Difference between revisions of "Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan)"

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==News About Shiny Bush (Pansit Pansitan) ==
==News About Shiny Bush (Pansit Pansitan) ==
'''Pepper Elder (Peperomia pellucida) to Decrease Uric Acid Levels'''
*Source:http://www.herbalzzz.com/pepper-elder-peperomia-pellucida-to-decrease-uric-acid-levels/
: (Herbalzzz.com Admin)
A high uric acid level is usually because of the body either produces too much uric acid or the kidneys do not eliminate uric acid rapidly enough. It may, but not always, cause recurrent attacks of gout. A high uric acid level in the blood, or usually called hyperuricemic, may also cause some people to develop kidney stones or kidney failure and in some people may develop high blood pressure, heart disease or chronic kidney disease, though it is still unclear whether this is a direct cause or merely an early warning sign of these conditions.
High level of uric acid is usually treated with allopurinol. This medicine has been proven to be effective in inhibiting Xanthine Oxidase, a type of enzyme which helps in uric acid formation. Unfortunately, this medicine is likely to increases the risks of hepatitis and allergic reaction.
As an alternative, Pepper Elder (Peperomia pellucida) offers almost the same anti-hyperuricemic effect with little side effect. It has been proven through some in vitro studies in the Philippines, India and Indonesia. Besides, it has been ethno-medicinally used since long time ago.
To make a Pepper Elder decoction, prepare two fists of fresh Elder Pepper leaves and stems. Wash and bring to boil in 3 glasses of water. After boiling, simmer over low heat until the water is reduced to a half glasses. Allow it to cool and strain. Drink regularly every night before going to bed. See if there any progress after a week.
As a preventive measure, retard from purine-rich diet such as organ meat, game meat, anchovies, herring, gravy, dried beans, dried peas, mushrooms and other foods is among many factors causing high level of uric acid. It is also suggested to drink plenty of fluids to help flush uric acid from the body. Drink a minimum of 4 and ½ liters of water daily.
As mentioned above, Pepper Elder is relatively safe. However, those who have hypersensitivity reactions to the species is advised to be careful if using it, as it can cause asthma-like symptoms.
----
'''Local cures'''
'''Local cures'''
*Source:http://http://www.philstar.com/opinion/2014/12/29/1407423/local-cures
*Source:http://http://www.philstar.com/opinion/2014/12/29/1407423/local-cures

Revision as of 07:15, 6 February 2016

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) 3.jpg
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.

Shiny Bush (Pansit-pansitan) - Peperomia pellucida

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

  • source: wikipedia:

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.
Herbal remedies in zamboanga.PNG

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)

Pepper Elder (Peperomia pellucida) to Decrease Uric Acid Levels

(Herbalzzz.com Admin)

A high uric acid level is usually because of the body either produces too much uric acid or the kidneys do not eliminate uric acid rapidly enough. It may, but not always, cause recurrent attacks of gout. A high uric acid level in the blood, or usually called hyperuricemic, may also cause some people to develop kidney stones or kidney failure and in some people may develop high blood pressure, heart disease or chronic kidney disease, though it is still unclear whether this is a direct cause or merely an early warning sign of these conditions.

High level of uric acid is usually treated with allopurinol. This medicine has been proven to be effective in inhibiting Xanthine Oxidase, a type of enzyme which helps in uric acid formation. Unfortunately, this medicine is likely to increases the risks of hepatitis and allergic reaction.

As an alternative, Pepper Elder (Peperomia pellucida) offers almost the same anti-hyperuricemic effect with little side effect. It has been proven through some in vitro studies in the Philippines, India and Indonesia. Besides, it has been ethno-medicinally used since long time ago.

To make a Pepper Elder decoction, prepare two fists of fresh Elder Pepper leaves and stems. Wash and bring to boil in 3 glasses of water. After boiling, simmer over low heat until the water is reduced to a half glasses. Allow it to cool and strain. Drink regularly every night before going to bed. See if there any progress after a week.

As a preventive measure, retard from purine-rich diet such as organ meat, game meat, anchovies, herring, gravy, dried beans, dried peas, mushrooms and other foods is among many factors causing high level of uric acid. It is also suggested to drink plenty of fluids to help flush uric acid from the body. Drink a minimum of 4 and ½ liters of water daily.

As mentioned above, Pepper Elder is relatively safe. However, those who have hypersensitivity reactions to the species is advised to be careful if using it, as it can cause asthma-like symptoms.


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