Tuesday 15 November 2011

Recent research on Moringa

http://www.academicjournals.org/ajar/abstracts/abstracts/abstracts2011/12%20Oct/Tesfay%20et%20al.htm


African Journal of Agricultural Research Vol. 6(22), pp. 5123-5132, 12 October, 2011
Available online at http://www.academicjournals.org/AJAR
ISSN 1991-637X ©2011 Academic Journals


Full Length Research Paper

Levels of anti-oxidants in different parts of moringa (Moringa oleifera) seedling

S. Z. Tesfay*, I. Bertling, A. O. Odindo, T. Seyoum Workneh and N. Mathaba

Horticultural Science, School of Agricultural Sciences and Agribusiness, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Private Bag X01, Scottsville, Agric Ave., 3209 Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

*Corresponding author. E-mail: tesfay@ukzn.ac.za.

Accepted 13 September, 2011
 Abstract
Moringa (Moringa oleifera) tree is known as a medicinal plant, with every part of the plant edible and rich in anti-oxidants. However, there is little information on these anti-oxidants distribution in the plant; these compounds are produced at different concentrations in different parts of the plant. This research, investigated the levels of anti-oxidants in different parts of the plant. Seedlings were grown in replication, consisting of four plots, and replicated into three. Pooled plant parts were collected for analysis. There were significant differences in sugar concentration and anti-oxidant distribution in different parts of moringa seedling. The sucrose concentration was the dominant carbohydrate produced in different parts of the seedling, except glucose in plant roots. Raffinose was detected only in leaf, stem and root of the seedling. Whereas the highest anti-oxidant concentration was also recorded in: Total anti-oxidant (TAO) (1.8 mg g-1), leaf-ascorbic acid (AsA) (2.0 mg g-1), and total phenols (TP) (64.1 μg g-1); stem-TAO (1.2 mg g-1); root-carotenoids (29.7 mg g-1), TP (57.3 μg g-1); seed- α-tocopherol (28.57 μg g-1). Although the seedlings had substantial amount of total crude protein, seed (110.4 mg g-1) and leaf (76.1 mg g-1) had the highest concentrations. Different parts of moringa seedlings had different levels of sugars and anti-oxidants; this contributes to their nutritional qualities and eventually qualifies it as a suitable underutilized crop with every part being edible. The specific aims of this study were to generate analytical data on anti-oxidants concentrations in different parts of the moringa plants and identification of different parts of the plant as potential ingredients in functional food products.

Key words: Anti-oxidants, carbohydrates, moringa, nutrients, protein.

Tuesday 20 September 2011

Enters Queen Intaka












Intaka Moringa going places, at the University of KZN


Moringa and Stretch marks

Definition


A shiny line on the skin of the abdomen, breasts, thighs, or buttocks that is often lighter than the surrounding skin and is caused by the stretching and weakening of elastic tissues as a result of pregnancy or obesity, for example.




Ancient Egyptian methods for health care and scar removal date back about 5,000 years. Ancient Egyptians were meticulous when it came to caring for their bodies. They had many different herbs, oils and other substances that they applied topically for skin ailments including burns, bites and scars.

Egyptian healing recipes have been long forgotten. Some, recorded on the Papyrus of Ancient Egypt, contain ingredients that are no longer obtainable. For example, moringa oil, frankincense, fermented fruit juices and grass were the ingredients listed in one Egyptian recipe for scars, wrinkles and stretch marks. However no specifics are given, and moringa oil is unheard of these days.
A Moringa paste used in skincare
 We have personal experience of Moringa powder being effective  when used for skin problems. I am using it myself for a condition on my legs, caused by poor blood-flow that leaves unattractive "scabby" patches.


Moringa and Ointments


Ointments and cream contain medicinal properties that can help improve the skin condition. Depending on the oils you choose these topical preparations can be healing or comforting. An ointment contains oils or fats, but not water. Petroleum jelly or paraffin wax may be used, but a wonderful natural method is to use vegetable oil, such as Coconut, Olive, Sweet Almond or Sunflower oil, with beeswax. Making an organic cream is very similar to making an ointment, again using beeswax. This is also very easy to make at home.

Ointments may be used as skin conditioners and as a means of treating skin conditions, they are mostly simple to make with the base ingredients being readily available.

The easiest method is to buy a natural base ointment from your pharmacy. It should have no additives. You can then ad Moringa powder and other natural substances like Moringa oil. This makes an easy to use cream with the natural healing properties of Moringa.

You can also make your own base ointment.
Ingredients for ointment bases:

Vegetable oils
As heat is used in the preparation of most ointments it is better to choose more saturated oils that are stable to heat such as Coconut and Olive oil to make the ointment base.

Beeswax
White beeswax is chemically treated to clean and bleach it. Yellow beeswax is filtered and has had the honey removed by washing in water. Beeswax is added to the vegetable oils to "set" the oil giving the ointment its consistency.

 Lard and other animal fats.
The use of lard (pig fat) and other animal fats has fallen out of fashion, being mostly replaced by the more cosmetically acceptable and readily available vegetable oils.

Paraffin's and other petroleum products.
These also have fallen out of favour but are still used in some commercial creams such as Sorbolene cream.

The Internet has many recipes and advice on making ointments.




Tuesday 16 August 2011





www.intaka2moringa.co.za



A DREAM IS BORN

During 2004 I registered a company and a logo after having a vision. it is now seven years later and Intaka Ezimbili is established and have a couple of projects under the belt.





Earlier this year (2011) my wife Monica came home and was very excited. She discovered a plant that could help us building on our dream. Our dream is and always was to try and uplift rural communities  specifically in Kwa Zulu Natal.

We bought property in Utrecht, where Monica hails from, and were never really able to make our dreams come true. Yes, we did welfare work and yes, we supported several children through school. We simply did not have the means to do more.

I am recuperating from a long spell of ill health and it affected our finances negatively. My vision became my dream and my dream became my goal and I never let go of it. I struggled on irrespectively and ignored sniggles and disbelief.

Now finally we have a product that can help us achieve our life ambition. It is a gift from nature and has been around through the ages. Suddenly things started happening. Monica contacted and met with influential people from all over the globe. Doors opened for us and we found ways to make things happen.

.

So I proudly introduce to you "Little Big Bird" , the child of Two Sparrows:

100 % Natural Moringa Capsules



Moringa powder




In South Africa, the iLembe District Municipality is working with Dr. Samason Tesfay of the University of KwaZulu-Natal to start a plantation project for moringa oleifera.  The plan is to use emerging small-scale farmers to harvest the pods for biodiesel.  The plant has many uses, with other parts of the tree used for relieving malnutrition in nursing mothers and babies, water treatment, and may have antioxidant values as well. frm BiofuelsDigest.





http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.intaka2moringa.co.za%2F&h=uAQA0IlCV



Moringa appears to be a nutritional and medicinal cornucopia. The author, a Western-trained nutritional biochemist who has studied some of Moringa’s phytochemicals for almost a decade, gives a brief commentary and extensive references, and presents a table introducing some of the tree’s most intriguing features. This is the first article in a series, and will be followed by more detailed analysis of some of the strongest claims made regarding this edible plant.



Abstract
Moringa oleifera, or the horseradish tree, is a pan-tropical species that is known by such regional names as benzolive, drumstick tree, kelor, marango, mlonge, mulangay, nébéday, saijhan, and sajna. Over the past two decades, many reports have appeared in mainstream scientific journals describing its nutritional and medicinal properties. Its utility as a non-food product has also been extensively described, but will not be discussed herein, (e.g. lumber, charcoal, fencing, water clarification, lubricating oil). As with many reports of the nutritional or medicinal value of a natural product, there are an alarming number of purveyors of “healthful” food who are now promoting M. oleifera as a panacea. While much of this recent enthusiasm indeed appears to be justified, it is critical to separate rigorous scientific evidence from anecdote. Those who charge a premium for products containing Moringa spp. must be held to a high standard. Those who promote the cultivation and use of Moringa spp. in regions where hope is in short supply must be provided with the best available evidence, so as not to raise false hopes and to encourage the most fruitful use of scarce research capital. It is the purpose of this series of brief reviews to: (a) critically evaluate the published scientific evidence on M. oleifera, (b) highlight claims from the traditional and tribal medicinal lore and from non-peer reviewed sources that would benefit from further, rigorous scientific evaluation, and (c) suggest directions for future clinical research that could be carried out by local investigators in developing regions.
This is the first of four planned papers on the nutritional, therapeutic, and prophylactic properties of Moringa oleifera. In this introductory paper, the scientific evidence for health effects are summarized in tabular format, and the strength of evidence is discussed in very general terms. A second paper will address a select few uses of Moringa in greater detail than they can be dealt with in the context of this paper. A third paper will probe the phytochemical components of Moringa in more depth. A fourth paper will lay out a number of suggested research projects that can be initiated at a very small scale and with very limited resources, in geographic regions which are suitable for Moringa cultivation and utilization. In advance of this fourth paper in the series, the author solicits suggestions and will gladly acknowledge contributions that are incorporated into the final manuscript. It is the intent and hope of the journal’s editors that such a network of small-scale, locally executed investigations might be successfully woven into a greater fabric which will have enhanced scientific power over similar small studies conducted and reported in isolation. Such an approach will have the added benefit that statistically sound planning, peer review, and multi-center coordination brings to a scientific investigation.
The following paper is intended to be useful for both scientific and lay audiences. Since various terms used herein are likely not familiar to the lay reader, nor are many of the references readily available to either scientific or lay audiences, we encourage active on-line dialog between readers and both the author and the journal staff. Both will attempt to answer questions and to direct readers to the experts in an open and public manner.
Introduction
Moringa oleifera is the most widely cultivated species of a monogeneric family, the Moringaceae, that is native to the sub-Himalayan tracts of IndiaPakistanBangladesh and Afghanistan. This rapidly-growing tree (also known as the horseradish tree, drumstick tree, benzolive tree, kelor, marango, mlonge, moonga, mulangay, nébéday, saijhan, sajna or Ben oil tree), was utilized by the ancient Romans, Greeks and Egyptians; it is now widely cultivated and has become naturalized in many locations in the tropics. It is a perennial softwood tree with timber of low quality, but which for centuries has been advocated for traditional medicinal and industrial uses. It is already an important crop in IndiaEthiopia, the Philippines and the Sudan, and is being grown in West, East and South Africa, tropical AsiaLatin America, the CaribbeanFlorida and the Pacific Islands. All parts of the Moringa tree are edible and have long been consumed by humans. According to Fuglie (47) the many uses for Moringa include: alley cropping (biomass production), animal forage (leaves and treated seed-cake), biogas (from leaves), domestic cleaning agent (crushed leaves), blue dye (wood), fencing (living trees), fertilizer (seed-cake), foliar nutrient (juice expressed from the leaves), green manure (from leaves), gum (from tree trunks), honey- and sugar cane juice-clarifier (powdered seeds), honey (flower nectar), medicine (all plant parts), ornamental plantings, biopesticide (soil incorporation of leaves to prevent seedling damping off), pulp (wood), rope (bark), tannin for tanning hides (bark and gum), water purification (powdered seeds). Moringa seed oil (yield 30-40% by weight), also known as Ben oil, is a sweet non-sticking, non-drying oil that resists rancidity. It has been used in salads, for fine machine lubrication, and in the manufacture of perfume and hair care products (158). In the West, one of the best known uses for Moringa is the use of powdered seeds to flocculate contaminants and purify drinking water (11,50,113), but the seeds are also eaten green, roasted, powdered and steeped for tea or used in curries (50). This tree has in recent times been advocated as an outstanding indigenous source of highly digestible protein, Ca, Fe, Vitamin C, and carotenoids suitable for utilization in many of the so-called “developing” regions of the world where undernourishment is a major concern.
Nutrition
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. Any readers who are familiar with Moringa will recognize the oft-reproduced characterization made many years ago by the Trees for Life organization, that “ounce-for-ounce, 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. These readers will also recognize the oral histories recorded byLowell Fuglie in Senegal and throughout West Africa, who reports (and has extensively documented on video) countless instances of lifesaving nutritional rescue that are attributed to Moringa (47,48). 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 are still 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, flowers), is very difficult since plant uses span both categories and this is deeply ingrained in the traditions and the fabric of the community (85). Thus, Table 1 in this review captures both nutritional and medicinal references as they relate to Moringa, whilst avoiding most of the better known agro-forestry and water purification applications of this plant. The interested reader is also directed to the very comprehensive reviews of the nutritional attributes of Moringa prepared by the NGOs mentioned earlier (in particular, see references 47,123,157).
Phytochemistry
Phytochemicals are, in the strictest sense of the word, chemicals produced by plants. Commonly, though, the word refers to only those chemicals which may have an impact on health, or on flavor, texture, smell, or color of the plants, but are not required by humans as essential nutrients. An examination of the phytochemicals of Moringa species affords the opportunity to examine a range of fairly unique compounds. In particular, this plant family is rich in compounds containing the simple sugar, rhamnose, and it is rich in a fairly unique group of compounds called glucosinolates and isothiocyanates (10,38). For example, specific components of Moringa preparations that have been reported to have hypotensive, anticancer, and antibacterial activity include 4-(4'-O-acetyl-a-L-rhamnopyranosyloxy)benzyl isothiocyanate [1], 4-(a-L-rhamnopyranosyloxy)benzyl isothiocyanate [2], niazimicin [3], pterygospermin [4], benzyl isothiocyanate [5], and 4-(a-L-rhamnopyranosyloxy)benzyl glucosinolate [6]. While these compounds are relatively unique to the Moringa family, it is also rich in a number of vitamins and minerals as well as other more commonly recognized phytochemicals such as the carotenoids (including b-carotene or pro-vitamin A). These attributes are all discussed extensively by Lowell Fuglie (47) and others, and will be the subject of a future review in this series.
Figure 1. Structures of selected phytochemicals from Moringa spp.: 4-(4'-O-acetyl-a-L-rhamnopyranosyloxy)benzyl isothiocyanate [1], 4-(-L-rhamnopyranosyloxy)benzyl isothiocyanate [2], niazimicin [3], pterygospermin [4], benzyl isothiocyanate [5], and 4-(a-L-rhamnopyranosyloxy)benzyl glucosinolate [6].
Disease Treatment and Prevention
The benefits for the treatment or prevention of disease or infection that may accrue from either dietary or topical administration of Moringa preparations (e.g. extracts, decoctions, poultices, creams, oils, emollients, salves, powders, porridges) are not quite so well known (116). Although the oral history here is also voluminous, it has been subject to much less intense scientific scrutiny, and it is useful to review the claims that have been made and to assess the quality of evidence available for the more well-documented claims. The readers of this review are encouraged to examine two recent papers that do an excellent job of contrasting the dilemma of balancing evidence from complementary and alternative medicine (e.g. traditional medicine, tribal lore, oral histories and anecdotes) with the burden of proof required in order to make sound scientific judgments on the efficacy of these traditional cures (138,154). Clearly much more research is justified, but just as clearly this will be a very fruitful field of endeavor for both basic and applied researchers over the next decade.
Widespread claims of the medicinal effectiveness of various Moringa tree preparations have encouraged the author and his colleagues at The Johns Hopkins University to further investigate some of these possibilities. A plethora of traditional medicine references attest to its curative power, and scientific validation of these popular uses is developing to support at least some of the claims. Moringa preparations have been cited in the scientific literature as having antibiotic, antitrypanosomal, hypotensive, antispasmodic, antiulcer, anti-inflammatory, hypocholesterolemic, and hypoglycemic activities, as well as having considerable efficacy in water purification by flocculation, sedimentation, antibiosis and even reduction of Schistosome cercariae titer (see Table 1).
Unfortunately, many of these reports of efficacy in human beings are not supported by placebo controlled, randomized clinical trials, nor have they been published in high visibility journals. For example, on the surface a report published almost 25 years ago (141) appears to establish Moringa as a powerful cure for urinary tract infection, but it provides the reader with no source of comparison (no control subjects). Thus, to the extent to which this is antithetical to Western medicine, Moringa has not yet been and will not be embraced by Western-trained medical practitioners for either its medicinal or nutritional properties.
In many cases, published in-vitro (cultured cells) and in-vivo (animal) trials do provide a degree of mechanistic support for some of the claims that have sprung from the traditional medicine lore. For example, numerous studies now point to the elevation of a variety of detoxication and antioxidant enzymes and biomarkers as a result of treatment with Moringa or with phytochemicals isolated from Moringa (39,40,76,131). I shall briefly introduce antibiosis and cancer prevention as just two examples of areas of Moringa research for which the existing scientific evidence appears to be particularly strong.
Antibiotic Activity. This is clearly the area in which the preponderance of evidence—both classical scientific and extensive anecdotal evidence—is overwhelming. The scientific evidence has now been available for over 50 years, although much of it is completely unknown to western scientists. In the late 1940’s and early 1950’s a team from the University of Bombay (BR Das), Travancore University (PA Kurup), and the Department of Biochemistry at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore (PLN Rao), identified a compound they called pterygospermin [4] a compound which they reported readily dissociated into two molecules of benzyl isothiocyanate [5] (23,24,25,26,77,78,79,80,81,108). Benzyl isothiocyanate was already understood at that time to have antimicrobial properties. This group not only identified pterygospermin, but performed extensive and elegant characterization of its mode of antimicrobial action in the mid 1950’s. (They identified the tree from which they isolated this substance as “Moringa pterygosperma,” now regarded as an archaic designation for “M. oleifera.”) Although others were to show that pterygospermin and extracts of the Moringa plants from which it was isolated were antibacterial against a variety of microbes, the identity of pterygospermin has since been challenged (34) as an artifact of isolation or structural determination.
Subsequent elegant and very thorough work, published in 1964 as a PhD thesis by Bennie Badgett (a student of the well known chemist Martin Ettlinger), identified a number of glyosylated derivatives of benzyl isothiocyanate [5] (e.g. compounds containing the 6-carbon simple sugar, rhamnose) (8). The identity of these compounds was not available in the refereed scientific literature until “re-discovered” 15 years later by Kjaer and co-workers (73). Seminal reports on the antibiotic activity of the primary rhamnosylated compound then followed, from U Eilert and colleagues in BraunschweigGermany(33,34). They re-isolated and confirmed the identity of 4-(a-L-rhamnopyranosyloxy)benzyl glucosinolate [6] and its cognate isothiocyanate [2] and verified the activity of the latter compound against a wide range of bacteria and fungi.
Extensive field reports and ecological studies (see Table 1) forming part of a rich traditional medicine history, claim efficacy of leaf, seed, root, bark, and flowers against a variety of dermal and internal infections. Unfortunately, many of the reports of antibiotic efficacy in humans are not supported by placebo controlled, randomized clinical trials. Again, in keeping with Western medical prejudices, practitioners may not be expected to embrace Moringa for its antibiotic properties. In this case, however, the in-vitro (bacterial cultures) and observational studies provide a very plausible mechanistic underpinning for the plethora of efficacy claims that have accumulated over the years (see Table 1).
Aware of the reported antibiotic activity of [2][5], and other isothiocyanates and plants containing them, we undertook to determine whether some of them were also active as antibiotics againstHelicobacter pylori. This bacterium was not discovered until the mid-1980’s, a discovery for which the 2005 Nobel Prize in Medicine was just awarded. H. pylori is an omnipresent pathogen of human beings in medically underserved areas of the world, and amongst the poorest of poor populations worldwide. It is a major cause of gastritis, and of gastric and duodenal ulcers, and it is a major risk factor for gastric cancer (having been classified as a carcinogen by the W.H.O. in 1993). Cultures of H. pylori, it turned out, were extraordinarily susceptible to [2], and to a number of other isothiocyanates (37,60). These compounds had antibiotic activity against H. pylori at concentrations up to 1000-fold lower than those which had been used in earlier studies against a wide range of bacteria and fungi. The extension of this finding to human H. pylori infection is now being pursued in the clinic, and the prototypical isothiocyanate has already demonstrated some efficacy in pilot studies (49,168).
Cancer Prevention. Since Moringa species have long been recognized by folk medicine practitioners as having value in tumor therapy (61), we examined compounds [1] and [2] for their cancer preventive potential (39). Recently, [1] and the related compound [3] were shown to be potent inhibitors of phorbol ester (TPA)-induced Epstein-Barr virus early antigen activation in lymphoblastoid (Burkitt’s lymphoma) cells (57,104). In one of these studies, [3] also inhibited tumor promotion in a mouse two-stage DMBA-TPA tumor model (104). In an even more recent study, Bharali and colleagues have examined skin tumor prevention following ingestion of drumstick (Moringa seedpod) extracts (12). In this mouse model, which included appropriate positive and negative controls, a dramatic reduction in skin papillomas was demonstrated.
Thus, traditional practice has long suggested that cancer prevention and therapy may be achievable with native plants. Modern practitioners have used crude extracts and isolated bioactive compounds. The proof required by modern medicine has not been realized because neither the prevention of cancer nor the modification of relevant biomarkers of the protected state has been adequately demonstrated in human subjects. Does this mean that it doesn’t work? No. It may well work, but more rigorous study is required in order to achieve a level of proof required for full biomedical endorsement of Moringa as, in this case, a cancer preventative plant.
Acknowledgements
I thank Dr. Mark Olson for his encouragement and collaboration early in my research involvement with Moringa (joint publications are still pending). I gratefully acknowledge the Lewis B. and Dorothy Cullman Foundation for providing unrestricted research funds that facilitated preparation of this review and work on Moringa in my laboratory; funding was also provided by the American Institute for Cancer Research and the NCI (Grant # R01 CA93780).

TABLE 1. REPORTED NUTRITIONAL, THERAPEUTIC & PROPHYLACTIC USES OF MORINGA OLEIFERA
Traditional Use
Condition/Effecta
Plant Partb
Referencesc
ANT Antimicrobial / Biocidal
LFSPRBGO
8, 13, 19, 24, 27, 31, 34, 64, 68, 100, 104, 114, 115, 126, 140, 151, 160, 161, 162
Bacterial
LFS
25, 26, 55, 63, 77-81, 149
Urinary Tract Infection
L
141
Typhoid
G
47
Infection
LF
47
Syphilis
G
47
Dental Caries/Toothache
RBG
47
Fungal/ Mycoses
O
111
Thrush
88, 111
Viral
Common cold
FRB
47
Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV)
L
104
Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV-1)
L
84
HIV-AIDS
L
1, 124
Warts
S
47
Parasites
Dranunculiasis (guinea-worm)
36
Helminths
LFP
47
Schistosomes
S
113
Trypanosomes
LR
95
Other / Not Attributed to a Specific Pathogen
Skin (Dermal)
O S
15
Hepatic
L
6
Fever
LRGS
47
Earache
G
47
External Sores/Ulcers
LFRB
15
Bronchitis
L
47
Throat Infection
F
47
Water treatment (general)
S
11, 50, 75, 86, 169
AST Asthma
RG
47
CAN Cancer Therapy / Protection
LFPBS
12, 17, 28, 39, 45, 59, 61, 64, 104, 115
Anti-tumor
LFSB
45, 48, 57, 61, 87
Prostate
L
47, 48
Radioprotective
L
132
Skin
P
12
CIR Circulatory/Endocrine Disorders
LFSPR
56, 93
Anti-anemic
L
47, 125
Anti-hypertensive
LP
40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 53, 83, 137
Cardiotonic
R
47
Diabetes/hypoglycemia
LP
6, 45, 71, 87, 101, 167
Diuretic
LFRG
6, 14, 62
Hypocholestemia
L
52, 94
Thyroid
L
153
Tonic
F
47
Hepatorenal
LR
93, 120
DET Detoxification
BO
76, 135, 166
Antipyretic
148
Purgative
O
47
Snakebite
B
47
Scorpion-bite
B
47
DIG Digestive Disorders
LSRBG
53
For TRTMNT of:
Colitis
LB
47
Diarrhea
LR
47, 62, 64
Digestif
B
47
Dysentery
LG
47
Flatulence
R
47
Ulcer / Gastritis
LS
3, 115, 136
INF Inflammation
LFSPRG
14, 28, 35, 45, 62, 64, 68, 110, 131, 160, 161
Rheumatism
LFSPRG
28
Joint Pain
P
47
Edema
R
47
Arthritis
S
47
IMM Immunity
SO
69
Immune-stimulant
S
69
Lupus
O
28
NER Nervous Disorders
LFRBGO
58, 59, 62, 96
Anti-spasmodic
SR
14, 53
Epilepsy
RB
47
Hysteria
FRBO
47
Headache
LRBG
47
NUT Nuritional
LSBO
6, 7, 18, 22, 28, 30, 31, 32, 46, 47, 48, 51, 65, 66, 67, 70, 92, 102, 112, 116, 133, 163
Antinutritional factors
B
88, 89, 90, 110, 127, 128, 139, 156, 164, 165
Antioxidant
LO
110, 147
Carotenoids
L
29, 105, 152
Energy
LSO
85
Goitrogen
S
2
Iron deficiency
LS
16
Oil quality
O
5, 98, 110, 158, 159
Protein
LS
47
Vitamin/Mineral deficiency
LS
7, 9, 54, 56, 85, 119
REP Reproductive Health
LFPRBGO
44, 53, 64, 121, 122
Abortifacient
FRBG
106, 107, 155
Aphrodisiac
RB
47
Birth Control
B
45, 53, 142-146
Lactation Enhancer
L
47
Prostate function
O
47
SKI Skin Disorders
LRSG
160, 161
Antiseptic
L
47
Astringent
R
47
Pyodermia
S
15
Rubefacient
RG
47
Vesicant
R
47
GEN General Disorders/Conditions
LFSPRBO
4, 6, 8, 20, 21, 45, 48, 64, 66, 67, 68, 73, 74, 82, 91, 92, 99, 102, 103, 109, 116, 117, 118, 123, 125, 128, 129, 130, 134, 150, 163
Bladder
OS
47
Catarrh
LF
47
Gout
RO
47
Hepatamegaly
R
47
Lactation
L
47
Low.Back/Kidney Pain
R
47
Scurvy
LSRBO
47
Splenomegaly
R
47
“Tonic”
LFPSO
47
aIt is very difficult in some cases to separate the effects of severe nutritional deficiencies (e.g. Vitamin C) from sequelae (e.g. scurvy) which transcend categorization by organ systems or classification into single disease states.
bPlant parts are designated by their first letters (in bold):
Leaves
Flowers
Seeds
Pods (drumsticks)
Roots
Bark
Gum
Oil (from seeds)
cMany of the original citations have been collected by Lowell J. Fuglie, [and can be found in his excellent treatise entitled The Miracle Tree, (47)] and by Manuel Palada (116), Julia Morton (102), and Trees For Life (157). Most other compendiums in recent publications or on commercial websites appear to be highly derivative of these seminal works.


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                                                                Moringa and Mental Health

You can find research  at the following link, about Moringa and Mental health

http://medind.nic.in/iby/t08/i12/ibyt08i12p744.pdf











Moringa for sleep and relaxation
Moringa acts as a great natural sleeping aid because it contains the unique natural compound known as Nebedaye, which can be found in the leaves. Nebedaye sets several of the body’s key conditions for a fitful night’s rest. It lowers our blood sugar levels, soothes our digestive system, and has a depressive effect on our central nervous system, acting as a muscle relaxant. When our muscles relax, it not only dissipates our tension, but also results in less constriction of our blood vessels. This results in lower blood pressure, which also helps to make sleep that much more restful. Moringa also helps you stay asleep for much longer. In one scientific study, it was shown that subject who consumed moringa could stay asleep for up to twice as long as subjects that did not consume any moringa. This makes it useful for those people who wish to stay in a long blissful slumber. On the other hand, the enhanced relaxation and deeper sleep will allow people with a limited number of allotted sleeping hours to awaken more refreshed and energized than they normally would. Moringa’s ability to relax muscles can come in handy not just for people looking for a good night’s sleep, but for those who are suffering from muscle pains and spasms as well. This can be especially beneficial for athletes, people recovering from injuries, and those who suffer from certain muscular conditions. These properties also help make moringa a safe and effective diuretic.







                                                                 Moringa and Pregnancy



It is known that good nutrition before pregnancy is important because of the amount of “resources” childbirth requires. The process of pre-pregnancy nutrition is a process of “building up” the immune system in preparation of pregnancy, and is known as being one of the major factors in determining the success rate of conceiving healthy children. Moringa Powder has been used to combat malnutrition, especially among infants and nursing mothers. Having a well balanced diet during pregnancy is extremely important, as the diet is going to be directly related to the health of the fetus.

Thus, Moringa supplementation is essential to get the right amounts of vitamins and minerals, as well as other nutrients. All the pregnant women today are more conscious about their health during gestation yet their nutritional intake becomes less as they are prone to cravings, sickness, and lack of energy, which makes preparing the right foods even harder. So the need for the extra nutrient is increasing which becomes more effective when the intake is in the form of natural supplement. Pregnant women need more iron to make more hemoglobin for all that additional blood. They also need extra iron for their growing baby.