Friday, February 22, 2008

HERBAL MEDICINE: SPECIAL QUALITY PHALAERIA MACROCARPA FOR BLOOD CANCER

January 13th, 2008 sasana Posted in Special quality phalaeria macrocarpa for cancer, Herbal medicine:Cancer herbal medicine No Comments »

BRAIN CANCER
One year ago, Ismail Saleh experiences inspection many times in some hospitals in Jakarta. In the early of March 2004, for example, the man who 79 years is investigated magnetically Resonance imaging (MRI) in Coast Hospital Respects Kapok. MRI functions to detect position and tumor measure in brain. Mantam, that news chief judge got brain cancer.
Result of MRI shows, there is bloated of brain tend to direction of type tumor lymphoma malignant. Initially his family keeps information about the disease. Because, worries influences emotion Ismail. When informed that he is hit by brain cancer. Ismail never expecting got that disease. I am never think before, why I got brain cancer. Though I always active, happy, likes humor, not stress, and often writes article in various medias a period,” said Ismail saleh.
Ear CorkEnd the year of 2004 the condition of his health is not going better. Graduated The military Law College experiences body balance trouble, communications focus, and sound track. He is often fallen down from bed and bathroom. That Is Why Ismail Saleh soon is brought to Hospital Gleneagles in Singapore.
Diagnose medical doctor over there mentions Ismail Saleh to have an affair disorients, confusion, headache, and disability to stand up and sits.

HERBAL MEDICINE: BLOOD CANCER CELL SUICIDE STYLE

Piece life after retired remains mirage for Syafril Roy. Result of inspection of health in RS Persahabatan, Rawamangun Jakarta Timur, shows that he got blood cancer and diabetes mellitus. Imagines death likely presents in the eyes. consumption of Phalaeria Macrocarpa regularly becomes healing fulcrums Syahril.
Initially leukocyte rate bounces up until 60000, and always rising until 100000. sugar rate in blood 340 mmHg. The man 65 years frequently feels headache. Cool sweat flows down. Suggestion to take back bone marrow is refused. One month after routine drinks ingredient Phalaeria Macrocarpa number leukocyte reduces to 74000. repair of the condition also is followed stable of sugar rate in blood.
The healing not just incident. From back of wall laboratories, Prof Dr Akio Mimura from Biotechnology Department, University Yamanashi, Japan, successfully opens clue. He identifies anticarcinogenetic active compound from fruit and Phalaeria Macrocarpa cochlea, proven can depress growth of cell leukemia in vitro. Anticipated the compound can induce process apoptosis.
According To Dr Ahkam Subroto, biotechnology researcher LIPI, apoptosis is an death active program of a real normal cell Biotechnology ”in laymen language usually is conceived of suicide process ( suicide),” says Ahkam.
SuicideApoptosis is keyword in cancer healing. At cancer patient, cells do not die and continuous multiplies itself. It cause by two things: deviation in process of bisection or trouble at system apoptosis. Akio believes, Phalaeria Macrocarpa contains mitosis resistor compound and triggers process to suicide/apoptosis at cancer cells. Mean member of Thymelaeaceae set of cancer cell to do suicide.
That happy news goes along with research Drs. Vivi Lisdawati Apt Msi, researcher from Litbang department of public health. “Positive indication Phalaeria Macrocarpa because have positive indication the character of sitoksis to break cancer cell,” says Vivi Alumnus pharmacy department Indonesia university. Same as Akio, Vivi also does work of indium vintro, applies mouse as experiment animal. The difference is she applies cell L1210 isolated from spleen. Apparently, 50% cell leukemia in the animal spleen is hampering after dropped by extraction Phalaeria Macrocarpa good news to leukemia patient and other cancer. Research of course done at blood cancer. However, did not close applicable possibility at other cancer disease if process apoptosis is suicide happened.
Apparently besides anticancer, Phalaeria Macrocarpa also functioning as antioxidant and ant diabetes. Research of Phalaeria Macrocarpa as antioxidant also does by akio. He successfully finds fact, in 100 Phalaeria Macrocarpa kernel grams there is mean 374 compound magnesium antioxidant. This higher rate compared to antioxidant rate from various tea types, herb.
Antioxidant is not directly correlate to ant cancer. “Antioxidant stands in free radical arrest. Cancer relates to life style and complicated factor,” says Ahkam. However, heaping of free radical can become one of cancer stimulate. here the role of antioxidant as preventive for free radical. Besides anticancer and usage antioxidant of Phalaeria Macrocarpa as anti diabetes also attract enthusiasm of the researchers. Research in LIPI has proved, Phalaeria Macrocarpa extract hamper glycosidase enzyme job activity in indium vintro.
Glycosidase enzyme is enzyme contributing in distorting of carbohydrate becomes glucose. With stop of the enzyme activity, hence glucose rate in manageable blood in normal boundary. For therapy world of Phalaeria Macrocarpa, research is valuable finding. The way towards scientific verification increasingly wide open for phalaeria macrocarpa.



INDONESIAN JAMU
A Blend of Bio- and Cultural Diversity


“Jamu, Madame, Sir!” That’s how a slim, young woman carrying a heavy basketful of bottles tied up on her back greets her clients from door to door at a Jakarta neighborhood every morning. The lady, wearing the Javanese traditional dress called kebaya and batik sarong, is selling the traditional Indonesian herbal medicine known as jamu.
Indonesia has the world’s largest biodiversity reservoir with around 140 million hectares of rainforest. Therefore, nature is deeply rooted in the life of the people culturally, socially and economically. Traditional herbal medicine derived from leaves, fruits, roots, seeds, flowers or tree barks, has been widely used since ancient times.
There are thousands of jamu ladies roaming Indonesia’s narrow streets and kampongs (hamlets), offering a glass of freshly prepared herbal medicine, which is usually mixed with raw egg and honey. In addition to the ‘mobile’ jamu ladies, there are also many jamu stalls almost everywhere.
Apart from homemade fresh jamu, the jamu vendors also offer herbal medicine produced by jamu manufacturers. At present, one could easily buy ready-made jamu packed in powder form, as pills, capsules, tonics, oil and ointments. Jamu is used to treat a wide variety of ailments ranging from fatigue and headache to malaria. It also supplies the body with vitamin C, cleanses the blood, keeps the body in good shape, and makes the skin smooth.
Jamu consumers come from every class of society, from the poor to the rich, those who live in villages or those who live in large cities. Indonesians like to consume jamu due to its availability and comparatively cheap price. Jamu is usually consumed in liquid form and in some cases is applied externally such as on the skin or forehead. The traditional methods of making jamu such as by boiling the prepared herbal ingredients still prevail in the country. The popular traditional tools of making jamu such as by using a clay pot and grater are still available in many families.
As part of the national family welfare program, each neighborhood has been encouraged to have a medicinal plants garden to supply residents who need to treat their family members. The garden is also aimed at preserving the medicinal plants and to pass on the traditional knowledge to younger generations.
Among common herbs used in jamu prescriptions are ginger (Zingiber officinale), wild ginger (Curcuma cautkeridza), turmeric (Curcuma domestica), greater galingale (Kaempferia galanga), kumis kucing (Orthosiphon aristatus), bengle (Zingiber bevifalium), secang (Caesalpinia sappan hinn), brotowali (Tiospora rumpii boerl), calamondin (Citrae aurantifalia sivingle), cinnamon (Gijeyzahyza glabra), and alang-alang (Gramineae).
Traditional Cosmetics

In principle there are several types of jamu. For example, one type maintains physical fitness and health, and another type treats various kinds of illness. Jamu for babies is also available, usually in oil form. There are also herbal cosmetics to maintain the natural beauty of women, and special jamu for pregnant women during the pre- and post-natal periods.
An estimated 80 percent of the Indonesian population has tried jamu at some stage of their lives. For Indonesian women, jamu is considered essential to keep them young and beautiful for their husbands. Drinking jamu is a must for women after giving birth, although some might hate its bitter taste. A special treatment for women in their post-natal period is usually a combination of massage, body wraps and tonics to help them regain their figures and eliminate stretch marks.
Almost every woman is concerned that her physical appearance always remains slim and beautiful with an alluring bright smiling face. As a Javanese idiom says, “Ngadi Sarira”, or “to maintain the body to be always in a perfect condition is of prime importance.”
In Javanese culture, the ladies of the royal families have a reputation of inheriting the beauty of goddesses from paradise. Nowadays, many women from outside the palace walls know some secrets of the royal palace culture of Ngadi Sarira. Jamu is widely used to give an inner beauty, which is thought to result from good physical health.
Some jamu products are consumed directly by drinking or eating it. For instance, eating kepel fruit (a brown fruit of a chicken egg size) gives the body - and even the urine - a fragrant odor similar to that of the fruit itself. Some traditional cosmetics include bedak dingin (a cool powder made from tendered rice with special ingredients such as pandanus and kenanga flower) and lulur bathing powder for scrubbing. Finally, a hair oil called cemceman, made of coconut oil with pandanus, kenanga flower, jeruk purut etc. is applied.
Rich in Biodiversity and Cultures
Indonesia is the world’s second richest megacenter of biodiversity, after Brazil. The country, comprising over 17,000 islands, covers only 1.3 per cent of the earth’s surface, but it contains almost 15 per cent of all higher plants and a significant share of the world’s fauna. According to the country study on biodiversity in 1993, the number of species of flowering plants in Indonesia is between 25,000 and 30,000, and 10 per cent of the total flora of Indonesia is thought to have medicinal value. Around 40 million people depend directly on the country’s biodiversity, and the communities make use of around 6000 plant species.
With a population of over 220 million people, Indonesia has at least 336 different cultures, speaking more than 250 languages. Thanks to this diverse culture, Indonesia has many different varieties of traditional medicine, depending on the local geography, ethnic groups and the historical processes of the communities. However, jamu, which originated in Java, and probably dates back to the construction of the world-famous Borobudur Temple in the late eighth and early ninth centuries, is the most wide-spread form of traditional medicine in the country.
In the course of time, jamu spread not only to the whole island of Java and to neighboring Bali, but also to many of the other islands. As a result of the continuous exchange of information between various cultural groups, traditional systems of medicine are not static but dynamic, regularly incorporating new knowledge and uses.
While all the various systems are based on more or less the same plant material, users are limited by what is available in their own locality and the existing knowledge, according to an article titled “Biodiversity, traditional medicine and the sustainable use of indigenous medicinal plants in Indonesia” written by Walter R. Erdelen, Kusnaka Adimihardja, H. Moesdarsono and Sidik. To cure liver infections, for instance, the Indonesian Sundanese ethnic group eats Curcuma domestica, or turmeric, as lalab (a fresh vegetable salad), while the country’s other large ethnic group, the Javanese, use boiled, dried turmeric to treat the same ailment.
Untapped Market

Nowadays, there are around 997 traditional medicine manufacturers in Indonesia, and 98 of them are industries. A few of the big jamu industries have exported their products such as cosmetics, oils and herbal medicines for women and babies to Malaysia, Singapore, India, Pakistan, Europe, the United States, and several Middle Eastern countries.
The proceeds of the herbal medicine sales domestically reached around 2 trillion Indonesian Rupiahs (Rp) annually or about US$225 million, and its export value was only US$5 million, according to data from the Indonesian Food and Medicine Supervisory Body (POM) in 2002. The figure was very small compared with China’s domestic sale value at US$5 billion and its export at US$1 billion. The demand for herbal diet supplements alone is estimated to be worth US$43 billion annually in the global market.
“Business opportunities for traditional medicines are very promising, both in the domestic and international markets. We have not tapped it maximally,” said Eng. Asyiantini, the organizing committee chairman of the Indonesian Biopharmacy Exhibition and Congress (IBEC) that was held in Yogyakarta from July 14 to 18, 2004. She said that the herbal medicine industry uses only around 500 species out of the total 7,000 known medicinal plants available in the country.
Meanwhile, according to Charles Saerang, secretary general of the Indonesian Traditional Herbal Medicines Producers Association (GPJTI), it is quite ironic that in herbal medicine production, the country falls far behind countries such as China, Korea and Japan. Political will from the government is a must for the country to rapidly develop the traditional medicine industry if Indonesia wants to compete with other countries.
Indonesia will host an International Workshop on “Enhancing Cooperation on Herbal Medicine: A Solution for Community Health Problems” and an Herbal Fair in Jakarta, this year. Initially the event was scheduled for July 27 to 30, 2004, but it has been postponed indefinitely. The workshop and exhibition are to be organized by the Non-Aligned Movement Center for South-South Technical Cooperation (NAM CSSTC) and the India-based Center for Science and Technology of Non-aligned and other Developing Countries (NAM S&T Center).
The international workshop and exhibition are expected to address key issues such as enhancing cooperation; covering issues of research, trade, business development, and intellectual property rights; and promoting the use of herbal medicines in the treatment of diseases such as HIV/AIDS, diabetes, and hypertension. It will also discuss solutions for community health problems in which traditional medicine could be used as an alternative to modern medicine due to its affordability, local production, cultural acceptance, and direct benefit to both producers and consumers.
References :
ANTARA - Nyonya Meneer exports herbal medicine to South Asia (2002)
ANTARA - It needs political will to develop jamu medicine (2002)
Suryo S. Negoro - Traditional Herbal Medicine and Traditional Cosmetics (www.Joglosemar.co.id/jamu)
Jamu Folk Medicine from the Kitchen - Tourism Indonesia.
Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor, November 1999 - “Biodiversity, traditional medicine and the sustainable use of indigenous medicinal plants in Indonesia” by Walter R. Erdelen, Kusnaka Adimihardja, H. Moesdarsono, Sidik.
The NAM CSSTCMs Website: http://www.nam-csstc.org.
Hani Mumtazah is an environmental journalist based in Jakarta, Indonesia. She graduated from a three-year English language non-decree program at the University of Indonesia, Jakarta. She attended the Non-Aligned News Agencies Journalism Course in New Delhi, India, in 1987. Comments and suggestions may be forwarded to her by contacting the editor at: ScienceTech@islam-online.net
By Hani MumtazahJakarta, Indonesia 23/08/2004
source : http://www.islamonline.net/english/Science/2004/08/article13.shtml