Featured White Papers
- Enterprise PBX buyer's guide (VoIP-News)
- Technology-based learning: Extending reach & ensuring Leadership Development effectiveness (SkillSoft)
- Hosted CRM buyer's guide (Inside CRM)
Neem: this living pharmacy could help you ward off nasty bugsand cancer
Better Nutrition, March, 2006 by Sheryll Alexander
Imagine a 24-hour pharmacy carrying one natural product--neem. It's not that far-fetched when you take into account that in India the neem tree is known as "the virtual living pharmacy."
Upon further investigation, the nickname fits. Every pan of the neem tree--bark, leaves, fruit, seeds--may be used to treat skin disorders, malaria, periodontal disease, blood and circulatory problems, digestive disorders and infectious diseases, according to a review of the tree's medicinal properties published in the May 2005 issue of Current Medicinal Chemistry--Anti-Cancer Agents. By being antiviral, antibacterial and immunostimulating, neem helps combat the body's three greatest challengers. Good luck finding something like that at your pharmacy.
While centuries of use have found that neem can protect the body externally and internally, modern science has been putting its abilities to the test. Over the past two decades neem has been the subject of more than 200 scientific studies. Among the most recent findings:
* Neem extract causes prostate cancer cell death, making it a potential treatment for the disease, according to a December 2005 Journal of Ethnopharmacology study.
* A new flavanone (a natural compound with antioxidant properties) named azharone exists in neem flowers, according to a study in the March 2006 issue of Natural Product Research. Though this research is preliminary, it echoes a May 2005 Journal of Ethnopharmacology study that found neem had strong antioxidant potential.
* Neem bark extract may be a therapeutic way to control esophageal, stomach or intestinal ulcers, according to a study in the October 2004 issue of Life Science.
* Neem could be a natural insect repellent. In one of many studies, Texas A&M University researchers reported in the January 2006 issue of Pest Management Science that surfaces covered with neem juice may repel diamondback moths.
So the next time you need a bug repellant, a stomach soother or an antioxidant boost, consider tapping into the living pharmacy and reach for neem.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
NEEMAMERICA'S NEEM GEL with aloe vera soothes stings, cuts and repels mosquitoes.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
NEEMAURA NATURALS NEEM CREAM is a smooth-as-silk blend for skin woes and may plump up wrinkles too.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Try HIMALAYA PURE HERBS NEEM twice daily with meals to help with skin disorders.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
THERA NEEM SUPERCRITICAL C[O.sub.2] EXTRACT OF NEEM benefits in a daily supplement.
COPYRIGHT 2006 PRIMEDIA Intertec, a PRIMEDIA Company. All Rights Reserved.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning