Muira Puama
Ptychopetalum olacoides
4:1 extract - 27mg per serving is equivalent to 108mg unrefined herb
This
is a small tree with fragrant white flowers. The bark and roots are used to
make a tea for countering sexual debility, easing joint and muscle pain, relieving
digestive complaints, and for baldness.
It has been used by Amazonia?s indigenous people as far back as they know,
and in South American cities, and in France and England, since the 1920?s. The
British Herbal Pharmacopoeia still lists it for dysentery. Somewhere along the
way, Muira Puama was discovered to be effective against hook-worms - possibly
an effect of its essential oils, or possibly an effect of its unique phytonutrients,
or perhaps in combination. This makes it an excellent addition to Iridesca?s
anti-parasite brigade.
In recent studies by the French, Muira Puama was found to be 51% to 62%
effective in cases of erectile dysfunction. Other French studies focused on its
positive psychological benefits as related to sexual functioning in men who had
lost interest in sex. It is a valued libido enhancer.
In Europe and South America, Muira Puama is used to alleviate frigidity,
infertility, menstrual disturbances, menstrual cramps and PMS. In South America
it is used to fortify the stomach, intestines and nerves, and to ease
exhaustion, stress and traumas. It is also regarded as a preventative of
baldness.
Proper processing along with adequate heat and vegetable alcohol extraction
is essential for this herb to achieve optimum bioactivity in the body.
There appears to be a pronounced synergy when Muira Puama is used with
Catuaba. These two in combination are favorites of South American athletes.
Saponins are also found in abundance (not by accident) in many other Iridesca
ingredients. Saponins leverage the assimilation and utilization of other
phytonutrients, thus enhancing their effective potency.
Quoted from Raintree Nutrition
Muira puama, also called "potency wood," is a small tree that grows to 5 m
high and is native to the Brazilian Amazon and other parts of the Amazon
rainforest. The small, white flowers have a pungent fragrance similar to
jasmine's. The Ptychopetalum genus is a small one - only two species of small
trees grow in tropical South America and five in tropical Africa. The two South
American varieties, P. olacoides (found in Brazil, French Guiana, Guyana, and
Suriname) and P. uncinatum (found only in Brazil), are used interchangeably in
South American herbal medicine systems. The olacoides variety is usually
preferred, as it has a higher content of lupeol (one of the plant's active
phytochemicals). A completely different species of Brazilian tree, Liriosma
ovata, also goes by the common name of muira puama (and is often sold in
commerce as such); however, it is a completely different tree with a different
phytochemical makeup.
Historically, all parts of muira puama have been used medicinally, but the
bark and roots are the most-utilized parts of the plant. It has long been used
in the Amazon by indigenous peoples for a number of purposes. Native peoples
along the Brazilian Amazon's Rio Negro river use the stems and roots from young
plants as a tonic to treat neuromuscular problems; a root decoction is used in
baths and massages for treating paralysis and beri-beri; and a root-and-bark tea
is taken to treat sexual debility, rheumatism, grippe, and cardiac and
gastrointestinal weakness. It's also valued there as a preventive for baldness.
In Brazilian herbal medicine, muira puama still is a highly-regarded sexual
stimulant with a reputation as a powerful aphrodisiac. It has been in the
Brazilian Pharmacopoeia since the 1950s. It is used as a neuromuscular tonic for
weakness and paralysis, dyspepsia, menstrual disturbances, chronic rheumatism
(applied topically), sexual impotency, grippe, and central nervous system
disorders.
Muira puama is employed around the world today in herbal medicine. Early
European explorers noted the indigenous uses and the aphrodisiac qualities of
muira puama and brought it back to Europe, where it has become part of herbal
medicine in England. It is still listed in the British Herbal Pharmacopoeia (a
noted herbal medicine source from the British Herbal Medicine Association); it
is recommended there for the treatment of dysentery and impotence. It is also
used in Europe to treat impotence, infertility, nerve pain, menstrual
disturbances, and dysentery. In Germany, muira puama is employed as a central
nervous system tonic, for hookworms, menstrual disturbances, and rheumatism.
Muira puama has been gaining in popularity in the United States, where
herbalists and health care practitioners are using it for impotence, depression,
menstrual cramps and PMS, nerve pain, and central nervous system disorders.
Scientists began searching for the source of muira puama's efficacy in the
1920s. Early researchers discovered that the root and bark were rich in fatty
acids and fatty acid esters (the main one being behenic acid), essential oils
(including beta-caryophyllene and alpha-humulene), plant sterols, triterpenes
(including lupeol), and a new alkaloid-which they named muirapuamine. Scientists
resumed researching the plant's constituents and pharmacological properties in
the late 1960s and continued into the late 1980s. These studies indicated that
the active constituents also included free long-chain fatty acids,
sesquiterpenes, monoterpenes, and novel alkaloids.
The main plant chemicals found in muira puama include: alpha-copaene, alpha-elemene,
alpha-guaiene, alpha-humulene, alpha-muurolene, alpha-pinene, alpha-resinic
acid, alpha-terpinene, arachidic acid, allo-aromadendren, behenic acid, beta-bisabolene,
beta-caryophyllene, beta-pinene, beta-resinic acid, beta-sitosterol, beta-transfarnesene,
borneol, campesterols, camphene, camphor, car-3-ene, caryophyllene, cerotic
acid, chromium, coumarin, cubebene, delta-cadinene, dotriacontanoic acid,
elixene, ergosterols, eugenol, essential oils, gamma-muurolene, hentriacontanoic
acid, heptacosanoic acid, lignoceric acid, limonene, linalool, lupeol, melissic
acid, montanic acid, muirapuamine, myrcene, nonacosanoic acid, para-cymene,
pentacosanoic acid, phlobaphene, stigmasterols, trichosanic acid, and uncosanic
acid.
The benefits of treating impotence with muira puama have been studied in two
human trials in France, which reported that muira puama was effective in
improving libido and treating erectile dysfunction. In one French study among
262 male patients who experienced lack of sexual desire and the inability to
attain or maintain an erection, 62% of the patients with loss of libido reported
that the extract of muira puama "had a dynamic effect," and 51% of patients with
erectile dysfunction felt that muira puama was beneficial. The second study
evaluated positive psychological benefits of muira puama in 100 men with male
sexual weakness. The therapeutic dosage was 1.5 g of a muira puama extract
daily. In their final report, researchers indicated muira puama could "enhance
libido [in 85% of test group], increase the frequency of intercourse [in 100%]
and improve the ability to maintain an erection [in 90%]."
In other recent clinical research, muira puama extracts have been reported to
have adaptogenic, antifatigue, antistress, and beneficial effects on the central
nervous system. A specially-prepared extract from the root of muira puama has
been patented for its ability to "relieve physical and mental fatigue" and for
"ameliorating a weakened constitution." Researchers in Brazil documented a
definite central nervous system effect of the bark in studies with mice. The
bark of muira puama also has demonstrated a mild, short-lived, hypotensive
effect. The root was found to inhibit stress-induced ulcers, while the leaf
demonstrated an analgesic effect. Another U.S. patent has been filed on muira
puama, citing that it can "reduce body fat percentage, increase lean muscle mass
and lower cholesterol" in humans and animals with long-term use (and with no
toxicity noted). The newest research confirms muira puama's traditional use for
memory and nervous disorders. Brazilian researchers reported in 2003 that an
alcohol extract of muira puama facilitated memory retrieval in both young and
aged mice and noted it may be beneficial for Alzheimer's patients. Their next
study published in 2004 reported that an alcohol extract of muira puama
protected and increased the viability of brain cells in mice (partly through an
antioxidant effect) which may be beneficial for stroke victims. Toxicity studies
with mice published in 1983 indicates no toxic effects.
The above text has been quoted from the book, Herbal
Secrets of the Rainforest
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