Guest guest Posted June 2, 2006 Report Share Posted June 2, 2006 Hi All, & Andrea Beth, MORINGA (Munga Plant/Tree, Lamu in Chinese http://tinyurl.com/ko9l4 and http://www.yexian.com.cn/list.asp?t=2 ) is NOT the same herb as MORINDA Root (Bajitian http://tinyurl.com/gclys ]. MORINGA is used as the leaf, flower, stem, bark (but NOT root-bark), root- flesh, juice, pod and seed-oil. See below. http://tinyurl.com/ko9l4 says (my edited version): MEDICINAL USES OF MORINGA OLEIFERA (Lamu): MORINGA OLEIFERA is used medically by local herbalists as follows: (1) LEAVES: In India LEAF juice is believed to have a stabilizing effect on blood pressure & treats anxiety; In Senegal LEAF juice infusion is believed to control glucose level in diabetes; LEAVES are used as a remedy for diarrhoea, dysentery & colitis; mix w honey & follow with a drink of coconut milk bid/tid; LEAF juice +/- carrot juice is used to increase urine flow; Eating LEAVES is recommended in gonorrhoea bc of its diuretic effect; LEAF juice is used as a skin antiseptic; In India, LEAVES are used to treat fevers, bronchitis, eye & ear infections; In Philippines, eating LEAVES is believed to increase a milk flow & prescribed for anaemia; (2) FLOWERS are considered anthelmintic; used as a tonic, diuretic, & abortifacient; cure inflammation, muscle diseases, tumours & splenomegaly; In India, FLOWER juice is said to alleviate sore throat & catarrh; (3) PODS are believed to be anthelmintic; also used in liver & spleen affections, & in treating joints pains; (4) ROOT: used in India as a carminative (to expel alimentary gas), & for intestinal pains or spasms & as a laxative; NB: Scrape off ROOT-BARK bc it has two alkaloids & toxic moringinine; pound interior ROOT flesh & mix w salt & vinegar; it can be dangerous to consume ROOT too often as ROOT flesh contains alkaloid spirochin that can paralyse nerve; (5) SEEDS: used against fevers; used for abdominal tumours; (6) SEED OIL: In India, seed oil applied externally to relieve pain & swelling in case of gout or rheumatism, & skin diseases; used to treat hysteria & Scury; Applied to treat prostrate & bladder troubles; Considered to be a tonic & a purgative; (G) TRADITIONAL REMEDIES SUPPORTED BY STUDIES: Recent laboratory studies have shown: * LEAF EXTRACT is effective in lowering blood sugar levels within 3 hours; * An extract taken from dried LEAVES showed an impressive ability to heal ulcers in Lab animals; * An extract of dried powdered LEAVES had a very potent depressive effect on CNS, resulting in significant muscle relaxation, decreased body temperature & increased sleep time among laboratory mice; (H) MORINGA'S HEALTHCARE PROPERTIES: (1) Abdominal discomfort: Grind together MORINGA ROOT & Cocos nucifera to a paste; take this orally bid until cured; (2) Boils: Grind BARK to a paste & smear on boils bid for 5d; (3) Cold: make a paste from 100g BARK; take this orally once during cold; (4) Conjunctivitis: Extract LEAF juice & put 2-3 drops inside eye bid for 2d, (or) Extract BARK juice & put 2-3 drops inside eye bid until cured, (or) extract STEM juice & add a few drops of honey; put 2-3 drops inside eye bid until cured; (5) Hypertension: Make a cone in LEAVES of Shorea robusta. Put same amount of MORINGA LEAVES in this cone; sear or bind this cone, then burn this cone in fire; take these half burnt LEAVES once/d until cured, (or) Grind 50g MORINGA LEAVES & one onion together, to a paste; fry paste w mustard oil; take fried paste orally once/d for 7d, (or) Fry MORINGA LEAVES w mustard oil; take fried LEAVES orally once/d until cured; (6) Hysteria: Grind together MORINGA ROOT + LEAVES to a paste; smear this paste on whole body; take 5g of this paste orally to get rid of hysteria; (7) Relapsing fever: Grind MORINGA BARK to a paste & add same amount of molasses; take this orally once/d until cured (patient is not supposed to see face of doctor or person who feeds medicine!!); (8) Rheumatism: Grind MORINGA BARK to a paste & massage on joints once/d for 7d; (9) Scorpion-bite: Make a paste from of MORINGA BARK & apply on affected area for pain relief; (10) Sprain: Grind MORINGA BARK to a paste & apply to affected area; then bandage it w a cloth, (or) Extract juice from MORINGA LEAVES & warm it in a spoon; massage warm juice on affected area tid for 3d; (11) Toothache: Boil MORINGA BARK w water; filter; gargle w lukewarm filtrate bid until cured. http://www.yexian.com.cn/list.asp?t=2 says: (Lamu Moringa ( " Spicy Wood " ) is called " Miracle Tree " , " Mother´s Friend " & " Tree Milk " ). Each 100g Moringa leaf contains 6.28g crude protein (2 times that of milk), vitamin C 251.3mg (7 times that of fresh orange & 4 times that of kiwi fruit), 7.00mg beta-carotene (1.7 times that of carrot - 4.13mg/100g), 2.43mg hard (same iron content as spinach), 168.1mg Ca (1.62 times that of milk) & 342mg K (1.4 times that of banana). US UC botanist Ann Hirsch: " Moringa is rich in protein, amino acid, polysaccharide, vitamin and many kinds of trace elements; it is effective to remove in vivo trash, supplement energy, promote human body health, eliminate weary and improve sleep. " In city dwellers, it can prevent " Rich Man's Disease - illness requiring long rest and good food " , restore body and mind, supplement nutrition against daily necessities. Moringa Leaf Powder inclusion in baby-food is useful in developing countries as mother's first choice health food for children (in USA, 120g Moringa leaf powder sells for 29.5 US$). Also useful as middle- aged & geriatric supplement for vitamin A, C, amino acids, Ca, Fe, K, many kinds of trace elements, etc. Moreover its soup color clear, sweet, tasty & refreshing and its aroma is unique. May be included in health food supplements. Dose: 3-4g/d, as a drink after soaking; it swells after simmering in boiling water for 2-3 minutes; then drink the mixture & chew it as food, especially its more tender leaves & buds; it facilitates bowel movement (laxative); it makes good soup when boiled w egg, lean meat, bone-heads (ends of bone/cartilage), but also makes good seasoning for noodles; use 5g/time; it is a healthy food supplement for diabetics (use 10g/d). See also http://www.botanical.com/site/column_poudhia/articles/__11909.html Best regards, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 3, 2006 Report Share Posted June 3, 2006 Interesting. I just assumed it was Morinda. Never heard of Moringa before. - Bill ....................................... Bill Schoenbart PO Box 8099 Santa Cruz, CA 95061 831-335-3165 plantmed >>>>>>>>>>>>>Hi All, & Andrea Beth, MORINGA (Munga Plant/Tree, Lamu in Chinese http://tinyurl.com/ko9l4 and http://www.yexian.com.cn/list.asp?t=2 ) is NOT the same herb as MORINDA Root (Bajitian http://tinyurl.com/gclys ]. MORINGA is used as the leaf, flower, stem, bark (but NOT root-bark), root- flesh, juice, pod and seed-oil. See below. >>>> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 3, 2006 Report Share Posted June 3, 2006 I eat them as vegetables, both leaves and pods. It has cooling properties. amy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 3, 2006 Report Share Posted June 3, 2006 I live near Orlando Florida. I have a small plant. It gives me enough for food. But you can buy them at Oriental grocery store. Ask for " malungay " if it's Philipines grocery store. It's at the frozen section. I prefer the Philippine variety because of the rich soil condition in that country. It is good for yin vacuity conditions. It has healed fibromyalgia-like pain. (this I heard) I suspect it can boost the immune system. It is bland, but has a mild distinct taste. Use it as you would any leafy greens.I use on bean soup. Where do you live? Take care. amy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 3, 2006 Report Share Posted June 3, 2006 Thanks for all the info, Roger. Is anyone using moringa, and if so, in what forms, and for what kinds of health issues? Also, what supplier are you using? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 3, 2006 Report Share Posted June 3, 2006 Thanks, Amy. Where do you live, and where/how do you get them? Are they tasty? --- Amyc144 wrote: > I eat them as vegetables, both leaves and pods. > It has cooling properties. > amy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 6, 2006 Report Share Posted June 6, 2006 Hi Amy, I live in the high desert, near Sedona, Arizona. A friend suggested I try to grow it here, but I read that it grows in the tropics and sub-tropics. Besides, I try my best to protect native species by not introducing non-natives. Blessings, Andrea Beth --- Amyc144 wrote: > I live near Orlando Florida. > I have a small plant. It gives me enough for food. > But you can buy them at Oriental grocery store. > Ask for " malungay " if it's Philipines grocery store. It's at the frozen > section. > I prefer the Philippine variety because of the rich soil condition in that > country. > > It is good for yin vacuity conditions. It has healed fibromyalgia-like pain. > (this I heard) > I suspect it can boost the immune system. > > It is bland, but has a mild distinct taste. Use it as you would any leafy > greens.I use on bean soup. > > Where do you live? > Take care. > > > amy > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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