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| ==News About Shiny Bush (Pansit Pansitan) == | | ==News About Shiny Bush (Pansit Pansitan) == |
| '''Nigeria: Eating to Beat Stroke''' | | '''Local cures''' |
| *Source:http://allafrica.com/stories/201411060889.html | | *Source:http://http://www.philstar.com/opinion/2014/12/29/1407423/local-cures |
| :By Chukwuma Muanya | | :By Ana Marie Pamintuan (SKETCHES, The Philippine Star) |
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| Analysis
| | ’Tis the season for binge eating, and also – as health experts warned – for getting sick. All those rich foods can lead to high blood pressure and stroke or heart attack, elevated blood sugar and numerous other afflictions from pigging out. |
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| Are you hypertensive or/and diabetic? If the answer is yes, then you have higher risk of having a stroke. But researchers have found eating primarily plant-based foods, such as fruit, vegetables, whole grains, legumes and nuts; replacing butter with healthy fats, such as olive oil; using herbs and spices instead of salt to flavour foods; limiting red meat to no more than a few times a month; drinking red wine in moderation, which is optional; regularly engaging in physical activity; and of course keeping your blood pressure under control would lower the risk of getting a stroke. CHUKWUMA MUANYA writes.
| | Holiday partying, drinking and lack of sleep, combined with the recent drop in temperatures, are also causing colds, whooping cough and fever. The approach of the New Year means worse air pollution, which can cause allergic rhinitis, skin rashes and conjunctivitis. |
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| A stroke is a sudden loss of brain function. It is caused by the interruption of flow of blood to the brain (ischemic stroke) or the rupture of blood vessels in the brain (hemorrhagic stroke). The interruption of blood flow or the rupture of blood vessels causes brain cells (neurons) in the affected area to die.
| | Treatments are readily available. But for millions of Filipinos, even over-the-counter generic drugs for common afflictions are a luxury they can’t afford. |
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| The effects of a stroke depend on where the brain was injured, as well as how much damage occurred. A stroke can impact any number of areas including your ability to move, see, remember, speak, reason and read and write.
| | Instead they turn to their villages’ medicinal lore: Philippine oregano for colds, unripe guava for amoebiasis and ordinary diarrhea. |
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| Stroke is the second leading cause of death and the leading cause of adult disability worldwide. It is estimated that at least 16,000 new stroke cases are recorded annually in Nigeria.
| | With so many people swearing by the efficacy of folk medicine, there must be something to it. Some Spaniards, during the colonial period, documented indigenous plants with healing properties. During the American occupation, a research and development center studied Philippine plants for medicinal properties and other possible uses. |
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| Stroke risk factors, according to a study published in the Nigerian Medical Journal included hypertension (82.7 per cent), obesity (32.6 per cent), diabetes (23.5 per cent), hyperlipidemia/high lipid levels (18.4 per cent), atrial fibrillation/ most common abnormal heart rhythm (9.2 per cent), and cigarette smoking (7.7 per cent).
| | As Big Pharma will tell you, developing a single cure, from the start of R&D to the numerous tests until its approval for commercial release, can cost about $600 million. Only the multinationals, national governments and Bill and Melinda Gates have that kind of money to spend on R&D. |
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| The researchers from the National Hospital, Garki, Abuja; College of Medical Sciences, University of Maiduguri, Borno State; and the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, Gwagwalada, Abuja recommend among other things improved public awareness of vascular risk factors, smoking-cessation campaigns, and aggressive control of hypertension.
| | But surely R&D support, on a lower scale, is possible for our country to develop a local pharmaceutical industry that can compete with India. |
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| However, according to updated American Heart Association (AHA)/American Stroke Association (ASA) guideline published in the American Heart Association's journal Stroke, eating Mediterranean or Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH)-style diets, regularly engaging in physical activity and keeping your blood pressure under control can lower your risk of a first-time stroke.
| | We’re buying generics from India, and no wonder – that country has long regarded the pharmaceutical industry as an engine of economic growth, providing meaningful jobs and making health care accessible to its people. |
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| According to Wikipedia, the Mediterranean diet is a modern nutritional recommendation originally inspired by the traditional dietary patterns of Greece, Southern Italy, and Spain. The principal aspects of this diet include proportionally high consumption of olive oil, legumes, unrefined cereals, fruits, and vegetables, moderate to high consumption of fish, moderate consumption of dairy products (mostly as cheese and yogurt), moderate wine consumption, and low consumption of meat and meat products.
| | While Big Pharma frowns on the start of the Indian pharmaceutical industry, which went around global patent regulations, the Indian industry has become the world’s third largest in terms of volume, earning billions of dollars annually for that country. |
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| Lead author of the study and professor and chairman of neurology at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Florida, United States, James Meschia, said: "We have a huge opportunity to improve how we prevent new strokes, because risk factors that can be changed or controlled -- especially high blood pressure -- account for 90 percent of strokes."
| | Because of government incentives, even small and medium enterprises are into pharmaceutical manufacturing in India. They’re ahead of us in this department by about four decades, but we can try catching up. |
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| Meschia added: "Talking about stroke prevention is worthwhile. In many instances, stroke isn't fatal, but it leads to years of physical, emotional and mental impairment that could be avoided."
| | Being familiar with our own flora, we can have an edge over foreign pharmaceutical companies in R&D. And we may be able to develop cures for tropical illnesses faster. |
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| The updated guidelines recommend these tips to lower risk:
| | If dengue afflicted people in the temperate zones, for example, a vaccine might have been developed decades ago. Sanofi-Pasteur has developed a dengue vaccine, but its targeted 2015 rollout is still fraught with complications. |
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| •Eat a Mediterranean or DASH-style diet, supplemented with nuts.
| | These days the multinationals are rushing to produce a vaccine for Ebola as the killer disease threatens to become a global pandemic. |
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| •Don't smoke. Smoking and taking oral birth control pills can significantly increase your stroke risk. If you're a woman who experiences migraines with aura, smoking raises your risk of stroke even more than in the general population.
| | Our rich biodiversity offers immense possibilities for medicine. One example: a woman who visited her family last month in a typhoon-hit village in the Visayas returned to Manila with a burning itch in her upper arm. She suspected that she got a viral infection from bathing in water drawn from a communal well. |
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| •Mediterranean-style or DASH-style diets are similar in their emphasis on fruits, vegetables, whole grains, legumes, nuts, seeds, poultry and fish. Both are limited in red meat and foods containing saturated fats, which are mostly found in animal-based products such as meat, butter, cheese and full-fat dairy.
| | A friend whose mother moonlights as a village herbalist in another province advised the woman to gather a few malunggay leaves, pound them into a paste and apply it on the itchiest part, which was raw from too much scratching. The woman did, and felt instant relief. |
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| •Mediterranean-style diets are generally low in dairy products and DASH-style diets emphasize low-fat dairy products.
| | She also followed the advice to wash the infected arm regularly with water in which malunggay leaves have been steeped. The itchiness disappeared in a few days. |
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| •Avoiding secondhand smoke also lowers stroke and heart attack risks, according to the guidelines.
| | Malunggay or moringa oleifera, indigenous to northwestern India, is now widely used here, in dried or powdered form, as an ingredient in food products including bread and biscuits. Water infused with malunggay has long been used in rural areas as a substitute for infant milk. Mothers eat the leaves or sip soup with malunggay to increase lactation. Recently, health officials said it could increase sperm production. |
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| •Monitor high blood pressure at home with a cuff device.
| | But its other uses are still little known. The woman’s friend learned that moringa is effective for itching and healing wounds after seeing another woman use malunggay paste on a pet dog that had also scratched an itchy part raw. The paste must’ve stung because the dog whimpered as it was applied, but the raw area healed rapidly and the fur grew back quickly. |
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| •Keep pre-hypertension from becoming high blood pressure by making lifestyle changes such as getting more physical activity, eating a healthy diet and managing your weight.
| | With sufficient state support or endowments from the private sector, malunggay can be developed into an affordable external antiseptic. And we have, for sure, several other plant species that can be used for biopharmaceuticals. |
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| •Reduce the amount of sodium in your diet; sodium is found mostly in salt.
| | Indians have been using various parts of the neem tree, now widely propagated here, as a mosquito repellent, antiseptic and ingredient in soap and beauty products. They use it against termites and cockroaches. Its leaves, used as tea, are believed to be good for afflictions including hypertension and high blood sugar. |
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| •Visit your healthcare provider annually for blood pressure evaluation.
| | These are still little known here. But Pinoy diabetics swear by the efficacy of ampalaya or bitter gourd – both the fruit and leaves – in maintaining a healthy blood sugar level. |
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| •If your medication to lower blood pressure doesn't work or has bad side effects, talk to your healthcare provider about finding a combination of drugs that work for you.
| | People familiar with folk medicine in their villages have long known about the properties of madre de cacao or kakawate. Local manufacturers at least have tapped this plant – not particularly attractive and regarded as a weed in urban areas – for producing dog soap for use specifically against fleas and skin infections. |
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| The writing committee reviewed existing guidelines, randomized clinical trials and some observational studies.
| | Filipino men also know that guava leaves, pounded into a pulp, speed up the healing of the newly circumcised. |
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| The DASH diet is a dietary pattern promoted by the U.S.-based National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (part of the National Institutes of Health, an agency of the United States Department of Health and Human Services) to prevent and control hypertension. | | The world is just starting to discover the healthful properties of virgin coconut oil. |
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| The DASH diet is rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and low-fat dairy foods; includes meat, fish, poultry, nuts, and beans; and is limited in sugar-sweetened foods and beverages, red meat, and added fats. In addition to its effect on blood pressure, it is designed to be a well-balanced approach to eating for the general public. It is now recommended by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) as an ideal eating plan.
| | Local tea and wine makers are now selling products made from banaba (for kidney ailments), duhat (for diabetes), sambong or Blumea camphor (for kidney stones) and lagundi – long used for easing fever, coughs and colds. |
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| Also, another study had shown that Mediterranean diet reduces genetic stroke risk.
| | During rainy days there is an abundance of pansit-pansitan (Peperomia pellucida), which people with gout gather and steep with pandan leaves to make tea. |
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| Scientists say they have discovered that the Mediterranean diet may prevent a genetic risk of stroke since it appears to interact with a particular gene variant usually associated with type 2 diabetes.
| | These days mangosteen and guyabano are being sold in pureed form or as tea. With sufficient R&D support, their purported anti-cancer properties can be backed by something more than anecdotal evidence. |
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| Researchers from the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research center on Aging (USDA HNRCA) at Tufts University, United States and the CIBER Fisiopatología de la Obesidad y Nutricion in Spain, conducted the study, which was published in the journal Diabetes Care.
| | The Department of Health has endorsed 10 medicinal herbs under its Traditional Health Program. These are ampalaya, guava, lagundi, sambong, pansit-pansitan, akapulko for ringworm and eczema, garlic for its anti-cancer and anti-hypertensive properties, niyog-niyogan or Chinese honeysuckle for eliminating intestinal parasites, tsaang gubat or wild tea for skin afflictions, and yerba buena or peppermint as an analgesic and for insect bites. |
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| The research team analyzed 7,018 men and women involved in the Prevencion con Dieta Mediterranea (PREDIMED) trial. The trial, carried out over a five-year period, looked at whether a Mediterranean or a low-fat controlled diet had an effect on the risk of cardiovascular disease, stroke and heart attack, and whether genetics played a part in this.
| | There must be over a thousand other Philippine plants out there, just waiting to be developed for public health. |
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| Prior to the trial, participants were also required to complete food frequency questionnaires, in order to see how closely participants followed a Mediterranean diet.
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| The study focused on a particular variant found in the Transcription Factor 7-like 2 (TCF7L2) gene. The variant is commonly involved in glucose metabolism and can lead to the development of type 2 diabetes. The researchers say this gene variant's link to heart disease has previously been unclear.
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| Around 14 per cent of the PREDIMED participants were found to be homozygous carriers, meaning they possessed two copies of this gene variant.
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| Of these homozygous participants who were also following the Mediterranean diet, results of the analysis revealed a reduced number of strokes. José Ordovás, director of the Nutrition and Genomics Laboratory at the USDA HNRCA, explained: "Being on the Mediterranean diet reduced the number of strokes in people with two copies of the variant. The food they ate appeared to eliminate any increased stroke susceptibility, putting them on an even playing field with people with one or no copies of the variant."
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| However, Ordovás adds that homozygous carriers who were following the low-fat diet did not have the same results, with a three times increased risk of having a stroke compared with participants with only one or no copies of the gene variant.
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| Delores Corella, of the CIBER Fisiopatologia de la Obesidad y Nutriciόn, said, however, results showed that when adherence to the Mediterranean diet was high, having two copies of the gene variant bared no significance on fasting glucose levels.
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| She added: "The same was true for three common measures of cardiovascular disease risk: total blood cholesterol, low density lipoprotein and triglycerides. Conversely, these risk factors were considerably higher in homozygous carriers with low adherence to the diet."
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| Previous research has also revealed that following a Mediterranean diet can benefit health. A study from the University of Alabama at Birmingham suggested that following a Mediterranean diet may improve memory and thinking.
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| Researchers from Spain have suggested the diet may help protect the health of bones.
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| The researchers in the current Spanish study would like to see more studies to determine how our genes and the Mediterranean diet work together.
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| Yet another study has examined the association between adherence to a Mediterranean diet and risk of stroke, depression, cognitive impairment, and Parkinson disease.
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| The study published in Annals of Neurology is titled "Mediterranean diet, stroke, cognitive impairment, and depression: A meta-analysis."
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| The study reads: "Twenty-two eligible studies were included (11 covered stroke, nine covered depression, and eight covered cognitive impairment; only one pertained to Parkinson's disease).
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| "High adherence to Mediterranean diet was consistently associated with reduced risk for stroke, depression, and cognitive impairment. Moderate adherence was similarly associated with reduced risk for depression and cognitive impairment, whereas the protective trend concerning stroke was only marginal.
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| "Subgroup analyses highlighted the protective actions of high adherence in terms of reduced risk for ischemic stroke, mild cognitive impairment, dementia, and particularly Alzheimer disease. Meta-regression analysis indicated that the protective effects of Mediterranean diet in stroke prevention seemed more sizeable among males.
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| "Concerning depression, the protective effects of high adherence seemed independent of age, whereas the favorable actions of moderate adherence seemed to fade away with more advanced age."
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| The researchers concluded: "Adherence to a Mediterranean diet may contribute to the prevention of a series of brain diseases; this may be of special value given the aging of Western societies."
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| Researchers have also found that Mediterranean diet rich in fruits, vegetables, fish, legumes and heart-healthy fats can help lower the risk of developing chronic kidney disease by 50 per cent.
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| In addition, such a diet that restricts consumption of red meats, processed foods and sweets can reduce the risk of experiencing rapid kidney function decline by 42 per cent, the findings showed.
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| The study was published in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology.
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| Co-researcher from Columbia University Medical Centre in the United States, Minesh Khatri, said: "There is increasing evidence that poor diet is associated with kidney disease."
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| For the study, the researchers examined the associations of varying degrees of the Mediterranean diet on long-term kidney function in an observational, community-based prospective study.
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| In their analysis of 900 participants, who were followed for nearly seven years, every one-point higher in a Mediterranean diet score, indicating better adherence to the diet, was associated with a 17 per cent lower likelihood of developing chronic kidney disease.
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| Dietary patterns that closely resembled the Mediterranean diet were linked with a 50 percent lower risk of developing chronic kidney disease and a 42 per cent lower risk of experiencing rapid kidney function decline.
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| Bananas 'cut stroke risk for women after menopause': Foods high in potassium found to reduce chance by up to a quarter
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| A new study suggests that eating bananas could cut the risk of strokes in post-menopausal women, a study suggests. Foods high in potassium could help lower the chance by as much as a quarter, it found.
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| Researchers studied 90,137 postmenopausal women, aged 50 to 79, for an average of 11 years. They looked at how much potassium they consumed, and whether they had strokes or died during the study.
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| Participants were stroke-free at the start and their average dietary potassium intake was 2,611mg a day.
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| The World Health Organisation's daily recommendation for women is 3,510mg or more. Only 16.6 per cent of those studied met or exceeded that.
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| Results of this study, published in the American Heart Association journal Report, are based on potassium from food, not supplements. A medium-sized banana contains around 430mg.
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| Women who ate the most potassium were 12 per cent less likely to suffer stroke in general and 16 per cent less likely to suffer an ischaemic stroke (where blood to the brain is cut off) than women who ate the least.
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| Among women who did not have high blood pressure, those who ate the most potassium had a 27 per cent lower risk of ischaemic stroke and 21 per cent reduced risk for all stroke types.
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| Of the women with hypertension, those who ate the most potassium had a lower risk of death, but potassium intake did not lower their stroke risk.
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| Researchers suggested that higher dietary potassium intake may be more beneficial before high blood pressure develops. They also found that women who ate the most potassium were 10 per cent less likely to die early than those who ate the least.
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| The study's senior author Sylvia Wassertheil-Smoller, of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, said: "Our findings suggest that women need to eat more potassium-rich foods. You won't find high potassium in junk food. Some foods high in potassium include white and sweet potatoes, bananas and white beans."
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| However, she warned that having too much potassium can be dangerous to the heart, and that people should check how much of the mineral they should consume.
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| :Local herbs for hypertension, stroke-related diseases
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| Can a combination of waterleaf, guava leaf, garlic, scent leaf, avocado, bitter leaf, onion, pawpaw leaf be the elusive cure for hypertension, stroke and other cardiovascular ailments?
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| A recent study by Nigerian researchers published in Ethnobotanical Leaflets has unveiled 14 local plants that could be effectively used to manage hypertension, stroke and their complications.
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| The local plants according to the study titled: "Phytochemical Analysis of Medicinal Plants Used for the Management of Hypertension by Esan people of Edo State, Nigeria" include: Guava (Psidium guajava), West African Black Pepper or Ashanti pepper (Piper guineense, Uziza in Igbo and Ata iyere in Yoruba), mistletoe (Loranthus spectobulus), waterleaf (Talinum triangulare), Nigerian senna/negro coffee (Senna occidentalis), swizzle stick (Rauwolfia vomitoria, garlic (Allium sativum), onion (Allium cepa), pawpaw (Carica papaya), asthma herb (Euphorbia hirta), scent leaf (Ocimum gratissimum), avocado (Persea americana), cow-foot (Peperomia pellucida), and bitter leaf (Vernonia amygdalina).
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| The researchers from the Departments of Botany and Pharmacology and Therapeutics, and Medical Laboratory Sciences, Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, Delta State, wrote: "In the present study, the plants which were identified by various herbalists in Esanland for the management of hypertension were examined for alkaloids, inulins, flavonoids, cardiac glycosides, tannins and saponins. The results of the various phytochemical tests revealed that alkaloids, saponins, inulins, tannins, flavonoids and cardiac glycosides were present in the plants studied.
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| "Cardiac glycosides were present in all the species studied while alkaloids were present in all except A. sativum, A. cepa, O. gratissimum, P. americana. Saponnins are present in all except the seeds of Negro coffee (S. accidentalis), while tannins are present in all except bulbs of garlic (A. sativum). Flavonoids were absent in the leaves of scent leaves (O. gratissimum), pawpaw (C. papaya), pear leaves (P. americana) silver bush (P. pellucida), and climbing pepper (Piper guineensis).
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| "From the present study as well as interviews with the local herbalists. It could be concluded that plants that possessed tannins, cardiac glycosides and alkaloids are the most effective for managing hypertension and also providing protection for the heart. The general use of plants such as A. sativum, A. cepa, C. papaya, E. hirta, O. gratissimum, P. americana, P. pellucida, P. guajava, P. guineensis, V. amygdalina, R. vomitoria, L. spectobulus, T. triangulare, and S. occidentalis in the management of hypertension and other disease condition in Esanland has also been reported in other parts of Nigeria and West Africa.
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| "The different herbs encountered at the different herbal homes have different medicinal properties and many of them have multiple uses and hence used for the management of more than one ailment. Thus Esan people have used some of these medicinal plants for controlling and managing hypertension and other types of ailments over the years. Gill (1992), Anslem (2006) and Okoli et al (2007) have reported the effectiveness of garlic, leaves of avocado pear, pawpaw, bitter and mistletoe for the treatment of hypertension in Nigeria. Similarly, Ayitey - Smith (1989) has reported the use of avocado pear, and bitter leaf for the management of hypertension and other disease conditions in Ghana.
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| "Garlic has been confirmed to be very effective in the treatment of hypertension. The bulbs of garlic are blended with honey for the purpose of hypertension. The unripe rind of pawpaw is peeled and soaked in water and after three days, a cup is taken daily. The leaves are also used for treating hypertension. Leaves of avocado pear are cut into pieces, dried and made into tea, for the management of hypertension. Odugbemi (2006) has also documented the efficacy of the cotyledons of avocado pear seed for the treatment of hypertension. The cotyledons are cut into pieces, dried and grinded into powder. A dessertspoonful in 200ml hot water taken after meals gives relieve for the ailment.
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| "According to Odugbemi (2006) silver bush (P. pellucida) is also very effective in the treatment of hypertension. This is also in line with earlier reports by Ayitey-Smith (1989) in Ghana, and Anslem (2006) in Nigeria. P. guajava leaves are soaked in salt water, washed and squeezed and product made up with fresh water to give a greenish liquid that is taken, one glass two times daily for one week to increase blood level and offer protection against heart attack. According to Addae- Mensah (1989) and Odugbemi (2006), climbing black pepper has been confirmed to be very active in the treatment of hypertension.
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| "Also, the fresh leaves of V. amygdalina are chewed and swallowed or ground, or stirred in water, and the liquid taken, to manage hypertension (Ayitey-Smith, 1989 and Okoli et al 2007). Gill (1992) has reported that a typical herbal preparation for managing hypertension in South west Nigeria contains Gladiolus, Sanseveira and Citrus spp."
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| Also, a recent study published in Journal of Neurological Sciences (Turkish), has demonstrated the beneficial potential of waterleaf in the enhancement of the brain activities and as pro-cognitive and neuro-protective agent.
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| The researchers concluded: "Consumption of waterleaf going by this investigation can be recommended as food supplement to protect the brain cells and provide numerous other functions that are beneficial to the body. Prior studies have shown that consumption of vegetables and other food supplements rich in polyphenols can reduce age-related neurological disorders."
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| "In this investigation, we demonstrated the beneficial potential of waterleaf in the enhancement of the brain activities in Swiss albino mice and by extension, may be recommended as pro-cognitive and neuro-protective agent. It is recommended that further studies be carried out to corroborate these findings."
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| :Method of preparation
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| The bulbs of garlic are blended with honey for the purpose of hypertension. The unripe rind of pawpaw is peeled and soaked in water and after three days, a cup is taken daily. The leaves are also used for treating hypertension.
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| Leaves of avocado pear are cut into pieces, dried and made into tea, for the management of hypertension. The cotyledons of avocado pear seed are cut into pieces, dried and grinded into powder. A dessert spoonful in 200ml hot water taken after meals gives relieve for the ailment.
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| Guava leaves are soaked in salt water, washed and squeezed and product made up with fresh water to give a greenish liquid that is taken, one glass two times daily for one week to increase blood level and offer protection against heart attack.
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| Also, the fresh bitter leaves are chewed and swallowed or ground, or stirred in water, and the liquid taken, to manage hypertension.
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| :Garlic
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| Garlic has long been used for a variety of cardiovascular conditions, especially hyperlipidemia. It has also been reported to have hypotensive action. It is thought to increase nitric oxide production, resulting in smooth muscle relaxation and vasodilatation. One of the primary active compounds that gives garlic its characteristic odor and many of its healing benefits is called allicin.
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| Meta-analysis of randomly chosen literary data has demonstrated that garlic is related to decrease of BP in patients with increased systolic pressure, but not in patients without increased systolic pressure.
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| Garlic preparations have been found to be superior to placebo in reducing BP in individuals with hypertension. The antioxidative and antihypertensive effect of garlic has been observed in 20 patients with hypertension compared to 20 patients with normal pressure, who have been receiving garlic pearls preparation for a period of two months.
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| The results have revealed decreased BP, significant reduction of 8-hydroxy-2-deoxyguanosin, level of nitric oxide, and lipid peroxidation, and an increased level of antioxidative vitamins (C and E). This study points to the beneficial cardioprotective action of garlic in essential hypertension.
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| In a pilot study made at Clinical Research Center of New Orleans, United States, on whether garlic could lower blood pressure, nine patients with severe hypertension were given a garlic preparation containing 1.3 per cent allicin. Sitting blood pressure fell with a significant decrease in diastolic blood pressure only five to 14 hours after the dose. Moreover, it was proven in a 2009 study that fresh garlic has more potent cardio-protective properties than processed garlic.
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| :Soursop
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| Annona muricata is a member of the family of custard apple trees called Annonaceae and a species of the genus Annona, known mostly for its edible fruits Annona. The tree grows natively in the Caribbean and Central America.
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| ==Pictures of Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan) - Peperomia pellucida== | | ==Pictures of Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan) - Peperomia pellucida== |
Herbal Remedies and Medicinal Cures for Diseases, Ailments & Illnesses that afflict Humans and Animals
Aloe Vera •
Astragalus •
Bankoro •
Bilberry •
Bitter Gourd (Ampalaya) •
Bitter Orange •
Black Cohosh •
Cat's Claw •
Chamomile •
Chasteberry •
Coconut •
Cranberry •
Dandelion •
Echinacea •
Ephedra •
European Elder Tree •
Evening Primrose •
Fenugreek •
Feverfew •
Flaxseed •
Garlic •
Ginger •
Ginkgo •
Ginseng (Asian) •
Golden Seal •
Grape Seed •
Green Tea •
Hawthorn •
Hoodia •
Horse Chestnut •
Kava •
Lavender •
Licorice •
Malunggay Moringa Oleifera •
Milk Thistle •
Mistletoe •
Passion Flower •
Peppermint Oil •
Red Clover •
Ringworm Bush (Akapulko) – Cassia alata •
Saw Palmetto •
St. John's Wort •
Tawa Tawa •
Turmeric •
Valerian •
Yohimbe •
accept the bitter to get better
Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan) Peperomia pellucida in a Pot growing with other plants. |
Dietary supplement is a product that contains vitamins, minerals, herbs or other botanicals, amino acids, enzymes, and/or other ingredients intended to supplement the diet. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has special labeling requirements for dietary supplements and treats them as foods, not drugs.
Manufacturers and distributors of dietary supplements and dietary ingredients are prohibited from marketing products that are adulterated or misbranded. That means that these firms are responsible for evaluating the safety and labeling of their products before marketing to ensure that they meet all the requirements of DSHEA and FDA regulations.
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Pansit-pansitan is a small, fleshy herb (about 40 cm tall), which grows in yards, nooks and other damp areas. The plant have green, heart-shaped leaves, fleshy stems that produce tiny flowers on a spike. The small, oblong-shaped fruits turn to black when ripe. Parts uses are leaves and stems.
Information verbatim from wikipedia: Peperomia pellucida is an annual, shallow-rooted herb, usually growing to a height of about 15 to 45 cm. it is characterized by succulent stems, shiny, heart-shaped, fleshy leaves and tiny, dot-like seeds attached to several fruiting spikes. It has a mustard-like odor when crushed. The family Piperaceae comprises about a dozen genera and around 3000 species. The genus Peperomia represents nearly half of the Piperaceae with the genus Piper making the bulk of the rest.
Common names
Throughout the Americas, it is known as pepper elder, silverbush, rat-ear, man-to-man, clearweed (North America); konsaka wiwiri (Guianas); coraçãozinho or "little heart" (Brazil); lingua de sapo, herva-de-vidro, herva-de-jaboti or herva-de-jabuti (South America). In Oceania, it is called rtertiil (Belauan); podpod-lahe or potpopot (Chamorro). In the different dialects of the Philippines, it is called pansit-pansitan or ulasimang-bato (Tagalog), olasiman ihalas (Bisaya), sinaw-sinaw or tangon-tangon (Bikol), and lin-linnaaw (Ilocano). In other parts of Asia, it is known as càng cua (Vietnam); pak krasang (Thailand); suna kosho (Japan); rangu-rangu, ketumpangan or tumpang angin (Bahasa/Malay); rinrin (Nigeria).
Medical Uses of Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan) - Peperomia pellucida
- Fresh juice made from stem and leaves controls eye inflammation or minor eye problems.
- Crushed whole plant as warm poultice, is effective for pimples, boils, and wound.
- Concoction of leaves used in treating fevers, headaches, sore throats, coughs, common colds, and diarrheas.
- Boiled leaves and stems is used for gout, arthritis, rheumatic pains, and conjunctivitis. The mixture is also effective in controlling high blood pressure.
- Juice made from leaves and stem, taken externally, is a good facial wash for skin problems.
Where Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan) - Peperomia pellucida Grows
This is a tropical plant and grows like weed in any damp area.
News About Shiny Bush (Pansit Pansitan)
Local cures
- By Ana Marie Pamintuan (SKETCHES, The Philippine Star)
’Tis the season for binge eating, and also – as health experts warned – for getting sick. All those rich foods can lead to high blood pressure and stroke or heart attack, elevated blood sugar and numerous other afflictions from pigging out.
Holiday partying, drinking and lack of sleep, combined with the recent drop in temperatures, are also causing colds, whooping cough and fever. The approach of the New Year means worse air pollution, which can cause allergic rhinitis, skin rashes and conjunctivitis.
Treatments are readily available. But for millions of Filipinos, even over-the-counter generic drugs for common afflictions are a luxury they can’t afford.
Instead they turn to their villages’ medicinal lore: Philippine oregano for colds, unripe guava for amoebiasis and ordinary diarrhea.
With so many people swearing by the efficacy of folk medicine, there must be something to it. Some Spaniards, during the colonial period, documented indigenous plants with healing properties. During the American occupation, a research and development center studied Philippine plants for medicinal properties and other possible uses.
As Big Pharma will tell you, developing a single cure, from the start of R&D to the numerous tests until its approval for commercial release, can cost about $600 million. Only the multinationals, national governments and Bill and Melinda Gates have that kind of money to spend on R&D.
But surely R&D support, on a lower scale, is possible for our country to develop a local pharmaceutical industry that can compete with India.
We’re buying generics from India, and no wonder – that country has long regarded the pharmaceutical industry as an engine of economic growth, providing meaningful jobs and making health care accessible to its people.
While Big Pharma frowns on the start of the Indian pharmaceutical industry, which went around global patent regulations, the Indian industry has become the world’s third largest in terms of volume, earning billions of dollars annually for that country.
Because of government incentives, even small and medium enterprises are into pharmaceutical manufacturing in India. They’re ahead of us in this department by about four decades, but we can try catching up.
Being familiar with our own flora, we can have an edge over foreign pharmaceutical companies in R&D. And we may be able to develop cures for tropical illnesses faster.
If dengue afflicted people in the temperate zones, for example, a vaccine might have been developed decades ago. Sanofi-Pasteur has developed a dengue vaccine, but its targeted 2015 rollout is still fraught with complications.
These days the multinationals are rushing to produce a vaccine for Ebola as the killer disease threatens to become a global pandemic.
Our rich biodiversity offers immense possibilities for medicine. One example: a woman who visited her family last month in a typhoon-hit village in the Visayas returned to Manila with a burning itch in her upper arm. She suspected that she got a viral infection from bathing in water drawn from a communal well.
A friend whose mother moonlights as a village herbalist in another province advised the woman to gather a few malunggay leaves, pound them into a paste and apply it on the itchiest part, which was raw from too much scratching. The woman did, and felt instant relief.
She also followed the advice to wash the infected arm regularly with water in which malunggay leaves have been steeped. The itchiness disappeared in a few days.
Malunggay or moringa oleifera, indigenous to northwestern India, is now widely used here, in dried or powdered form, as an ingredient in food products including bread and biscuits. Water infused with malunggay has long been used in rural areas as a substitute for infant milk. Mothers eat the leaves or sip soup with malunggay to increase lactation. Recently, health officials said it could increase sperm production.
But its other uses are still little known. The woman’s friend learned that moringa is effective for itching and healing wounds after seeing another woman use malunggay paste on a pet dog that had also scratched an itchy part raw. The paste must’ve stung because the dog whimpered as it was applied, but the raw area healed rapidly and the fur grew back quickly.
With sufficient state support or endowments from the private sector, malunggay can be developed into an affordable external antiseptic. And we have, for sure, several other plant species that can be used for biopharmaceuticals.
Indians have been using various parts of the neem tree, now widely propagated here, as a mosquito repellent, antiseptic and ingredient in soap and beauty products. They use it against termites and cockroaches. Its leaves, used as tea, are believed to be good for afflictions including hypertension and high blood sugar.
These are still little known here. But Pinoy diabetics swear by the efficacy of ampalaya or bitter gourd – both the fruit and leaves – in maintaining a healthy blood sugar level.
People familiar with folk medicine in their villages have long known about the properties of madre de cacao or kakawate. Local manufacturers at least have tapped this plant – not particularly attractive and regarded as a weed in urban areas – for producing dog soap for use specifically against fleas and skin infections.
Filipino men also know that guava leaves, pounded into a pulp, speed up the healing of the newly circumcised.
The world is just starting to discover the healthful properties of virgin coconut oil.
Local tea and wine makers are now selling products made from banaba (for kidney ailments), duhat (for diabetes), sambong or Blumea camphor (for kidney stones) and lagundi – long used for easing fever, coughs and colds.
During rainy days there is an abundance of pansit-pansitan (Peperomia pellucida), which people with gout gather and steep with pandan leaves to make tea.
These days mangosteen and guyabano are being sold in pureed form or as tea. With sufficient R&D support, their purported anti-cancer properties can be backed by something more than anecdotal evidence.
The Department of Health has endorsed 10 medicinal herbs under its Traditional Health Program. These are ampalaya, guava, lagundi, sambong, pansit-pansitan, akapulko for ringworm and eczema, garlic for its anti-cancer and anti-hypertensive properties, niyog-niyogan or Chinese honeysuckle for eliminating intestinal parasites, tsaang gubat or wild tea for skin afflictions, and yerba buena or peppermint as an analgesic and for insect bites.
There must be over a thousand other Philippine plants out there, just waiting to be developed for public health.
Pictures of Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan) - Peperomia pellucida
- Pictures taken by Frank Maletsky
Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan) - Peperomia pellucida
Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan) - Peperomia pellucida
Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan) - Peperomia pellucida
Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan) - Peperomia pellucida