/kg i.p.) and baicalin (20 mg/kg i.p.) have also been shown in vivo to produce an anxiolytic effect, mediated through activation of the benzodiazepine binding sites of GABA-A receptors.
A water extract of Baikal skullcap has been shown in vivo to have anticonvulsant activity against electroshock-induced tonic seizures. Interestingly, the authors suggest that anticonvulsant effect might not be via the activation of the benzodiazepine binding site of GABA-A receptors, but probably via the prevention of seizure spread.


Antiviral and antimicrobial activity
Baikal extract and flavonoids have been shown in numerous studies to be antibacterial, antiviral and antifungal.

The antimicrobial effect of baikal extract is mild and the clinical efficacy of baikal in infectious diseases may be more associated with its anti-inflammatory rather than its antimicrobial activities.. Antiviral effects have been demonstrated for Baikal in numerous in vitro and in vivo tests.



Antidiabetic activity
5-alpha-reductase inhibition
Diabetics may accumulate intracellular quantities of the sugars sorbitol and dulcitol, due to an increase of the polyol pathway involving the enzyme 5-alpha-reductase. Oral baicalin and liquid extract of liquorice (also rich in flavonoids) reduce sorbitol levels in the red blood cells of diabetic rats.


Alpha-glucosidase inhibition
Alpha-glucosidase inhibitors (e.g. Glucobay [Acarbose]) is a class of oral medicine for type 2 diabetes, which blocks enzymes that digest starches in food. The result is a slower and lower rise in blood glucose throughout the day, especially right after meals.
Methanol extracts of Scutellaria baicalensis, Rheum officinale and Paeonia suffruticosa showed potent inhibitory activity against rat intestinal sucrase.
The active principles were identified as baicalein and methyl gallate (from the later two plants). In addition to its activity against the rat enzyme, baicalein also inhibited human intestinal sucrase in vitro.


Renal-protective activity
Baicalein inhibited angiotension II-induced increases in the cellular protein content of aortic smooth muscle cells in vitro. In another in vitro study, baicalein prevented the angiotension II-induced increase in renal vascular resistance by 50% and promoted the glomerular filtration rate.
Pretreatment with baicalein significantly inhibited a decrease in nephrotoxin-induced glomerular filtration rate and renal blood flow in vivo. Oral intake of baikal flavonoids and extract has been shown to produce a diuretic effect. The effect is mediated via regulation of the prostaglandin metabolism.


Antineoplastic activity
Immunostimulation
Sho-saiko-to has been shown to stimulate granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) which may explain its use in infectious diseases and cancer. G-CFS is, like growth hormone, interleukins 2 and 4 and interferon, a signalling ligand which stimulates immune function.

G-CSF, a glycoprotein, produce mainly by macrophages, induces proliferation of neutrophil colonies and differentiation of precursor cells to neutrophils. It also stimulates the activity of mature neutrophils.
Sho-saiko-to is known to significantly suppress cancer development in the liver. Moderate regulation of the cytokine production system in patients with hepatitis C by using TJ-9 may be useful in the prevention of disease progression.
One possible mechanism for the beneficial effects of TJ-9 on patients with liver cirrhosis may be the improvement in IL-12 production. Interleukin-12 is an important cytokine for maintenance of normal systemic defence and bioregulation. This effect of TJ-9 is attributed to two of its seven herb components, Baikal and liquorice roots.
Patients who were given Baikal skullcap showed a tendency towards increase in the relative number of T-lymphocytes and their theophylline-resistant population during antitumour chemotherapy. The immunoregulation index in this case was approximately twice the background values during the whole period of investigation.
The inclusion of Baikal skullcap in the therapeutic complex promoted an increase in the number of immunoglobulins A at a stable level of immunoglobulins G.


Apoptosis induction
Baicalein, baicalin and wogonin have been shown to induce apoptosis, disrupt the mitochondria and inhibit proliferation in various human hepatoma cell lines.
Platelet-type 12-Lipoxygenase (12-LOX ) pathway is a critical regulator of prostate cancer progression and apoptosis by affecting various proteins regulating these processes. Baicalein inhibits 12-LOX and may be a potential therapeutic agent in the treatment of prostate cancer (Pidgeon et al. 2002) as well as breast cancer.


Antiproliferative effects
Baicalein, baicalin and wogonin has been shown to induce apoptosis and inhibit proliferation in various human hepatoma cell lines.
Baicalin has been shown to inhibit the proliferation of prostate cancer cells in vitro. However, the responses to baicalin was different among different cell lines.
Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), which converts arachidonic acid to prostaglandin E2 (PGE2), is highly expressed in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Scutellaria baicalensis, but not baicalein, suppressed proliferation cell nuclear antigen expression and PGE2 synthesis.
A 66% reduction in tumour mass was observed in the mice with HNSCC. Baikal selectively and effectively inhibits cancer cell growth in vitro and in vivo and can be an effective chemotherapeutic agent for HNSCC.
Inhibition of PGE2 synthesis via suppression of COX-2 expression may be responsible for its anticancer activity. Differences in biological effects of Baikal compared with baicalein suggest the synergistic effects among components in Baikal.
Baicalein, baicalin and wogonin have been shown to reduce proliferation of human bladder cancer cell lines in a dose-dependent manner, but baicalin exhibited the greatest antiproliferative activity. In an in vivo study Baikal skullcap extract had a significant inhibition of tumour growth (P<0.05).


Amelioration of chemotherapy
In experiments with murine and rat transplantable tumours, Baikal skullcap extract treatment was shown to ameliorate cyclophosphamide and 5-fluorouracil-induced myelotoxicity and to decrease tumour cell viability.


Prevention of metastases
The advancement of Pliss' lymphosarcoma in rats was shown to be associated with disorders of platelet-mediated haemostasis, presenting with either lowered or increased aggregation activity of platelets.
Extract of Baikal was shown to produce a normalising effect on platelet-mediated haemostasis whatever the pattern of alteration. This activity is thought to be responsible for the drug's antitumour and, particularly, metastasis-preventing effect.
Experiments on mice inoculated with metastasing Lewis lung carcinoma showed that the antitumour and antimetastatic effects of cyclophosphamide are potentiated by Baikal, Rose root (Rhodiola rosea), Liquorice (Glycyrrhiza glabra), and their principal acting components, baicalin, paratyrosol and glycyrrhizin .



 
Chemoprevention
Baicalein has been shown to prevent chemically induced DNA damage in a cell culture model.


Anti-angiogenesis
Baicalein and baicalin have demonstrated in vitro anticancer activity against several cancers. The flavonoids have also been shown to be potent inhibitors of angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo. Baicalein was found to be more potent than baicalin.


Antiemetic activity
Pre-treatment with baikal root extract has been shown to decrease cisplatin-induced pica in rats (animal models use the level of kaolin (a type of clay) intake as a measure of the intensity of nausea). This suggests that Baikal may help to reduce cisplatin-induced nausea and emesis during cancer therapy.


Clinical uses
There are no clinical studies utilising an extract of baikal skullcap in isolation. Chinese studies have been based on either injection of isolated constituents or the oral administration of traditional formulations containing baikal skullcap.


Respiratory infection
Sixty patients with respiratory infection (mainly nosocomial pneumonia) were treated either by injection of an unidentified baikal compound or IV piperacillin sodium.
The total efficacy was evaluated after treatment for one week. Total effective treatment rates were 73.3% for Baikal compared to 76.7% in the antibiotic treatment group. Body temperature was decreased similarly and symptoms disappeared or were relieved in 11.67 +/- 6.75 days with the herb and 11.53 +/- 7.30 days with the antibiotic.
Additionally, leucocyte decreased to normal and roentgenographic shadows disappeared or became smaller in both groups. In the piperacillin sodium group, fungal infections were found in 4 of 30 patients, but there was none in the Baikal treatment group.



 
Bone marrow stimulation during chemotherapy
Haemopoiesis was studied in 88 patients with lung cancer during combination treatment with chemotherapy and a Scutellaria baicalensis extract.
Administration of the plant preparation was accompanied with haemopoiesis stimulation, intensification of bone-marrow erythrocytopoiesis and granulocytopoiesis and increase in the content of circulating precursors of the type of erythroid and granulomonocytic colony-forming units.


Epilepsy
Saiko-keishi-to, a spray dried decoction of bupleurum, cinnamon, peony, ginger, liquorice, ginseng, pinellia, zizyphus and baikal) was applied to 24 epileptics, who had frequent uncontrollable seizures (3-5 seizures per day in the most severe case and 5 seizures per month in the mildest case) of various types, in spite of sufficient combined therapy with ordinary medical anticonvulsants. Six patients were definitively controlled well with Saiko-keishi-to.
Thirteen showed improvement and three showed no effect. No patients experienced worsening of their condition. Two patients dropped out during treatment.


Chronic active hepatitis
Sho-saiko-to was found in a double-blind multicentre clinical study of 222 patients with chronic active hepatitis to significantly decrease AST and ALT values compared with placebo.
The difference of the mean value between the treatment and placebo group was significant after 12 weeks. In patients with chronic active type B hepatitis, a tendency towards a decrease of HBeAg and an increase of Anti-HBe antibodies was also observed. No remarkable side effects were noticed .


Safety
There have been several case reports of Sho-saiko-to induced interstitial pneumonia. One case of Sho-saiko-to induced pneumonia in a patient with autoimmune hepatitis was reported, however, direct toxicity is very low.

Toxicity studies of three different traditional Chinese/Japanese formulations containing baikal suggests a very low acute or subchronic toxicity for the herbs in them.
The studies found no herb-related abnormalities such as changes in body weight or food consumption; abnormalities on ophthalmological and haematological examination, urinalysis and gross pathological examination; changes in organ weights or optical microscopic examination.
The acute lethal activity of wogonin is low, with an LD50 of 3.9 g/kg.

There are reports of baikal flavonoids interacting with P-450 enzymes. Baikal flavonoids inhibit hepatic CYP1A2, suggesting that Baikal extract may be hepatoprotective via prevention of CYP1A2-induced metabolic activation of toxins.
Theoretically, inhibition of CYP1A2 may affect certain medical drugs metabolised by this P-450 enzyme. There are, however, no clinical reports of such herb-drug interaction.


Sho-saiko-to during interferon therapy
Sho-saiko-to as well as interferon is used for the treatment of chronic hepatitis. There have been reports of acute pneumonitis due to a possible interferon-herb interaction.
Pneumonitis, also called extrinsic allergic alveolitis, is a complex syndrome caused by sensitisation to an allergen. The mechanism of the Sho-saikoto-interferon interaction seems to be due to an allergic-immunological mechanism rather than direct toxicity.
Baikal and the formulation sho-saiko-to (Minor Bupleurum Combination, Xiao Chai Hu Tang) are contraindicated during interferon therapy. Baikal is contraindicated in Cold conditions in traditional Chinese medicine.
Baikal is used in traditional Chinese medicine for restless fetus (threaten abortion) and toxaemia of pregnancy. A recent animal study found that Baikal combined with Atractylodes macrocephala had an anti-abortive effect through inhibition of maternal-fetal interface immunity. The herbs prevented lipo-polysaccharide-induced abortion by reducing natural killer cells and interleukin-2 activity.


Dosage
The traditional dosage of Baikal skullcap is given as 6-15 g daily by decoction.


Conclusion
Baikal is traditionally used for infectious diseases with fever, irritability, thirst, cough, tight chest and expectoration of thick, yellow mucus. Baikal is also used for diarrhoea, abdominal distension, jaundice and painful urinary disorders.
Extrapolating from in clinical studies on formulations containing Baikal, in vitro and in vivo studies, it may be deducted that Baikal skullcap may be useful as an adjunctive therapy during cancer treatment.

Baikal may reduce chemotherapy-induced nausea, increase apoptosis and stimulate recovery of the haemopoietic system. The anti-inflammatory and antiallergic activities may be beneficial in the treatment of allergic conditions including allergic rhinitis, asthma, eczema and urticaria.

The antiviral, antibacterial and anti-inflammatory activities may be beneficial in the treatment of respiratory tract infections in combination with other antimicrobial and immune stimulant herbs.
The hepatoprotective, antifibrotic and antioxidant activities may be beneficial in the treatment of liver disorders and reduce the risk of the development of malignancies.

2/03/2012

Moringa oleifera





Moringa oleifera
.
"Drumstick Tree" and variants thereof redirect here. This name is also used for the Golden Shower Tree (Cassia fistulosa).

It is also known as drumstick tree, from the appearance of the long, slender, triangular seed pods, horseradish tree, from the taste of the roots which resembles horseradish, or Ben oil tree, from the oil derived from the seeds.

It is an exceptionally nutritious vegetable tree with a variety of potential uses. The tree itself is rather slender, with drooping branches that grow to approximately 10 m in height. In cultivation, it is often cut back annually to 1 meter or less and allowed to regrow so that pods and leaves remain within arm's reach.




Distribution
The moringa tree is grown mainly in semi-arid, tropical, and subtropical areas, corresponding in the United States to USDA hardiness zones 9 and 10. While it grows best in dry sandy soil, it tolerates poor soil, including coastal areas. It is a fast-growing, drought-resistant tree that is native to the southern foothills of the Himalayas in northwestern India.

Reports that it grows wild in the Middle East or Africa are completely unsubstantiated. Today it is widely cultivated in Africa, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, Philippines, Central and South America, and Sri Lanka.
It is considered one of the world’s most useful trees, as almost every part of the moringa tree can be used for food or has some other beneficial property.

In the tropics, it is used as forage for livestock, and in many countries, moringa micronutrient liquid, a natural anthelmintic (kills parasites) and adjuvant (to aid or enhance another drug) is used as a metabolic conditioner to aid against endemic diseases in developing countries.

A traditional food plant in Africa, this little-known vegetable has potential to improve nutrition, boost food security, foster rural development, and support sustainable landcare.


General nutrition
The immature green pods called “drumstick” are probably the most valued and widely used part of the tree. They are commonly consumed in South and Southeast Asia and are generally prepared in a wide range of dishes.

The roots are shredded and used as a condiment in the same way as horseradish; however, they contain the alkaloid [[significant source of beta-carotene, Vitamin C, protein, iron, and potassium.

The leaves are cooked and used like spinach. In addition to being used fresh as a substitute for spinach, its leaves are commonly dried and crushed into a powder, and used in soups and sauces.

Moringa leaves and pods are helpful in increasing breast milk in the breastfeeding months.

One tablespoon of leaf powder provide 14% of the protein, 40% of the calcium, 23% of the iron and most of the vitamin A needs of a child aged one to three..


Six tablespoons of leaf powder will provide nearly all of a woman's daily iron and calcium needs during pregnancy and breastfeeding.



Malnutrition
Moringa trees have been used to combat malnutrition, especially among infants and nursing mothers. Three non-governmental organizations in particular — Trees for Life, Church World Service, and Educational Concerns for Hunger Organization — have advocated Moringa as "natural nutrition for the tropics." Leaves can be eaten fresh, cooked, or stored as dried powder for many months without refrigeration, and reportedly without loss of nutritional value.

Moringa is especially promising as a food source in the tropics because the tree is in full leaf at the end of the dry season when other foods are typically scarce.

A large number of reports on the nutritional qualities of Moringa now exist in both the scientific and the popular literature. It is commonly said that Moringa leaves contain more Vitamin A than carrots, more calcium than milk, more iron than spinach, more Vitamin C than oranges, and more potassium than bananas, and that the protein quality of Moringa leaves rivals that of milk and eggs.

However, the leaves and stem of M. oleifera are known to have large amounts of their calcium bound in calcium oxalate crystals, which is not a form of calcium available to the body.

Whether the claim of "more calcium than milk" includes this non-bioavailable calcium needs to be addressed. The oral histories recorded by Lowell Fuglie in Senegal and throughout West Africa report countless instances of lifesaving nutritional rescue that are attributed to Moringa.

In fact, the nutritional properties of Moringa are now so well-known that there seems to be little doubt of the substantial health benefit to be realized by consumption of Moringa leaf powder in situations where starvation is imminent. Nonetheless, the outcomes of well-controlled and well-documented clinical studies would still be clearly of great value.

In many cultures throughout the tropics, differentiation between food and medicinal uses of plants (e.g. bark, fruit, leaves, nuts, seeds, tubers, roots, and flowers), is very difficult because plant uses span both categories, and this is deeply ingrained in the traditions and the fabric of the community.

In traditional Indian medicine(Ayurveda and Siddha), children and adults used to drink a cup of "decoction" (kasayam) every Sunday, normally after an oil bath, made of ginger, garlic, a piece of moringa tree bark (murungai pattai in Tamil) and mavelingam tree bark (mavelinga pattai), and the root nodules of the kolinji plant (a leguminous plant with nitrogen nodules in the root).



Moringa Leaf Powder

The World's Greatest Unknown Supplement

There is no doubt that the pure Moringa Tree leaf is the source of incredible health benefits. It's the ultimate, natural, organic, energy and endurance health supplement. There are plenty of studies that describe these benefits and the pure, powdered, moringa leaf is the most potent part of the plant.

India's ancient tradition of ayurveda medicine sites 300 diseases that are treated with the leaves of the Moringa tree.

Gram for gram, Moringa leaves contain:
7 times the vitamin C in oranges
4 times the calcium in milk
4 times the vitamin A in carrots
2 times the protein in milk
3 times the potassium in bananas

Moringa Tree Leaf is organic and absolutely safe. There are no known side effects. It's gentle enough to be given to babies in Africa to overcome malnourishment.

It's one of the most secret performance enhancing products taken by athletes today who ingest mega-doses that help them physically and mentally. It's great for people of all ages, especially oldsters who are losing their alertness.

Neutral Composition in Moringa Leaf
Principle
말린잎
RDA
Energy
205 Kcal
10%
Carbohydrates
38.2 g
29%
Dietary Fiber
19.2 g
77%
Protein
27.1 g
54%
Essential Amino Acid
Histidine
613 mg
88%
Isoleucine
825 mg
59%
Leucine
1950 mg
71%
Lysine
1637 mg
82%
Tryptophan
425 mg
152%
Methionin
350 mg
Phenylalanine
1388 mg
Threonine
1188 mg
Valine
1063 mg
None Essential Amino Acid
Arginine
1325 mg
Alanine
3033 mg
Aspartic acid
1430 mg
Glutamic acid
2530 mg
Glycine
1533 mg
Proline
1203 mg
Serine
1087 mg
Tyrosine
2650 mg
Total Fat
2.3 g
22%
Omega-3
44.6%
Omega-6
7.6%
Omega-9
4.5%
Vitamin
Carotene-ß
16300 IU
326%
Choline
423 mg
Thiamin
2.6 mg
216%
Rivoflamin
20.5 mg
170%
Niacine
8.2 mg
51%
Ascorbic Acid
220 mg
366%
Tocopherols
113 mg
130%
Electrolytes
Sodium
164 mg
66%
Potassium
1324 mg
30%
Minerals
Calcium
2003 mg
200%
Magnesium
368 mg
92%
Sulphur
870 mg
870%
Phosphorus
204 mg
20%
Copper
0.6 mg
30%
Iron
28.2 mg
352%
Manganese
0.87 mg
9%
Zinc
33.4 mg
223%
Selenium
36 ug
48%
Poluphenol
2.02 g
Tannin
428 mg
21.2% of Polyhenol
Saponin
32.3 mg
1.6% of Polyhenol

Although there have been references to the Moringa Tree that go back a couple thousand years, and the World Health Organization has been studying and using the plant for the last forty years as a low cost health enhancer in the poorest countries around the world, there is a reason why the moringa leaf is still relatively unknown.



Soothing Moringa helps lower blood pressure and is a sleep aid. Its detoxifying effect may come from Moringa's ability to purify water.

Moringa acts as a coagulant attaching itself to harmful material and bacteria. It is believed that this process takes place in the body as well.

The result is long-lasting energy without hyperactivity, a nerve system at rest, a blood system not under pressure, and a gland and hormone system in balance.

Here are some of the uses around the world for the fantastic Moringa Leaf:

Detoxification - Studies have shown Moringa's ability to remove hazardous materials from water.


Antibiotic - Moringa is used as a topical treatment for minor infections. Its antibiotic property is identified as Pterygospermin, a bacterial and fungicidal compound. Studies have shown an agueous extract made from seeds was equally effective against the skin infecting bacteria Staphylococcus aureus as the antibiotic Neomycin.


Skin Treatment - Moringa has great healing benefits for the skin, curing cuts, scrapes, sores, and rashes as well as cracking and other signs of aging.


Diabetes - An extract from the Moringa leaf has been shown to be effective in lowering blood sugar levels within 3 hours of ingestion, though less effectively than the standard hypoglycemic drug, glibenclamide.

The effects increased with larger doses.

The most popular way of using Moringa is as a tea or a spice in cooking.

But the most potent way to ingest it is through powder that is readily available on the internet by searching under "Moringa Leaf Powder."


Moringa Oil

Moringa oil can be used for cooking, skin, hair and scalp. It contains powerful antioxidants with
 excellent skin smoothing properties. It is rich in Palmitoleic, oleic and linoleic acids (72%).
  Also contains vitamin A, C and D which gives it excellent moisturising and nourishing qualities.
Moringa oil is a nutty flavoured oil, with a clear to slightly pale yellow colour.


The Moringa oil is from the seed of the moringa oleifera tre
e. This oil was prized by the early Egyptians, Greek and Romans. Due to its long "shelf life" - it takes several years to become rancid.
Moringa oil was found buried in the Pyramids with the Pharoahs.

 Moringa oil penetrates deeply into the skin, bringing vital nutrients that helps the skin retain moisture.
Benefits of using Ankh Rah Moringa Oil
  • Skin care
  • Rejuvenation
  • Stronger and healthier hair
  • Wrinkle reduction
  • Skin blemish removal


 


Discover the Chief Health Benefits that have made Moringa Tea Famous
  • Boosts energy levels
  • Improves mental clarity/focus
  • Promotes sound sleep
  • Provides all vital vitamins
  • Contains several important minerals
  • Is an extremely powerful free radical fighter
  • Moringa has very high levels of fibers
  • Cleanses and Detoxifies the body of infectious toxins
  • Strengthens your immune system
  • Enhances sexual desire and performance
  • Fights cancerous cells
  • Slows down the aging process
  • Promotes healthier and younger-looking skin
  • Alleviates diabetes
  • Normalizes and regulates cholesterol levels
  • Helps maintain healthy heart function
  • Minimizes inflammation
  • Improves Blood Circulation
  • Prevents artherosclerosis
  • Enhances visual acuity
  • Helps stabilize normal blood sugar levels
  • Helps improve patients suffering from leukemia, dengue
  • Fights general depression and stress
  • Supports weight loss
  • Improves upon your overall physical strength