Dr. Mona Harrison received her medical training at the
University of Maryland, Harvard University and the Boston University Medical
Centers. She is the former assistant dean of the Boston University School of
Medicine and former chief medical officer at the Washington, D.C. General
Hospital. She currently specializes in pediatrics and family medicine.
I have a real variety of patients who have benefitted from
Tahitian Noni juice, and it would seem to many people that something magical is
happening here because it affects so many bodily systems. But there is a
very
scientific explanation for how something so simple, just a juice, can have such
widespread effects.
Ancient manuscripts call the different glands in the body
seals, and by a seal, we mean something which opens and closes. Ancient medical
literature states that the glands actually operate according to frequency, a
term which is becoming very popular these days in nuclear and quantum physics.
The frequency of the glands was known thousands of years ago, but we have
forgotten much of this information. In ancient terms, the pineal gland was
called the sixth seal or sixth gland of the body. We have recently discovered
that it stimulates two major hormones called serotonin and melatonin. The
pineal gland controls the five other glands below it which are the thyroid
which produces thyroxine to energize our cells, the thymus which protects you
against infections and cancer, the pancreas which is involved with blood sugar
and secreting the hormone insulin, the adrenal gland which responds every time
you are under stress; and the first gland is the male and female sex organs and
their hormones. Therefore restoring the sixth gland, the pineal gland, will
have an impact on all those other glands and their functions in the body. When
the pineal gland is at its peak performance, it turns a golden colour and emits
a black juice as well as a golden oil. That black juice would be the melanin
colour of the organs and every other area of the body which has a pigment.
It happens that Noni juice mimics the secretion coming from
the pineal gland, and in fact acts as a precursor to it, building it up and
allowing it to function fully. Noni juice has a black colour, very similar to
the melanin that gives colour or pigment to each one of our organs. Every place
our body contains this pigment will be affected by Noni juice.
The back of the eye has a black area called the macula which
is pigmented with melanin. That is the area the light hits when your eye opens.
Many people have difficulty with blindness because they no longer make that
beautiful colour in that spot. We have noted the Noni juice makes the macula
generate more pigment and the cells begin to return to normal, and the
blindness reverses itself.
In the brain, that black stain is found in an area of the
mid-brain called the substantia nigra, nigra standing for black. Diseases
related to that area occur when it no longer receives pigment and begins to
deteriorate. Diseases in this category are multiple sclerosis and Parkinson's
disease. Appropriate function of the pineal gland is important in restoring
those cells, and we are seeing patients reversing some of their neurological
problems because the Noni juice is stimulating the production of chemicals
essential to those areas of the brain.
The pancreas is also affected by Noni juice: the blood sugar
and blood pressure begin to normalize. The pineal gland affects the different
organs all the way down to the first glands, the male and female sex organs,
and people are noticing for example that their prostate glands are beginning to
shrink down to normal size once they have been on the Noni juice for a short
period of time. Women who have problems with their uterus or with fibroids etc.
are noticing that the fibroids are beginning to disappear, that their
menstruation is beginning to normalize, they have less cramps and their
bleeding problems become more in balance.
DR. SCOTT GERSON, M.D.
Dr. Gerson has practiced medicine in Manhattan for the last
15 years. He is uniquely educated, having received his M.D. from Mount Sinai
Medical School in New York, and his doctorate in ayurvedic medicine in India.
He is currently teaching our new medical doctors at some of the most
prestigious medical schools in America about alternative approaches in
medicine. Several months ago, he addressed the United Nations on "the
state of herbs in the world today".
Several years ago, I was researching material for a book on
the medicinal plants of India, and became interested in a family of plants
known as Rubiaceae. Of particular interest was a plant known in Sanskrit as ach
which was attributed special properties by ancient physicians. The fruit of
this ach plant or Morinda citrafolia has a rich history in India where it has
been used for tens of centuries in the system of medicine known as ayurveda.
This holistic medical tradition was established in the north western part of
India by a people called aryans who were reputed to be a rather cosmic
civilization. Morinda citrifolia was especially esteemed by the ancient aryan
physicians because it protected the skin from becoming dry and cracked from the
sun. My investigation of the published scientific literature on Morinda
citrifolia yielded more than 100 articles pertaining to this medicinal plant. I
soon discovered that the original home of the plant was not India at all, but
rather Polynesia, Micronesia and the Hawaiian Islands where it is known as
noni.
I first investigated what was known about the compounds in
the noni fruit. Not surprisingly I found that several important active
constituents were already identified which had beneficial effects in human
physiology. Among the most intriguing were the carotenoids, bioflavonoids and
anthraquinones as well as several other unknown substances which according to
their chemical structures appeared to be accessory activating factors.
At this point, I decided to take noni as a medicine on a
regular basis myself. I had taken this direct experiential approach to learning
about a plant medicine many times, as I had been taught to do in my training as
an ayurvedic physician. It was late autumn, and although I was healthy, I was
all too familiar with the pattern my physiology follows every year around this
time. It always began with feelings of increasing stress, then bothersome skin
eruptions, fatigue, mental irritability, bloating, constipation, and finally
inevitably an upper respiratory infection, and it happened the same way every
year. I reasoned that noni juice might confer some protective action against
disease through its significant anti-oxidant components. In the past, I had
consumed medicinal preparations hundreds of times with many of these same
constituents without any appreciable effects. As it turned out, there was a
marked difference in my health that autumn. I was distinctly more alert, more
energetic, more balanced, my skin was glowing more than I could ever recall and
my digestion was improved immeasurably. I attributed the benefits of noni to
the interaction of the known components with the hitherto unknown components
which perhaps work synergistically with all the other nutrients.
The second part of my research is known as ethnobotony,
where we seek out physicians or native healers who may have extensive
experience in using a particular medicinal herb, and ask them what they use it
for, how they prepare it, how successful it is and obtain direct information
about its medical usefulness from people who have used it over many many years.
The third aspect of my research process involves a thorough search of the
current scientific and medical literature to determine whether any of the constituents
of the plant in question are known to possess biological activity that may help
shed some light on its effectiveness for the treatment of a certain disease or
diseases.
With regard to Morinda citrifolia, an interesting thing
started to happen the more my research progressed. It seemed that the list of
ailments for which noni was used medically just grew and grew longer than
almost any other medicinal plant that I have ever encountered. I was initially
overwhelmed at how many medical indications this single plant has had in the
Pacific Islands and south east Asian literature.
A few of the medicinal uses are for digestive problems such
as diarrhea, intestinal worms, nausea, food poisoning; respiratory problems
such as congestive cough, dry cough, tuberculosis, cholera, infant chest colds
and sore throat; cardiovascular problems, hypertension; inflammatory conditions
such as arthritis, abscesses, mastitis, gout and other inflammatory joint
conditions. It is a noted analgesic or pain reliever. One of the most common
uses of noni has been in the area of skin conditions, being utilized for
wounds, ulcers, abscesses, ring worm, boils, cellulitis, swellings, scalp
conditions and sores. It has been used in the treatment of tumours and broken
bones, jaundice and other forms of liver disease. It has been used to treat
asthma and dysentery, hypercholesterolemia, menstrual cramps, gastric ulcers
and diabetes.
Faced with such a diverse list of physiologically distinct
conditions, the conventionally oriented physician might be tempted to
completely dismiss these reports as unsubstantiated folk tales. We are
conditioned to believe that any important medicinal substance should have one
or at most two applications. How could one plant be used to treat so many pathological
conditions?
To answer these questions, it was time to turn to the
scientific research involving Morinda citrafolia. Research at the University of
Hawaii's Biomedical Sciences Department showed that extracts of noni contained
a naturally occurring component which activates serotonin receptors in the
brain and throughout the body. Serotonin is a neuroendocrine compound which
along with its receptors is found in high levels in the brain, the blood
platelets and the lining of the digestive tract. It is well established that
serotonin is an important brain neurotransmitter, and plays a significant role
in temperature regulation, sleep, hunger and sexual behaviour. Serotonin
deficiency has been implicated in a number of pathological conditions including
migraine headaches, obesity, depression and Alzheimer's disease. Modern
pharmaceutical medicine has had some success with the use of serotonin
analogues in the treatment of certain diseases. I am sure many of you are
familiar with the drug Prozac which is used to treat depression; another is
used to treat acute migraine headaches. Both of these synthetic drugs
specifically target and bind to serotonin receptors. The problem with both of
these substances and with all synthetically manufactured pharmaceuticals which
isolate one active ingredient is the great incidents of adverse side effects.
Natural products like Morinda citrafolia in its unprocessed complete form do
not generally have adverse effects. The presence of a wide range of other
naturally occurring substances which are present in some way regulates and
modifies its effects.
Research at the University of Metz in France, demonstrated
the central analgesic activity of noni to alleviate pain of many types.
Moderate doses of noni was measured to be about 75% as effective as an
equivalent dose of morphine sulfate.
Since 1961, we have known that various parts of the Morinda
citrafolia tree contains several different varieties of bitter plant compounds
known as anthraquinones. Plants containing anthraquinones have literally been
used for millennia due to their medicinal properties. Most noted are
significant antiseptic (antibacterial) effect to disease causing bacteria in
the intestinal tract. This compound is especially toxic to the pathogens
Shigela and Salmonella. Anthraquinones are also particularly effective against
many forms of Staphylococcus, a major cause of many skin infections which
sometimes infect the valves of the heart. Furthermore anthraquinones in noni
prompt the digestive secretions of the stomach and small intestines, stimulate
bile flow and promote the activity of the entire digestive process. However, it
is the activity of one specific anthraquinone, damnacanthal which has been
shown in vitro to actually reverse cancer cell proliferation at the gene level.
The research has demonstrated that one isolated component found in noni fruit
turned off the signal for tumour cells to proliferate. The study was reported
in 1993 from a very reputable laboratory in Kao University in Yokohama, Japan.
It was originally believed that one compound which had been
isolated was responsible for all the many biological effects. The compound
which has a chemical formula of C10H8O4 is known as scopoletin. Both noni and
scopoletin are known to reduce blood pressure, have anti-inflammatory activity,
exhibit antibiotic activity, antifungal activity and possess antitumour
effects. Yet when researchers at the University of Hawaii tried to purify and
isolate scopoletin from the rest of the noni extract, much of its activity was
lost. In fact, both the biological effects and the serotonin receptor binding
effects of the crude noni extract was lost upon purification of this presumed
active ingredient. This leaves us the conclusion that other substances in noni
must be present in order to produce its biological effects. (http://www.consumerhealth.org)
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