Graviola

Graviola, soursop or guanábana (Annona muricata) is a fruit native to the humid regions of Central and South America. A formerly obscure fruit for those not in those regions, it has gained some notoriety for being promoted as an alternative cancer treatment.

Against allopathy
Alternative medicine
Clinically unproven
v - t - e
10000 times stronger killer of CANCER than Chemo.. do share it.. can save many lives, fill up hopes and build confidence in the patients...
—Chain e-mail

Cancer woo

The fruit itself is not the active ingredient studied, but rather extracts from seeds, leaves, bark and twigs of the plant.[1] The fruit itself is tasty and probably harmless in moderation. A 1996 study[2] did find extracts from the seeds to be potent against colon adecarcinoma cells. However, it was performed with an in vitro sample of cells and not humans, and was only compared to one kind of chemotherapy drug.

Side effects

Graviola extract has been proven to be neurotoxic. A study performed by the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center showed a high frequency of Parkinson's disease in the French West Indies, where graviola is popular as food and medicine. The source of the disease was dopamine-degenerating alkaloids in seeds and roots.[3] So, not only is it ineffective, but dangerous if used carelessly.

gollark: The WIP Executive Office thing. Fully self-sufficient and with these convenient holograms of the outside world.
gollark: It's now actually turned on.
gollark: Electromagnets are powering up.
gollark: See the kind of octagonal cyan one with the orange/brown frame?
gollark: It's a particularly wide tube/cable.

See also

References

  1. Graviola (Annona muricata) by Barrie R. Cassileth (September 01, 2008) Cancer Network.
  2. Five novel mono-tetrahydrofuran ring acetogenins from the seeds of Annona muricata by M. J. Rieser et al. J. Nat. Prod. 1996 Feb;59(2):100-8.
  3. Toxicity of Annonaceae for dopaminergic neurons: potential role in atypical parkinsonism in Guadeloupe by A. Lannuzel et al. Mov. Disord. 2002 Jan;17(1):84-90.
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