Garlic efficacy

June 18, 2010 · Posted in Food medicine, Traditional Herbal · Comments Off 

garlicBeing used as vampire antidote in movies, this herbal have lots more capabilities in human health.
Garlic is a wonderful herbal supplements that can help health in many ways. Research shows that garlic contains a composition that can help prevent and cure infections, some types of cancer including stomach cancer, skin, breast, esophagus, mouth, and colon cancer, reduce body stress from pollution, boost the immune system, lowering blood pressure and cholesterol , used for arthritis, asthma, respiratory problems, fever and flu, digestive problems, insomnia, liver disease, sinusitis, and for wounds. Read more

Petai, unreveal efficacy

December 14, 2009 · Posted in Food medicine, Fruit medicine · Comments Off 

petaiYou all must know that Petai (Pete) as the fruit that makes bad breath and smelly fart is not good. But perhaps many of you do not know that bananas contain 3 natural sugars sucrose, fructose and glucose combined with fiber.
The combination of this content can provide an instant energy boost, but long enough and big enough effect. Research has proven that just two bananas provide enough energy for a strenuous 90 minutes. Read more

Noni (Morinda citrifolia), efficacious although not sexy fruit

December 14, 2009 · Posted in Fruit medicine · Comments Off 

noniAlthough its appearance not sexy and has a smell that stung, but mengkudu or pace fruit (Morinda citrifolia) have the efficacy to cure various diseases, such as gout, rheumatism, high blood pressure, diabetes, kidney, cancer, allergies, asthma, and others. This is because plants that flourish in tropical countries contain vitamins, calcium, potassium, protein, antioxidants, and others.
Morinda citrifolia, commonly known as great morinda, Indian mulberry, Nunaakai (Tamil Nadu, India) , Read more

Arabian Herbal Medicine

December 13, 2009 · Posted in Traditional Herbal · Comments Off 

Herbal remedies and alternative medicines are used throughout the world and in the past herbs often represented the original sources of most drugs. The plant kingdom has provided an endless source of medicinal plants first used in their crude forms as herbal teas, syrups, infusions, ointments, liniments and powders. Evidence of use of herbal remedies goes back some 60 000 years to a burial site in a cave in northern Iraq, which was uncovered in 1960. An analysis of the soil around the human bones revealed extraordinary quantities of plant pollen of eight species. Seven of these are medicinal plants and still used throughout the herbal world. With the development of chemistry and Western medicine, the active substances of many species have been isolated and in some cases duplicated in the form of synthetic drugs. Read more