Tayuya
Cayaponia ficifolia
70mg per serving
Despite a staggeringly bitter taste, Tayuya has found wide use by indigenous
South Americans, Africans and Indonesians all the way back into the deep fog of
prehistory.
In 1991, many of Tayuya?s useful properties were scientifically validated
in a study entitled Superoxide Scavenging Properties of Flavonoids in a Non-enzymic
System. There were shown to be phytonutnients (Saponins and others), which
are unique and potent antioxidants.
Quoted from Raintree Nutrition
In related activity, Tayuya is being used by athletes to help remove
lactic acid accumulations, greatly reducing the swelling and pain of over -
exercised muscles. As far as I am personally concerned, being a 45 - year - old
alpine snow skier, understanding the significance of this benefit, makes this
the one most exciting feature mentioned in this newsletter.
Japanese researchers are investigating Tayuya?s ?significant inhibitory
effects on Epstein-Barr virus (related to chronic fatigue syndrome).? Others
are employing it to relieve emotional exhaustion and depression, while yet
others are focusing on its ability to ease excess stomach acid and reduce the
symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome.
It is used by Amazonia?s indigenous people in cases of snake bite, and now,
logically, by city dwellers as a general blood purifier. One of Tayuya?s favored anti-inflammatory uses is to relieve rheumatism. Thyroid hormones are essential for turning couch-warming flab into
productive energy and activity.
Tayuya is a woody vine found in the Amazon rainforest (predominantly in
Brazil and Peru) as well as in Bolivia. This important Amazon plant belongs to
the Cucurbitaceae (gourd) family, which comprises over 100 genera and over 700
species?most of which are characterized by their long, tuberous roots. It is
this root that is employed medicinally. Harvesting of it can only be performed
during rainy season, when the ground is soft and wet; during dry season, the
ground is too hard to extricate the root (which can extend to three feet long)
from the dry clay soils in the Amazon. About 50 species of Cayaponia occur in
the warmer parts of the Americas, West Africa, Madagascar and Indonesia. In
Brazil, Cayaponia tayuya is known as taiui?; in Peru, it is called tayuya.
Tribal & Herbal Medicine Uses
South American Indians have been using tayuya since prehistoric times, and the
plant?s value is well known. It has been used as a tonic and blood cleanser
traditionally (and, usually, with a bit of honey or stevia added to tone down
the strong, bitter taste). In the Amazon rainforest, Indians have used the root
of tayuya for snakebite and rheumatism for centuries. Indians in Colombia use
the plant for sore eyes; indigenous tribes of Peru use it for skin problems.
Tayuya has a long history in Brazilian herbal medicine; it was first recorded in
the Brazilian Pharmacopoeia as an official herbal drug in 1929. Brazilian
botanist J. Monteiro da Silva reports tayuya is used for the treatment of all
types of pain and, recommends it as an anti-syphilitic agent. Monteiro also
believes that tayuya helps to regulate metabolism. In Brazil today, tayuya is
used as an analgesic, diuretic, anti-inflammatory, tonic, blood purifier and
detoxifier; to treat diarrhea, epilepsy, metabolism disorders, backache, sciatic
pain, headaches, gout, neuralgia, constipation, anemia, cholera, dyspepsia,
stomach problems, fatigue and debility, skin disorders, arthritis and
rheumatism, syphilis, tumors (especially in the joints)?and as a general
analgesic for many conditions.
Currently, tayuya is employed in North and South America for its pain-reducing
properties and more. Natural health practitioners in the United States are using
tayuya to treat irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), dyspepsia and sluggish
digestion, neuralgia, sciatica, gout, headaches, rheumatism, and as a metabolic
regulator. Because of its reported effectiveness as a blood purifier and
detoxifier, it is also being used to treat water retention, wounds, splotchiness
on the face, eczema, herpes, severe acne, and other skin problems. It is also
being used in athletic training and recovery to help remove lactic acid
accumulation, reduce swelling, and to relieve emotional fatigue and depression.
Plant Chemicals
Tayuya is phytochemically rich in flavones, glucosides, and cucurbitacin
triterpenes. Almost every species in the huge Cucurbitaceae family is documented
to contain cucurbitacin compounds?many of which evidence biological activity
(and, oftentimes, the plant?s medicinal activity is ascribed to these
chemicals). Novel cucurbitacins have been discovered in tayuya and named
cayaponosides (24 distinct cayaponosides have been discovered thus far). These
phytochemicals have been documented to have antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and
analgesic properties and, more recently, to have anticancerous potential. The
National Cancer Center Research Institute in Tokyo, Japan reported (in 1995)
that five cayaponosides in tayuya ?... exhibited significant anti-tumor-promoter
activity in screening tests using an Epstein-Barr virus activating system.? and
that two other cayaponosides ?... also suppressed mouse skin tumor promotion
in a two-stage carcinogenesis experiment ...? Another cucurbitacin found in
tayuya, cucurbitacin R, has been studied extensively in Russia. There it is
cited as a powerful adaptogen, preventing stress-induced alterations in the
body. Other flavone phytochemicals in tayuya have been reported act as potent
scavengers of free radicals, providing an antioxidant effect as well as
protecting against damage induced by gamma-radiation.
The main plant chemicals found in tayuya include: alkaloids, cayaponosides,
cucurbitacins, isoorientin, isovitexin, orientin, resins, saponins, spinosin,
sterols, swertisin, vicenin 2, and vitexin.
Biological Activities & Clinical Research
While tayuya?s compounds have come under some scientific scrutiny (and many of
the documented uses in herbal medicine could be explained by some of the
activities of its chemicals), very little research has been performed on the
biological activity of the plant itself. Two animal studies (performed in the
early 1990s) do verify that root extracts provide analgesic and
anti-inflammatory actions. One study documented that a root infusion given
intragastrically to mice had an analgesic action. Another research group
prepared the root in a methanol extract and reported mild anti-inflammatory
actions when administered orally to mice. The latter group reported no toxic
effects in mice (oral dosages of a methanol root extract) at 2 g per kg of body
weight; however, an LD50 of 500 mg/kg was established when injected
intraperitoneally. One in vitro study by Brazilian scientists reported that
tayuya did not evidence any antimicrobial properties (against several common
bacteria, fungi, and yeast microbes they tested).
The above text has been quoted from the book, Herbal
Secrets of the Rainforest
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