Categories
Herbs & Plants

Burbur (Desmodium molliculum)

[amazon_link asins=’B004L59WY0,B01B65QJ9S,B00KXWIBQ0,B00UM1TG5C,B004GXJYHC,B01N1X4S75,B005KODMG0,B00R566JW0,B008D4WQ6Q’ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’finmeacur-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’daba5325-6f6a-11e7-a7e3-0bebcb009020′]

Botanical Name:Desmodium molliculum (Kunth) DC
Family: Fabaceae
Subfamily: Faboideae
Tribe: Desmodieae
Subtribe: Desmodiinae
Genus: Desmodium
Species: Desmodium molliculum
COMMON NAMES:
“manayupa”, “beggar lice”, “hard man”, “hard stick”, “strong back”. Spanish: “manayupa”, “margarita”, “pega-pega”. Peru “manayupa”, “manayupana”. Mexico “amor seco”, “escobilla”, Purépecha: “Uekaku K’arhiri”. Portuguese: “barba de boi”, “carrapicho”. Others: “burbur”, “dipinda dimukuyi”, “dusa karnira”, “mundurana”, “owono-bocon”.
PART USED: Leaves
Habitat: South American, probably native to Central Andes (Peru). It grows wild in Central and South America, in the equatorial and circumecuatorial zone, at elevations of 1,000 to 3,500 m a. s.

DESCRIPTION: Creeping herb up to 1 m long, perennial, branching (that is, forming mats of multiple branches), stem thin, up to 50 cm tall. Leaves: Trifoliate, stipulated. Flowers: Small, papilionate (butterfly-like), light purple, arranged in racemes. Fruit: An indehiscent legume called a loment, green, lineal, flattened; seeds kidney-shaped.
click to see
The plant that is harvested between 1,000 meters to 3,500 meters above sea level in Peru. Nutramedix, U.S. producer of Burbur, utilizes a proprietary extraction and enhancement process that makes this product far more effective than any other Desmodium molliculum product available.

PROPERTIES: Antianaphylactic, antiasthmatic, antiallergic, antimicrobial, mild antispasmodic, anti-inflammatory, antimalarial, antiparasitic (Ascaris lumbricoides), antitumor, antiviral, aperitive (stimulates the appetite); against gastritis (acute and chronic), against oxalate kidney calculi; chronotropic (controls the rate of contraction of the heart), depurative, digestive (favours or assists the process of digestion), diuretic, hepatoprotector, hypertensive (soyasaponins, hordenine), hypolipidemic, mild hypotensive (astragalin), immuno-modulator, inotropic (increases the force of contraction of cardiac muscle), improves kidney functions, blood detoxifier, sedative.

CHEMICAL COMPOSITION:· Organic Acids · Steroids· Saponins:· Dehydrosoyasaponin I· Soyasaponin I· Soyasaponin II. Soyasaponin III· Soyasaponegol B; (common aglycone of soyasaponins I-IV· Other triterpenoids saponines· Astragalin· Beta-phenylarethylamine· Cosmosiin · Cyanidino-3-orthosoforoside· Hordenine· Pelargonidin-3-ortho-rhamnoside· Salsoline· Tectorigenin· Tetrahydroisoquinolines· Tyramine.

Medicinal Use Of Burbur:
· LIVER DETOX

· BLOOD PURIFIER

· LYMPHATIC DETOX

· KIDNEY DETOX

· ANTI-INFLAMMATORY

The herb in Burbur has been traditionally used for its body cleansing properties. It is very effective in aiding detoxification of the liver, kidneys, lymphatics and the ground matrix. Burbur is commonly used in conjunction with powerful antimicrobials produced by Nutramedix, Samento and Cumanda. Many health care professionals have reported that Burbur can be used in place of 6 detox remedies. In many cases a significant healing crisis (Herxheimer’s reaction) can be dramatically reduced or eliminated with the use of Burbur.

There are no known contraindications, no known side effects and no known interactions with other drugs when using Desmodium molliculum products like Burbur. In May 2005, toxicology studies were conducted on Nutramedix Burbur at the University of Guayaquil, Ecuador. No toxic effects were reported even when laboratory rodents received 120,000 times the equivalent human dose.

RECOMMENDED DOSES:
Infusion: As prevention measure, drink one cup daily, like tea. As treatment, prepare an infusion with 3 spoonfuls of dried leaves per liter of water; drink 3 times daily for 14 days. Its diuretic effect can be reinforced with a natural diuretic, like corn silk. Decoction . Boil one handful (20 g aprox.) of dried material in 1 liter of water for 5 minutes; drink 2 glasses a day.

CONTRAINDICATIONS:
Not recommended for pregnant women and children less than 3 years of age. In very high doses, it has an antinutritional effect, inhibiting assimilation of proteins from the digestive tract.

Disclaimer:
The information presented herein is intended for educational purposes only. Individual results may vary, and before using any supplements, it is always advisable to consult with your own health care provider.

Resources:
http://www.andeshealth.com/site/868226/page/633062
http://www.bionatus.com/nutramedix/pages/burbur_what.htm
http://conabioweb.conabio.gob.mx/bancoimagenes/doctos/001_thumbs422-40.htm

 

Enhanced by Zemanta
Categories
News on Health & Science

Diabetics, Beware

 

U[amazon_link asins=’B016YOCSIC,B00024D7RW,1580405584,B002Z8WDVO,B0089LOG7U,0544302133,B01IAILDKY,B06VWGPCPP,B00N3JOCOU’ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’finmeacur-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’5763b489-a027-11e7-9593-3dd3d201fd52′]S scientists have found a link between high blood sugar levels and Alzheimer’s.

It’s a puzzle that has baffled scientists for long. The brain, which has an impenetrable protective layer around it in the form of a thick blood-brain barrier, should not be affected that easily by the chemical changes taking place elsewhere in the body. The blood-brain barrier, composed of tightly packed cells, insulates the brain from an overload of undesirable chemicals that circulate in the bloodstream, while still allowing the essential metabolic functions.

This is thought to be true in the case of blood sugar as well. Diabetes patients, who have high levels of glucose in their blood because of faulty insulin production, normally have near-normal glucose levels in the blood circulating through the myriad blood vessels in the brain.

Yet scientists have found that 30 to 65 per cent of diabetics run the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease — a debilitating degenerative brain disorder that severely impairs cognitive function and memory — in their old age. The connection between the two, though circumstantial, has so far perplexed researchers.

The issue is of critical importance to India which may soon be the diabetes capital of the world. With the number of diabetes cases in the country rising, there may be an increase in the occurrence of Alzheimer’s disease, as has been happening in the West. Despite being the focus of the medical world for long, there is no cure for this severest form of dementia.

But a team of researchers at the Salk Institute of Biological Studies in the US seems to have resolved the puzzle. The scientists, led by David Schubert, claim to have found a molecular basis for the diabetes-Alzheimer’s interaction.

Though the brain remains largely insulated from the high blood sugar otherwise found in the body, the layers of the blood-brain barrier — which is composed of cells that are more densely packed than elsewhere in the body — are often exposed to the high blood sugar. As a result, the central nervous system is indirectly affected, scientists hypothesise.

To investigate this, Schubert — a professor at the institute’s Cellular Neurobiology Laboratory — and his colleagues studied the blood vessels in the brain of young mice that were rendered diabetic. The study, reported in the latest issue of Neurobiology of Aging, looked specifically at the interaction between the elevated blood glucose levels and beta-amyloid — protein molecules that clump together to form the senile plaques that riddle Alzheimer’s patients’ brains.

To their surprise, the scientists found that despite having beta-amyloid in very low levels — not enough to trigger the brain disorder — the mice began suffering from significant memory loss. They also noticed an increase in inflammation in the brain. “The damage took place long before the first plaques appeared,” says Schubert.

The mice suffered damage to the blood vessels well before any overt signs of Alzheimer’s — such as nerve cell death or the acquisition of amyloid deposits, the hallmark of the disease — could be detected in their brains. Further experiments revealed that the vascular damage was due to the overproduction of free radicals, resulting in oxidative damage to the cells lining the brain’s blood vessels.

“Because of the elevated blood glucose in diabetes, the blood vessels of the brain become damaged. This damage will lead to more stress in the brain because the availability of nutrients in the blood is reduced. Since nerve cells in the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease are themselves weakened, the additional stress of a poor nutrient supply may lead to their premature death, resulting in early onset of Alzheimer’s,” Schubert told KnowHow.

According to Joseph Burdo, co-author of the study, researchers earlier could not find a link between the two because they were looking for a direct connection between an impaired insulin signalling and Alzheimer’s, which never existed. “Many studies have focused on altered insulin signalling in the brain as a possible mechanism for the association between Alzheimer’s disease and diabetes but researchers paid much less attention to the impact of increased blood glucose levels on brain function and the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s,” explains Burdo.

While it is normal for a person to have a low level of amyloid circulating in his or her blood, in diabetics there may be a synergistic toxicity between the amyloid and high level of blood glucose which comes in the way of proper blood vessel formation, says Burdo.

Anoop Misra, who heads the department of diabetes and metabolism at the Fortis Group of Hospitals, New Delhi, says that though it is too early to say the study may have any clinical significance, there is a lesson to take home. “If you could keep your blood sugar well under control, you can deal with two monsters — diabetes and Alzheimer’s.”

And that would be much like the proverbial stone that can kill two birds with one shot.

Turmeric helps
While there is no clear-cut study to establish the prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease in the Indian population, scientists infer that cases of the neurodegenerative disease may be far fewer in India than in the West despite increased life expectancy because of the amount of haldi (turmeric) Indians consume. A team of researchers at the Salk Institute of Biological Sciences in the US has now discovered that a downstream derivative of curcumin, the active ingredient in turmeric, does enhance cognition and memory. In a recent work published in Neurobiology of Aging, the scientists report isolation of the compound (called CNB-001), saying that it boosts communication between brain cells, facilitating long-term retention of memory. They feel that it could be a potential remedy for treating brain disorders affecting memory and cognition such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease.

Sources: The Telegraph (Kolkata, India)

Zemanta Pixie
Categories
Featured

Go Green, Live Longer

[amazon_link asins=’081298840X,076792018X,0897249798,B00GP3NV4S,B071YLF8YR,B01DWZ09ZA,B01NGYNWW8,B01H7IM2RQ,B01FYWOKWC’ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’finmeacur-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’6aa810c9-6c42-11e7-8dda-39e23ab6f05c’]

How to safeguard yourself from environmental toxins:-
The threat: Prostate Cancer.

The problem: About a billion pounds of pesticides are used in the U.S. every year, mostly for agriculture. A 2007 Canadian review connected chemicals in pesticides with prostate-cancer cases.

Why you should care: One in every six men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer.

What you can do: Drink red wine. Researchers found that drinking 4 to 7 glasses of red wine a week cuts your prostate-cancer risk by 48 percent.


The threat: Diabetes

The problem: Korean researchers say PCBs, toxic chemical compounds, may increase your diabetes risk. PCBs are banned, but lingering amounts accumulate in fish.

Why you should care: 10.9 million men — nearly 11 percent of those over age 20 — have diabetes. Not only is the disease itself debilitating, but it doubles your stroke risk.

What you can do: Avoid bluefish and summer flounder, both high in PCBs. Swap in black sea bass, mahi-mahi, or skipjack tuna. Andeat fiber, which cuts diabetes risk by 30 percent.

The threat: Skin Cancer

The problem: According to NASA, a 3 percent drop in ozone levels since the early 1980s has damaged the earth’s built-in layer of UVA and UVB protection.

Why you should care:
A million new cases of skin cancer are diagnosed each year, and nearly 11,000 people die of the disease. UVB rays penetrate deep into skin cells, damaging the DNA.

What you can do: Give your favorite summer duds a defensive edge with SunGuard detergent, which increases their UPF (ultraviolet protection factor) to 30. ($2, ritsunguard.com)


The threat: Heart Disease

The problem: University of Michigan researchers found that fine particles released from power plants, cars, and electricity generators are contributing to a host of heart problems.

Why you should care: In 2008, 1.1 million people in the United States will have a heart attack. Nearly half won’t survive.

What you can do: A 2007 Norwegian study found that 300 milligrams a day of anthocyanins, abundant in blueberries, can cut your risk of ticker trouble by as much as 60 percent.

Sources:http://health.msn.com/health-topics/

Zemanta Pixie
Categories
News on Health & Science

Are There Deadly Superbugs in Your Pork?

[amazon_link asins=’B01AS2COIU,B00B59QDLK,B01LNPCEP4,B00KPT8TUE,B001SAO77S,B01J20QP5C,B01A1EW2UA,B01A8UILTS,B01C4MHO32′ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’finmeacur-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’ee74edd0-6c3b-11e7-a502-79c1c0f734af’]

Scientists have detected antibiotic-resistant bacteria in pork, pigs and some veterinarians. It is possible that these so-called superbugs could infect farmworkers or even people who eat pork.

Antibiotic-resistant bugs were found in more than 7 percent of over 100 swine veterinarians tested. The same bacterial strains were found in nearly 50 percent of 300 tested pigs.

Perhaps of greatest concern, the bacteria were also found in 10 percent of more than 200 samples of ground pork and pork chops collected from four Canadian provinces.

An estimated 18,650 deaths a year in the U.S. are estimated to be caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria.


Sources:
Organic Consumers Association June 16, 2008

Zemanta Pixie
Categories
Featured

Hot Baths May Cut Male Fertility

[amazon_link asins=’B0006HDOSM,B072KJ314W,B007N8FWB4,B01LZXRGFL,B06XBNDWTK,B01E4FYFAC,B011AALC4Q,B01CF77A9Y,B06W9K5S1G’ template=’ProductCarousel’ store=’finmeacur-20′ marketplace=’US’ link_id=’2d36350d-8185-11e7-aa00-c32bd8733847′]

Soaking in the tub may reduce men’s fertility, say US researchers.

Findings from a three-year study support current advice that men should avoid ‘overheating’ their sperm.

Sperm counts in five of 11 men with fertility problems soared by 491% after they stopped having baths or using the hot tub for a few months.

Other research has shown heat from laptop use and wearing tight underwear can reduce fertility the Journal of the Brazilian Society of Urology reports.

The researchers from the University of California, San Francisco, said although it had been believed for decades that ‘wet heat’ could damage fertility, there had been very little research.

Men attending a fertility clinic who were exposed to more than 30 minutes per week of ‘wet heat’ through hot baths, Jacuzzis or hot tubs, were recruited to the study.

After three to six months of staying out of the bath, just under half the men showed dramatic five-fold improvement in sperm count.

Sperm motility increased from 12% to 34% in the men who responded to cutting out baths.

Five of the six men who showed no improvement were chronic smokers, which the researchers said could have influenced the lack of response.

Cool environment

Sperm are known to develop best in cool surroundings which is why the testicles are situated outside the man’s body within the scrotum.

Study leader, Dr Paul Turek, director of the UCSF Male Reproductive Health Center said: “These activities can be comfortably added to that list of lifestyle recommendations and ‘things to avoid’ as men attempt to conceive.”

He added that if men could improve their fertility through avoiding hot baths, couples may be able to avoid IVF or choose less invasive treatment.

“Couples really prefer having kids at home and not with technology. This is a way to help them do that.”

According to Dr Turek, the only other published study looking at the link between hot baths and fertility was done in 1965.

After exposing men to ‘wet heat’ for 30 minutes on alternating days, researchers found a temporary decline in sperm production but did not look at sperm quality before and after the study.

Dr Allan Pacey, senior lecturer in andrology at the University of Sheffield said it seemed intuitive that hot baths could contribute to reduced numbers of sperm but it was unclear whether it actually contributed to fertility.

“Ideally, this study needs to be repeated with a much larger number of patients, and with a clearly defined control group, before we can be certain that hot baths are a genuine risk factor for male sub-fertility

“Changes in sperm quality are one thing, but it is pregnancies that matter.

“However, it would do no harm for men who are concerned about their fertility to take a shower instead of a bath.”

Sources: BBC NEWS, march5,2007

Zemanta Pixie
css.php