Noni Extract 5:1
STRENGTH: 500 mg
FORM: 60 Capsules
Benefits
- Noni may help alleviate poor digestion.
- Noni may heal gastric ulcers.
- Noni regulates cell function.
- Noni may relieve menstrual cramps.
- Noni may repair damaged cells.
- Noni may help to treat joint disorders.
- Noni may lower blood pressure.
- Noni may help to reverse vascular problems.
- Noni may help to heal sprains, injuries.
- Noni may help to relieve the symptoms of sadness.
- Noni may ease the symptoms associated with age related confusion.
Noni’s
wonderful healing properties have been known and used
successfully for over 2,000 years. It’s a plant whose fruit is
found in warmer climates around the world, with the primary
sources coming from Hawaii and Tahiti. The traditional
Polynesian healers used the fruit of the noni plant for many
things; in fact they used it for everything from a ‘tonic’ to
mending broken bones. Different parts of the plant are used to
treat those who use it, and scientific studies within the last
few decades lend support to the Hawaiian and Polynesians' claims
of its unusual healing power. Some of the health-related
ingredients found in noni fruit that have been isolated are
morindone, morindine, acubin, terpene compounds, L. asperuloside,
various anthraquinones, alazarin, caproic acid, caprylic acid,
scopoletin, damnacanthal, and other alkaloids. In the early
1990s the marketing of noni juice became very popular not just
in the U.S. but in markets world wide, due primarily to word of
mouth, and subsequent research…that continues on even today.
A scientist by the name of Dr. Heinicke has spent over 45 years
studying phytochemicals such as those found in noni. Dr.
Heinicke found that one of the active ingredients wasn’t a
carbohydrate or protein found in the plant, it was a chemical
called an alkaloid. Alkaloids are by nature some of the most
active and important classes of plant chemicals. They are in
many cases the components by which certain drugs in the
pharmaceutical industry are based. He named an alkaloid he
discovered in noni ‘xeronine’ (dry - alkaloid). Xeronine is a
relatively small alkaloid which is physiologically very active
and important for the proper functioning of all cells in the
body. Dr. Heinicke found that Noni contained a precursor form of
this alkaloid that he termed ‘pro-xeronine’. When the precursor
is ingested the active alkaloid is formed, and releases pure
xeronine into the intestines when it comes in contact with
certain enzymes.
Other major supporting constituents in noni appear to be
polysaccharides and a compound known as damnacanthal. Animal and
test tubes studies show noni to have immune-enhancing activity,
mostly because of its polysaccharide components that have been
shown to increase the release of immune-enhancing compounds that
activate white blood cells. An interesting side note is that,
damnacanthal is thought to be responsible for producing sedative
effects in animal studies.
The research done to date shows that noni and it various
components do their work at the cellular level systemically;
which can strengthen the immune system, regulate cell function
and increase cellular regeneration of damaged cells. The actives
in noni help to repair damaged cells by regulating the rigidity
and shape of certain proteins. In a sense this may explain the
wide range of pathologies that noni may have an affect on. There
have been no commonly reported side effects following the
ingestion of noni. And since the use of noni during pregnancy,
while breast feeding or while taking certain drugs has not been
adequately studied it is recommended that it not be used during
these times. †
Also available: Noni 500mg
REFERENCES:
- McClatchey W. From Polynesian healers to health food stores:
Changing perspectives of Morinda citrifolia (Rubiaceae).
Integrative Cancer Therapies 2002; 1(2): 110-120.
- Wang MY, West BJ, Jensen CJ, Nowicki D, Chen S, Palu AK,
Anderson G. Morinda citrifolia (Noni): A Literature review and
recent advances in noni research. Acta Pharmacol Sin 1002 Dec;
23 (12): 1127-1141.
- Hirazumi A, Furusawa E. An immunomodulatory
polysaccharide-rich substance from the fruit juice of Morinda
citrifolia (noni) with antitumour activity. Phytother Res
1999;13:380–7.