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Thursday, April 3, 2014

The Wonder Herb for Cancer, Alzheimer’s, and Stress

Harness the Strength of a
Stallion Against Cancer,
Alzheimer's, and Stress

This ancient herb is known in Sanskrit as "the smell of a horse." That doesn't sound very attractive (to me, anyway). But it's one of the most life-giving herbs in Ayurveda, the traditional medicine of India. Maybe you don't need the smell of a horse, but sometimes the strength of a horse is just what you need.
Ashwaghanda is legendary for its ability to give stallion-like vigor and strength, as well as tame stress, protect your brain, fight cancer, and more. And it has the medical community abuzz, with studies cropping up everywhere. One of them showed a 92 percent reduction in the number of cancer tumors, so you want to keep reading…
Continued below…

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Ashwaghada is a promising alternative treatment for degenerative diseases like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and more. It's on a search and destroy mission against the free radicals implicated in aging and many diseases.
Stress really does kill people
Most people live with multiple sources of chronic stress. Emotional stressors at work and home can be more than just emotionally draining. They can ruin your physical health, too. Even if the stress happened a long time ago you may still carry emotional scars.
If you compound unremitting, long-term stress with environmental toxins and poor nutrition, you have a disease just waiting to happen.
Stress can cause the oxidative breakdown of lipids (fats), through a process in which free radicals "steal" electrons from the lipids in cell membranes, causing cell damage. Stress also depletes the body of critical nutrients you need for healthy organs.
Ashwaghanda can help undo the damage.
Science is now showing us what Ayurveda has believed for centuries – that ashwagandha is a powerful adaptogenic herb that earns its keep. Adaptogens are active agents that help your body deal with stress, anxiety, and fatigue. They work on your whole body, not just a single organ.
During the past 45 years or so, a stunning 1200 research scientists have conducted over 3,000 studies involving over 5,000 people. Their efforts led to the discovery of adaptogens, a name coined by Dr. Nicolai Lazarev.
An adaptogenic herb gives you more of what you need and less of what you don't need. Thus, an adaptogenic herb for blood pressure might either increase or decrease your blood pressure, depending on whether yours is too high or too low.
How does the adaptogen called ashwagandha deal with stress? Pretty well, thank you.
Ashwagandha can end premature aging linked to chronic nervous tension, to the point that many researchers support it for clinical use as an anti-stress agent.
Studies show it's as effective as certain tranquilizers and antidepressant drugs (Ativan® and Tofranil®), provided you give it five days.
Scientists also administered ashwagandha one hour before a daily stressful procedure. All the measures of free radical damage became normal, in a dose-dependent manner.
Fights cancer as effectively
as chemotherapy
Perhaps because so many ills are associated with chronic stress, ashwagandha's benefits extend to cancer, too.
Here's just a sampling of what recent cancer studies have found…
  • Ashwagandha inhibits the growth of human breast, lung, and colon cancer cells comparably to the chemo drug doxorubicin (in lab studies). Withaferin A, a compound in ashwagandha, was more effective than doxorubicin in stopping breast and colon cancer cell growth.
  • Ashwagandha disrupts the ability of cancer cells to reproduce, which is a key to fighting cancer.
  • Lab analysis shows that ashwagandha has the ability to prevent cancer from forming the new blood vessels it needs to support its uncontrolled growth. Stopping this process (called angiogenesis) is likewise a key to fighting cancer.
  • In animal trials, ashwaghanda also inhibited induced stomach cancer. Overall tumor incidence dropped by 60% and the number of tumors (multiplicity) plummeted by 92%. The results were similar when tested with rodents and skin cancer, reducing tumor incidence by 45% and multiplicity by 71%.
  • Other studies have also confirmed ashwagandha's protective benefit against skin cancer.
  • Another experiment showed it increased life span and decreased tumor weight in experimental animals with induced lymphatic cancer.
These are exciting findings suggesting ashwagandha could give patients a huge boost in battling cancer.
Ashwagandha as a valuable adjunct for chemo
Ashwagandha can also be an important adjunct to help with neutropenia caused by chemotherapy. Neutropenia is a sharp decrease in infection-fighting neutrophils (white blood cells). The condition can make a chemo patient into a sitting duck for infections, and, in fact, many cancer patients die of such infections.
Chemotherapy typically destroys the valuable immune system factors interferon-gamma and interleukin-2. An animal study showed that those receiving ashwagandha were able to keep these immune system parameters at normal levels while undergoing chemotherapy.
How about protection from Alzheimer's?
Ashwagandha does that, too!
Not only is ashwagandha a proven stress reducer and cancer fighter, it also protects your brain.
One impressive animal study in India showed that stressed rats had an 85% rate of cell degeneration in their brains – similar to what leads to long-term cognitive problems in humans.
When treated with ashwagandha and exposed to stress, their brain degeneration was stopped almost entirely.
Then there's this human trial…
Could this herb help address
the stress factors in your life?
The most damning effects of stress are linked to the stress hormone cortisol. With ashwagandha, study participants experienced these eye-popping results:
  • Reduction in cortisol levels as much as 26%
  • Decline in blood sugar levels
  • Improved lipid profile
  • Increased energy
  • Reduced fatigue
  • Better sleep
  • An enhanced sense of well-being
Could this herb help address many of the health and psychological issues of today's frenzied society?
A Japanese model of damaged nerve cells and impaired nerve-signaling pathways showed that ashwagandha helped reconstruct synapses, the junctions where nerve cells talk to each other. Synapses affect the speed of aging, brain ability and your ability to regenerate nerve tissue.
Ashwagandha also helps reconstruct and stimulate the growth of the "limbs" or "branches" of nerve cells called dendrites that play a role in cell-to-cell communication. Dendrites transmit the signals received from other nerve cells via synapses.
By repairing and reconstructing both synapses and dendrites, ashwaghanda helps heal compromised brain tissue such as that associated with dementia.
Lastly, it may help boost healthy brain cell function in addition to benefiting diseased nerve cells.
Parkinson's is another neurodegenerative disease for which conventional medicine has no cure. But studies show that ashwagandha extract reverses all the markers of Parkinson's in a dose-dependent manner.
Ashwagandha inhibits the enzyme responsible for breaking down one of the brain's key chemical messengers, a problem shared in both Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.
We've just scratched the surface
of ashwaghanda's benefits
As with many natural nutrients and herbs, ashwagandha supports a broad base of functions and therefore offers benefits well beyond the ones that get the most attention.
These are some of the side benefits you may experience:            
  • Increased memory, learning ability, and attentiveness
  • Reduced inflammation
  • Reduced cholesterol
It's even a helpful treatment for malaria, if you happen to visit the tropics and come home with this deadly parasite. Interestingly, one study showed that ashwagandha produced higher counts of critical white blood cells like T cells and Natural Killer white blood cells when it was ingested with cow's milk.
How to take ashwagandha
So, interested in adding Ashwagandha to your diet? Here's what to know…
Ashwagandha also goes by the names Indian ginseng and winter cherry. It's botanical name is Withania somnifera. It can be found as a supplement, in dried root form, as a tea, or as a plant. Some people grow it in their backyard gardens. The plant loves sandy soil and hot sun.
Wonderfully, it has few side effects compared to Big Pharma's drugs, but pregnant and nursing women should not take it.
Some people report that it makes them sleepless, and others say it makes them sleep better. I'm in the first category: It disturbs my sleep. That's an effect that many powerful antioxidants have on me. Few people have this problem. You may have to experiment to find out how your body responds.
Recommended dosage is generally 300-500 mg once or twice per day.
Beat stress or lose your health – your choice!
Chronic stress extorts a heavy toll from your body – and your mind. It plays a major role in cancer, heart disease and memory loss. Don't take it lightly or resign yourself to just putting up with it.
It's worth adding this ancient herb to your daily regimen to combat daily stressors and protect yourself. You have much to gain and little to lose. If you try it, find us on Facebook and let us know how you like it.


   
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Editor in Chief: Lee Euler Contributing Editors: Mindy Tyson McHorse, Carol Parks, Roz Roscoe Webmaster: Holly Cornish Information Technology Advisor: Michelle Mato   Fulfillment & Customer Service: Joe Ackerson and Cami Lemr

Health Disclaimer: The information provided above is not intended as personal medical advice or instructions. You should not take any action affecting your health without consulting a qualified health professional. The authors and publishers of the information above are not doctors or health-caregivers. The authors and publishers believe the information to be accurate but its accuracy cannot be guaranteed. There is some risk associated with ANY cancer treatment, and the reader should not act on the information above unless he or she is willing to assume the full risk.

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