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Please note the graviola we supply is in a 300mg vegetable capsule, not a 100mg capsule like other distributors and with only 60 capsules in a pot!. Please check before you buy and remember shipping is included in our prices. No surprises at the checkout, the prices you see above is the price you pay.
Graviola is a small, upright evergreen
tree, 5–6 m high, with large, glossy, dark green leaves. It produces
a large, heart-shaped, edible fruit that is 15–20 cm in diameter, is
yellow-green in color, and has white flesh inside. Graviola is
indigenous to most of the warmest tropical areas in South and North
America, including the Amazon. The fruit is sold in local markets in
the tropics, where it is called guanábana in Spanish-speaking
countries and graviola in Brazil. The fruit pulp is excellent
for making drinks and sherbets and, though slightly sour-acid, can
be eaten out of hand.
Family: Annonaceae
Genus: Annona
Species: muricata
Synonyms: Annona macrocarpa, A.
bonplandiana, A. cearensis, Guanabanus muricatus
Common names: Graviola, soursop, Brazilian paw
paw, guanábana, guanábano, guanavana, guanaba, corossol épineux,
huanaba, toge-banreisi, durian benggala, nangka blanda, cachiman
épineux Part Used: Leaves, fruit, seeds, bark,
roots
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GRAVIOLA PLANT SUMMARY
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Main Actions (in order): anticancerous,
antitumorous, antimicrobial, antiparasitic, hypotensive
(lowers blood pressure)
Main Uses:
- for cancer (all types)
- as a broad-spectrum internal and external antimicrobial
to treat bacterial and fungal infections
- for internal parasites and worms
- for high blood pressure
- for depression, stress, and nervous disorders
Properties/Actions Documented
by Research: antibacterial, anticancerous,
anticonvulsant, antidepressant, antifungal, antimalarial,
antimutagenic (cellular protector), antiparasitic,
antispasmodic, antitumorous, cardiodepressant, emetic (causes
vomiting), hypotensive (lowers blood pressure), insecticidal,
sedative, uterine stimulant, vasodilator
Other Properties/Actions
Documented by Traditional Use: antiviral, cardiotonic
(tones, balances, strengthens the heart), decongestant,
digestive stimulant, febrifuge (reduces fever), nervine
(balances/calms nerves), pediculicide (kills lice), vermifuge
(expels worms)
Cautions: It has
cardiodepressant, vasodilator, and hypotensive (lowers blood
pressure) actions. Large dosages can cause nausea and
vomiting. Avoid combining with ATP-enhancers like CoQ10.
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Tribal & Herbal Medicine
Uses
All parts of the graviola
tree are used in natural medicine in the tropics, including the
bark, leaves, roots, fruit, and fruit seeds. Different properties
and uses are attributed to the different parts of the tree.
Generally, the fruit and fruit juice are taken for worms and
parasites, to cool fevers, to increase mother's milk after
childbirth, and as an astringent for diarrhea and dysentery. The
crushed seeds are used against internal and external parasites, head
lice, and worms. The bark, leaves, and roots are considered
sedative, antispasmodic, hypotensive, and nervine, and a tea is made
for various disorders toward those effects.
Graviola has a long, rich
history of use in herbal medicine as well as a lengthy recorded
indigenous use. In the Peruvian Andes, a leaf tea is used for
catarrh (inflammation of mucous membranes) and the crushed seed is
used to kill parasites. In the Peruvian Amazon the bark, roots, and
leaves are used for diabetes and as a sedative and antispasmodic.
Indigenous tribes in Guyana use a leaf and/or bark tea as a sedative
and heart tonic. In the Brazilian Amazon a leaf tea is used for
liver problems, and the oil of the leaves and unripe fruit is mixed
with olive oil and used externally for neuralgia, rheumatism, and
arthritis pain. In Jamaica, Haiti, and the West Indies the fruit
and/or fruit juice is used for fevers, parasites and diarrhea; the
bark or leaf is used as an antispasmodic, sedative, and nervine for
heart conditions, coughs, flu, difficult childbirth, asthma,
hypertension, and parasites.
Plant Chemicals
Many active compounds and
chemicals have been found in graviola, as scientists have been
studying its properties since the 1940s. Most of the research on
graviola focuses on a novel set of chemicals called Annonaceous
acetogenins. Graviola produces these natural compounds in its
leaf and stem, bark, and fruit seeds. Three separate research groups
have confirmed that these chemicals have significant antitumorous
properties and selective toxicity against various types of cancer
cells (without harming healthy cells) publishing eight clinical
studies on their findings. Many of the acetogenins have demonstrated
selective toxicity to tumor cells at very low dosages—as little as 1
part per million. Four studies were published in 1998 which further
specify the chemicals and acetogenins in graviola which are
demonstrating the strongest anticancerous, antitumorous, and
antiviral properties. In a 1997 clinical study, novel alkaloids
found in graviola fruit exhibited antidepressive effects in
animals.
Annonaceous acetogenins
are only found in the Annonaceae family (to which graviola belongs).
These chemicals in general have been documented with antitumorous,
antiparasitic, insecticidal, and antimicrobial activities. Mode of
action studies in three separate laboratories have recently
determined that these acetogenins are superb inhibitors of enzyme
processes that are only found in the membranes of cancerous tumor
cells. This is why they are toxic to cancer cells but have no
toxicity to healthy cells. Purdue University, in West Lafayette,
Indiana, has conducted a great deal of the research on the
acetogenins, much of which, has been funded by The National Cancer
Institute and/or the National Institute of Health (NIH). Thus far,
Purdue University and/or its staff have filed at least nine U.S.
and/or international patents on their work around the antitumorous
and insecticidal properties and uses of these
acetogenins.
In 1997, Purdue
University published information with promising news that several of
the Annonaceous acetogenins were " . . . not only are effective in
killing tumors that have proven resistant to anti-cancer agents, but
also seem to have a special affinity for such resistant cells." In
several interviews after this information was publicized, the head
pharmacologist in Purdue's research explained how this worked. As he
explains it, cancer cells that survive chemotherapy can develop
resistance to the agent originally used as well as to other, even
unrelated, drugs. This phenomenon is called multi-drug resistance
(MDR). One of the main ways that cancer cells develop
resistance to chemotherapy drugs is by creating an intercellular
pump which is capable of pushing anti cancer agents out of the cell
before they can kill it. On average, only about two percent of the
cancer cells in any given person might develop this pump—but they
are the two percent that can eventually grow and expand to create
multi-drug-resistant tumors. Some of the latest research on
acetogenins reported that they were capable of shutting down these
intercellular pumps, thereby killing multi-drug-resistant tumors.
Purdue researchers reported that the acetogenins preferentially
killed multi-drug-resistant cancer cells by blocking the transfer of
ATP—the chief source of cellular energy—into them. A tumor cell
needs energy to grow and reproduce, and a great deal more to run its
pump and expel attacking agents. By inhibiting energy to the cell ,
it can no longer run its pump. When acetogenins block ATP to the
tumor cell over time, the cell no longer has enough energy to
operate sustaining processes—and it dies. Normal cells seldom
develop such a pump; therefore, they don't require large amounts of
energy to run a pump and, generally, are not adversely affected by
ATP inhibitors. Purdue researchers reported that 14 different
acetogenins tested thus far demonstrate potent ATP-blocking
properties (including several found only in graviola). They also
reported that 13 of these 14 acetogenins tested were more potent
against MDR breast cancer cells than all three of the standard drugs
(adriamycin, vincristine, and vinblastine) they used as
controls.
The Annonaceous
acetogenins discovered in graviola thus far include: annocatalin,
annohexocin, annomonicin, annomontacin, annomuricatin A & B,
annomuricin A thru E, annomutacin, annonacin, annonacinone,
annopentocin A thru C, cis-annonacin, cis-corossolone, cohibin A
thru D, corepoxylone, coronin, corossolin, corossolone, donhexocin,
epomuricenin A & B, gigantetrocin, gigantetrocin A & B,
gigantetrocinone, gigantetronenin, goniothalamicin, iso-annonacin,
javoricin, montanacin, montecristin, muracin A thru G,
muricapentocin, muricatalicin, muricatalin, muri-catenol,
muricatetrocin A & B muricatin D, muricatocin A thru C muricin
H, muricin I, muricoreacin, murihexocin 3, murihexocin A thru C,
murihexol, murisolin, robustocin, rolliniastatin 1 & 2,
saba-delin, solamin, uvariamicin I & IV, xylomaticin
Biological Activites and Clinical
Research
In an 1976 plant
screening program by the National Cancer Institute, graviola leaves
and stem showed active toxicity against cancer cells and researchers
have been following up on these findings since. Thus far, specific
acetogenins in graviola and/or extracts of graviola have been
reported to be selectively toxic in vitro to these types of
tumor cells: lung carcinoma cell lines; human breast solid tumor
lines; prostate adenocarcinoma; pancreatic carcinoma cell lines;
colon adenocarcinoma cell lines; liver cancer cell lines; human
lymphoma cell lines; and multi-drug resistant human breast
adenocarcinoma. Researchers in Taiwan reported in 2003 that the main
graviola acetogenin, annonacin, was highly toxic to ovarian,
cervical, breast, bladder and skin cancer cell lines at very low
dosages saying; “. . . annonacin is a promising anti-cancer agent
and worthy of further animal studies and, we would hope, clinical
trials.”
An
interesting in vivo study was published in March of 2002 by
researchers in Japan, who were studying various acetogenins found in
several species of plants. They inoculated mice with lung cancer
cells. One third received nothing (the control group), one third
received the chemotherapy drug adriamycin, and one third received
the main graviola acetogenin, annonacin (at a dosage of 10 mg/kg).
At the end of two weeks, five of the six in the untreated control
group were still alive and lung tumor sizes were then measured. The
adriamycin group showed a 54.6% reduction of tumor mass over the
control group—but 50% of the animals had died from toxicity (three
of six). The mice receiving annonacin were all still alive, and the
tumors were inhibited by 57.9%—slightly better than adriamycin—and
without toxicity. This led the researchers to summarize; “This
suggested that annonacin was less toxic in mice. On considering the
antitumor activity and toxicity, annonacin might be used as a lead
to develop a potential anticancer agent.”
Current Practical
Uses
Cancer research is
ongoing on these important Annona plants and plant chemicals,
as several pharmaceutical companies and universities continue to
research, test, patent, and attempt to synthesize these chemicals
into new chemotherapeutic drugs. In fact, graviola seems to be
following the same path as another well known cancer drug – Taxol.
From the time researchers first discovered an antitumorous effect in
the bark of the pacific yew tree and a novel chemical called taxol
was discovered in its bark - it took thirty years of research by
numerous pharmaceutical companies, universities, and government
agencies before the first FDA-approved Taxol drug was sold to a
cancer patient (which was based on the natural taxol chemical they
found in the tree bark). With graviola, it has taken researchers
almost 10 years to successfully synthesize (chemically reproduce)
the main antitumorous chemical, annonacin. These acetogenin
chemicals have a unique waxy center and other unique molecular
energy properties which thwarted earlier attempts, and at least one
major pharmaceutical company gave up in the process (despite knowing
how active the natural chemical was against tumors). Now that
scientists have the ability to recreate this chemical and several
other active acetogenins in the laboratory, the next step is to
change the chemical just enough (without losing any of the
antitumorous actions in the process) to become a novel chemical
which can be patented and turned into a new patented cancer drug.
(Naturally-occurring plant chemicals cannot be patented.) Thus far,
scientists seem to be thwarted again—every time they change the
chemical enough to be patentable, they lose much of the antitumorous
actions. Like the development of taxol, it may well take government
agenies like the National Cancer Institute and the National
Institute of Health to step forward and launch full-scale human
cancer research on the synthesized unpatentable natural plant
chemical (which will allow any pharmaceutical company to develop a
cancer drug utilizing the research as happened with taxol) to be
able to make this promising therapy available to cancer patients in
a timely fashion.
In the meantime, many
cancer patients and health practitioners are not waiting… they are
adding the natural leaf and stem of graviola (with over 40
documented naturally-occurring acetogenins including annonacin) as a
complementary therapy to their cancer protocols. After all, graviola
has a long history of safe use as a herbal remedy for other
conditions for many years, and research indicates that the
antitumorous acetogenins are selectively toxic to just cancer cells
and not healthy cells—and in miniscule amounts. While research
confirms that these antitumorous acetogenins also occur in high
amounts in the fruit seeds and roots of graviola, different alkaloid
chemicals in the seeds and roots have shown some preliminary in
vitro neurotoxic effects. Researchers have suggested that these
alkaloids might be linked to atypical Parkinson’s disease in
countries where the seeds are employed as a common herbal parasite
remedy. Therefore, using the seeds and root of graviola is not
recommended at this time.
The therapuetic dosage of
graviola leaf, (which offers just as high of an amount of
acetogenins as the root and almost as much as the seed) is reported
to be 2-3 grams taken 3 or 4 times daily. Graviola products
(capsules and tinctures) are becoming more widely available in the
U.S. market, and now offered under several different manufacturer’s
labels in health food stores. As one of graviola’s mechanisms of
action is to deplete ATP energy to cancer cells, combining it with
other supplements and natural products which increase or enhance
cellular ATP may reduce the effect of graviola. The main supplement
which increases ATP is a common antioxidant called Coenzyme Q10 and
for this reason, it should be avoided when taking
graviola.
Graviola is certainly a
promising natural remedy and one that again emphasizes the
importance of preserving our remaining rainforest ecosystems.
Perhaps—if enough people believe that the possible cure for cancer
truly is locked away in a rainforest plant—we will take the steps
needed to protect our remaining rainforests from destruction. One
researcher studying graviola summarized this idea eloquently: “At
the time of preparation of this current review, over 350 Annonaceous
acetogenins have been isolated from 37 species. Our preliminary
efforts show that about 50%, of over 80 Annonaceous species
screened, are significantly bioactive and are worthy of
fractionation; thus, this class of compounds can be expected to
continue to grow at an exponential rate in the future, provided that
financial support for such research efforts can be found. With the
demise of the world’s tropical rain forests, such work is compelling
before the great chemical diversity, contained within these
endangered species, is lost."
Traditional
Preparation: The therapeutic dosage is reported to be 2 g
three times daily in capsules or tablets. A standard infusion (one
cup 3 times daily) or a 4:1 standard tincture (2–4 ml three times
daily) can be substituted if desired.
Contraindications:
- Graviola has demonstrated uterine stimulant activity in an
animal study (rats) and should therefore not be used during
pregnancy.
- Graviola has demonstrated hypotensive, vasodilator, and
cardiodepressant activities in animal studies and is
contraindicated for people with low blood pressure. People taking
antihypertensive drugs should check with their doctors before
taking graviola and monitor their blood pressure accordingly (as
medications may need adjusting).
- Graviola has demonstrated significant in vitro
antimicrobial properties. Chronic, long-term use of this plant may
lead to die-off of friendly bacteria in the digestive tract due to
its antimicrobial properties. Supplementing the diet with
probiotics and digestive enzymes is advisable if this plant is
used for longer than 30 days.
- Graviola has demonstrated emetic properties in one animal
study with pigs. Large single dosages may cause nausea or
vomiting. Reduce the usage accordingly if this occurs.
- One study with rats given a stem-bark extract intragastrically
(at 100 mg/kg) reported an increase in dopamine, norepinephrine,
and monomine oxidase activity, as well as a inhibition of
serotonin release in stress-induced rats.
- Alcohol extracts of graviola leaf showed no toxicity or side
effects in mice at 100 mg/kg; however, at a dosage of 300 mg/kg, a
reduction in explorative behavior and mild abdominal constrictions
was observed. If sedation or sleepiness occurs, reduce the amount
used.
Drug
Interactions: None have been reported; however, graviola
may potentiate antihypertensive and cardiac depressant drugs. It may
potentiate antidepressant drugs and interfere with MAO-inhibitor
drugs. See contraindications above.
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