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All parts of the graviola tree are used in natural
medicine in the tropics, including the bark, leaves, roots, fruit, and fruit
seeds. Different properties and uses are attributed to the different parts of
the tree. Generally, the fruit and fruit juice are taken for worms and
parasites, to cool fevers, to increase mother's milk after childbirth, and as
an astringent for diarrhea and dysentery. The crushed seeds are used against
internal and external parasites, head lice, and worms. The bark, leaves, and
roots are considered sedative, antispasmodic, hypotensive, and nervine, and a
tea is made for various disorders toward those effects.
Graviola has a long, rich history of use in
herbal medicine as well as a lengthy recorded indigenous use. In the Peruvian
Andes, a leaf tea is used for catarrh (inflammation of mucous membranes) and
the crushed seed is used to kill parasites. In the Peruvian Amazon the bark,
roots, and leaves are used for diabetes and as a sedative and antispasmodic.
Indigenous tribes in Guyana use a leaf and/or bark tea as a sedative and heart
tonic. In the Brazilian Amazon a leaf tea is used for liver problems, and the
oil of the leaves and unripe fruit is mixed with olive oil and used externally
for neuralgia, rheumatism, and arthritis pain. In Jamaica, Haiti, and the West
Indies the fruit and/or fruit juice is used for fevers, parasites and
diarrhea; the bark or leaf is used as an antispasmodic, sedative, and nervine
for heart conditions, coughs, flu, difficult childbirth, asthma, hypertension,
and parasites.
Many active compounds and chemicals have
been found in graviola, as scientists have been studying its properties since
the 1940s. Most of the research on graviola focuses on a novel set of
chemicals called Annonaceous acetogenins. Graviola produces these natural
compounds in its leaf and stem, bark, and fruit seeds. Three separate research
groups have confirmed that these chemicals have significant antitumorous
properties and selective toxicity against various types of cancer cells
(without harming healthy cells) publishing eight clinical studies on their
findings. Many of the acetogenins have demonstrated selective toxicity to
tumor cells at very low dosages—as little as 1 part per million. Four studies
were published in 1998 which further specify the chemicals and acetogenins in
graviola which are demonstrating the strongest anticancerous, antitumorous,
and antiviral properties. In a 1997 clinical study, novel alkaloids found in
graviola fruit exhibited antidepressive effects in animals.
Annonaceous acetogenins are only found in
the Annonaceae family (to which graviola belongs). These chemicals in general
have been documented with antitumorous, antiparasitic, insecticidal, and
antimicrobial activities. Mode of action studies in three separate
laboratories have recently determined that these acetogenins are superb
inhibitors of enzyme processes that are only found in the membranes of
cancerous tumor cells. This is why they are toxic to cancer cells but have no
toxicity to healthy cells. Purdue University, in West Lafayette, Indiana, has
conducted a great deal of the research on the acetogenins, much of which, has
been funded by The National Cancer Institute and/or the National Institute of
Health (NIH). Thus far, Purdue University and/or its staff have filed at least
nine U.S. and/or international patents on their work around the antitumorous
and insecticidal properties and uses of these acetogenins.
In 1997, Purdue University published
information with promising news that several of the Annonaceous acetogenins
were " . . . not only are effective in killing tumors that have proven
resistant to anti-cancer agents, but also seem to have a special affinity for
such resistant cells." In several interviews after this information was
publicized, the head pharmacologist in Purdue's research explained how this
worked. As he explains it, cancer cells that survive chemotherapy can develop
resistance to the agent originally used as well as to other, even unrelated,
drugs.
This phenomenon is called multi-drug
resistance (MDR). One of the main ways that cancer cells develop resistance to
chemotherapy drugs is by creating an intercellular pump which is capable of
pushing anticancer agents out of the cell before they can kill it. On average,
only about two percent of the cancer cells in any given person might develop
this pump—but they are the two percent that can eventually grow and expand to
create multi-drug-resistant tumors. Some of the latest research on acetogenins
reported that they were capable of shutting down these intercellular pumps,
thereby killing multi-drug-resistant tumors.
Purdue researchers reported that the
acetogenins preferentially killed multi-drug-resistant cancer cells by
blocking the transfer of ATP—the chief source of cellular energy—into them. A
tumor cell needs energy to grow and reproduce, and a great deal more to run
its pump and expel attacking agents. By inhibiting energy to the cell , it can
no longer run its pump. When acetogenins block ATP to the tumor cell over
time, the cell no longer has enough energy to operate sustaining processes—and
it dies. Normal cells seldom develop such a pump; therefore, they don't
require large amounts of energy to run a pump and, generally, are not
adversely affected by ATP inhibitors.
Purdue researchers reported that 14
different acetogenins tested thus far demonstrate potent ATP-blocking
properties (including several found only in graviola). They also reported that
13 of these 14 acetogenins tested were more potent against MDR breast cancer
cells than all three of the standard drugs (adriamycin, vincristine, and
vinblastine) they used as controls.
In an 1976 plant screening program by the
National Cancer Institute, graviola leaves and stem showed active toxicity
against cancer cells and researchers have been following up on these findings
since. Thus far, specific acetogenins in graviola and/or extracts of graviola
have been reported to be selectively toxic in vitro to these types of tumor
cells: lung carcinoma cell lines; human breast solid tumor lines; prostate
adenocarcinoma; pancreatic carcinoma cell lines; colon adenocarcinoma cell
lines; liver cancer cell lines; human lymphoma cell lines; and multi-drug
resistant human breast adenocarcinoma. Researchers in Taiwan reported in 2003
that the main graviola acetogenin, annonacin, was highly toxic to ovarian,
cervical, breast, bladder and skin cancer cell lines at very low dosages
saying; “. . . annonacin is a promising anti-cancer agent and worthy of
further animal studies and, we would hope, clinical trials.”
Ingredients: 600mg per serving, vegetarian
capsules.
Serving Size: 2 capsules
Benefits: enhances the immune
function
Cautions: If pregnant, nursing
or under a doctor's care, consult your physician before using this product.
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