|
|
|
Are you buying counterfeit emu oil?
According to FDA, there has been an increase in drug counterfeiting activities in recent years. This counterfeiting represents a threat to public health because the finished drug products may closely resemble legitimate drugs, yet contain inactive...
Can you get fuller breasts from natural breast enhancement supplements?
There have, in very recent years, been a flood of breast enhancement and breast enlargement supplements put on the market. All of them make the same claims of being an effective and safe alternative to breast augmentation surgery. For many women,...
Dating chat up lines for men
Here are some chat up lines that men can use with women. If they don't work, I
suggest that you investigate online dating .
Do you believe in love at first sight, or should I walk by again?
I seem to have lost my phone number, could I borrow...
Feng Shui for Your Health and Vitality
How many of us wake up in the morning feeling refreshed, happy and full of energy? How many of us, after a few hours in the office, still feel full of energy? Why certain environments uplift our spirits and make us breathe deeper, while others...
Summer Skin Care
Just as winter weather makes us pay special attention to our skin, summer with its sun and heat has its requirements too. SPF. SPF and more SPF. I know you heard a lot about it - but talking about summer skin care, I just have to remind you ...
The Confidence Walk
A couple months back, in the midst of my chaotic holiday shopping excursion, I decided to take refuge in a pleasant nook of the mall. While gathering my thoughts, I was presented with the resonance of a confident woman. Her black leather heeled...
We Can Help You Lose up to 7 kg by 28th of May
Welcome, to my long term health care online store. If you are an existing customer, I recommend that you log into this Site right away so that you can view your personal version of this Site. If you are visiting my website for the first time, I...
WEDDING MAKEUP - Making Sure Your Makeup is Camera Ready!
WEDDING MAKEUP Making Sure Your Makeup is Camera Ready! You plan and anguish over every little detail. Then, your dream day finally arrives. You put on your beautiful wedding dress and make up your face by applying your favorite lipstick, a...
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Neem Tree and Neem Tree Oil
The Neem Tree Information about Neem Oil
The National Institutes of Health, an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and a sister agency to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, has created a database of national and international research journals called MedLine. It includes more than 150 documents on neem. To search for neem and a specific question, type neem AND disorder, i.e., neem AND parasites or neem AND antiviral. MDChoice.com is a privately held company founded by academic physicians and backed by private venture capital. They have developed a unique, patent-pending technology that provides specific, content-focused information from MedLine at the click of a mouse button.
Excerpted from:
Neem-The Ultimate Herb Literature from Pure Gar Neem: A Tree For Solving Global Problems. Conrick, John. National Academy Press.
For centuries, the people of India have utilized the Neem tree (Azadirachta indica) for its variety of medicinal uses. The twigs, leaves, and bark of the Neem tree provide so many benefits that the Indian equivalent to the American Food and Drug Administration (FDA) believes that "anything from Neem has to be good," according to R.O. Larson, a contributor to the book, Neem, A Tree For Solving Global Problems.
Perhaps Neem's most touted advantage is the effect it has upon the skin. Preparations from the leaves or oils of the tree are used as general antiseptics, according to a report of The National Research Council's Ad Hoc Panel of the Board on Science and Technology for International Development. Due to Neem's antibacterial properties, it is effective in fighting most epidermal dysfunction. Ancient ayurvedic practitioners believed high sugar levels in the body caused skin disease; Neem's bitter quality was said to counteract the sweetness.
Traditionally, Indians bathed in Neem leaves steeped in hot water. Since there has never been a report of the topical application of Neem causing an adverse side effect, this is a common procedure to help skin ailments or allergic reactions.
In India and Africa, people use the twigs of the Neem tree as toothbrushes. This practice has apparently influenced current dental products that incorporate Neem bark extracts in toothpaste and mouthwashes.
Several studies of Neem extracts in suppressing malaria have been conducted, all supporting its use in treatment. Scientists at India's Defense Institute of Physiology and Allied Science believe that they have found a Neem-oil extract that behaves as a spermicide. More research is being conducted in this area because of Neem's widespread availability in overpopulated countries unable to afford pricier birth control methods.
Even though millions of Neem consumers exist in India alone, the pharmacological effects have rarely been studied under controlled environments. Neem has never been
reported to have an adverse effect when applied topically or for dental use.
Though the FDA has not approved Neem extracts as an acceptable compound in medicine, Neem is manufactured into many health and beauty care products from the leaves, oils, and extracts of the tree. These products include bath powders, soaps and shampoos.
Excerpted from:
Stix, Gary: "The Village Pharmacy,"Scientific American, page 132 of the May '92 issue. A review of the National Research Council report entitled, "Neem: A Tree For Solving Global Problems."
While the Neem tree has been used intensely for centuries wherever it grows, Western interest did not register until the 1920's. Real interest was peaked in 1959 when a German entomologist, Heinrich Schmutterer, noticed that Neem trees were not consumed by locusts during a plague in the Sudan; characteristically, all other vegetation was stripped to the ground. After Schmutterer's report, research on the Neem tree and its uses became a little industry of its own.
Neem is now gaining acceptance in the West. Neem extracts have been found to be extremely effective against more than 200 arthropod species including, but not limited to, the Mediterranean fruit fly, house flies, fleas, head lice, the Gypsy moth, the Colorado potato beetle, the boll weevil, and cockroaches. This list is a veritable Who's Who of super-resistant insects. As the National Research Council (NRC) points out, Neem has a complex chemical makeup, more than twenty compounds identified to date, which makes developed resistance unlikely. This smacks of 20/20 hindsight since no problem insects in the Orient, where the Neem tree has grown for thousands of years, are known to have developed resistance to it. Neem accomplishes this without committing "ecocide." Mr. Stix points out that birds and bats regularly eat the Neem fruits with no ill effects. They must see the killed insects as a wonderful windfall! He adds that Neem leaves are routinely added to grain stores in India to keep weevils out, with no effect to the grain or the people who eat it.
Medical benefits are vastly claimed but poorly researched. Neem paste is applied to the skins of victims of chicken pox (stops the itching among other benefits) and warts. Several reports document Neem's effect on oral bacteria.
Quietly balancing this very conservative approach is the legendary guru of miracle plants, Noel D. Vietmeyer. Dr. Vietmeyer is a program officer with, and spent 20 years on the Board of Science and Technology for International Development for the NRC. He has "shepherded" the debuts of such plant giants as the jojoba, and amaranth. In the foreword to the NRC's Neem report he insists: "I've never come across a plant with the potential the Neem has." Enough said.
Visit us at http://hsfenergy.com to learn more about our PX Essential Energel products, including our energized Neem products.
|
|
|
|
|
|