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13
Ways Aloe Can Help
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The following
article is published in the magazine: Alternative Medicine,
The Voice of Alternative Medicine® (issue 28, March 1999).
While this website does not necessarily endorse everything
in the article (for example: we do not endorse the use of
"dried" or "powdered" aloe), it is felt that the article contains
valuable information for you.
The
Potted Physician
13 Ways Aloe Vera Can Help You
Known
to herbalists and medical folklorists for centuries as the
"medical plant" or "the potted physician", this cactus-like
plant with green dagger-shaped leaves filled with a clear,
viscous gel was brought from Africa to North America in the
sixteenth century. But long before this, aloe, whose name
means "shining bitter substance," was widely regarded as a
master healing plant. The ancient Egyptians referred to aloe
as the "plant of immortality" and included it among the funerary
gifts buried with the pharaohs. In recent decades, medical
research has confirmed and extended many of the health claims
for the shining bitter substance (used topically or consumed
as a liquid) that is the heart of aloe. Here is a brief review
of its merits.
Helps
Heal Wounds
The bulk
of the aloe leaf is filled with gel, 96% water with the other
4% containing 75 known substances. Applied to wounds, aloe
gel is a mild anesthetic, relieving itching, swelling, and
pain: it also is antibacterial and antifungal, increases blood
flow to wounded areas, and stimulates fibroblasts, the skin
cells responsible for wound healing.
An animal-based
study in the Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association
found that both oral and topical aloe preparations speed wound
healing. Animals were given either aloe (100mg/kg body weight)
in their drinking water for two months or 25% aloe vera cream
applied directly to wounds for six days. Aloe had positive
effects in both cases. The size of wounds decreased 62% in
the animals taking oral aloe compared to a 51% in the control
group. Topical aloe produced a 51% decrease in wound size
compared to a 33% in the control group.
Supports
Surgical Recovery
Aloe decreases
surgical recovery time, according to a report in the Journal
of Dermatologic Surgery and Oncology. Eighteen acne patients
underwent facial dermabrasion surgery, in which lesions are
scraped away. Dressings were applied to their faces, with
half of each person's face receiving the standard dressing
coated with surgical gel, and the other half with aloe added
to this dressing. The half of the face treated with aloe healed
approximately 72 hours faster than the other side.
Dermatologist
James Fulton, M.D., of Newport Beach, California, principal
author of the report, uses topical aloe in his practice to
speed wound healing. "Any wound we treat, whether it's suturing
a cut or removing a skin cancer, heals better with aloe vera
on it," he states.
Soothes
Burns
In a study
in the Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand, 27
patients with moderate burn wounds were treated with a gauze
coated in either aloe gel or Vaseline™ (petroleum jelly).
The burns healed more quickly in the aloe group, with an average
healing time of 12 days compared to 18 days for the group
using Vaseline.
Minimizes
Frostbite Damage
A study
published in the Annals of Emergency Medicine established
that aloe works for frostbite as well. Researchers gave standard
treatments for frostbite (antibiotics, ibuprofen, and re-warming)
to 154 patients with mild to severe frostbite. Of patients
who additionally received aloe vera cream, 67.9% healed without
any tissue loss (amputation) compared to 32.7% in the control
group. Researchers concluded that aloe prevented a decrease
of blood flow to the frozen tissues, a common cause of tissue
loss in frostbite.
Screens
Out Radiation
Aloe
protects against skin damage from X rays, according to researchers
at Hoshi University in Japan publishing in the journal Yakugaku
Zasshi. They found that aloe was an effective antioxidant,
mopping up the free radicals caused by radiation, and that
it protected two of the body's healing substances, superoxide
dismutase (an antioxidant enzyme) and glutathione (an amino
acid which stimulates the immune system).
Heals
Psoriasis Lesions
In a double-blind,
placebo-controlled study published in Tropical Medicine and
International Health, 60 patients with chronic psoriasis were
given a 0.5% aloe vera extract in a mineral oil creme. The
ointment was applied three times daily for five consecutive
days (15 applications total per week) for four weeks. When
patients were checked after eight months, far more psoriasis
skin lesions had healed in the aloe group (82.8%) than in
the placebo group (7.7%). Further, 83.3% of the aloe group
were considered cured of their psoriasis compared to only
6.6% of the placebo group.
Eases
Intestinal Problems
Aloe vera
juice can be effective for treating inflammatory bowel disease,
according to a study in the Journal of Alternative Medicine.
Ten patients were given two ounces of aloe juice, three times
daily, for seven days. After one week, all patients were cured
of diarrhea, four had improved bowel regularity, and three
reported increased energy.
Researchers
concluded that aloe was able to rebalance the intestines by
"regulating gastrointestinal pH while improving gastrointestinal
motility, increasing stool specific gravity, and reducing
populations of certain fecal microorganisms, including yeast."
Other studies have shown that aloe vera juice helps to detoxify
the bowel, neutralize stomach acidity, and relieve constipation
and gastric ulcers.
Reduces
Blood Sugar in Diabetes
Aloe reduced
the blood sugar levels in diabetics, as reported in Hormone
Research. Five patients with adult (non-insulin-dependent)
diabetes were given 1/2 teaspoon of aloe extract daily for
up to 14 weeks. Blood sugar levels were reduced in all patients
by an average of 45%, with no change in their total weight.
Reduces
Arthritic Swelling
Aloe can
help prevent arthritis and reduce the inflammation in joints
already affected by arthritis, according to the Journal of
the American Podiatric Medical Association. Aloe can also
inhibit the autoimmune reaction associated with certain forms
of arthritis, in which the body attacks its own tissues.
Animals
were injected with a bacterium to cause arthritic symptoms,
namely inflammation and swelling. To determine if it could
prevent arthritis, aloe (150mg/kg body weight) was injected
under the skin daily for 13 days. Physical measurements were
taken daily to determine the amount of swelling and inflammation.
Several compounds from aloe showed antiarthritic activity,
according to the researchers. One organic acid in aloe reduced
inflammation by 79.7% and suppressed the autoimmune response
by 42.4%. Another aloe compound (anthraquinone) reduced inflammation
by 67.3% but had no effect on the autoimmune response.
Curtailing
HIV Infection
An extract
of mannose, one of the sugars in aloe, can inhibit HIV-1 (the
virus associated with AIDS). In a 1991 study in Molecular
Biotherapy, HIV-1 cells were treated in vitro (outside the
body) with a mannose extract. Aloe slowed virus reproduction
by as much as 30%, reduced viral load (total amount of the
virus), suppressed the spread of the virus from infected cells,
and increased the viability (chance of survival) of infected
cells.
Nutritional
Support for HIV Patients
Aloe vera
juice proved to be an effective part of a nutritional support
program for HIV+ patients according to the Journal of Advancement
in Medicine. For four months, 29 patients were given 100%
pure aloe vera juice (five ounces, four times daily) along
with an essential fatty acid supplement and another supplement
containing vitamins, minerals, and amino acids. Patients were
told to continue with their normal diet and not to take other
supplements.
After
90 days, all of the patients had fewer occurrences of opportunistic
infections, thrush, fatigue, and diarrhea, as well as increased
white blood cell counts (meaning their immune systems were
responding positively). Their assessment of overall quality
of health also improved. In 25% of the patients, aloe apparently
knocked out the virus's ability to reproduce. Researchers
found that aloe (the mannose extract and perhaps other compounds)
stimulates the body's immune system, particularly T4 helper
cells, white blood cells that activate the immune response
to infection.
Stimulates
Immune Response Against Cancer
Aloe may
help prolong survival time and stimulate the immune system
of cancer patients, according to recent research. In a 1994
study in the Japanese medical journal Yakhak Hoeji, mice with
cancerous tumors were given aloe orally for 14 days. While
the aloe did not suppress tumor growth, the average life span
of the mice was prolonged by 22% for those given 50mg aloe/kg
body weight and by 32% for those given 100mg/kg daily. A simultaneous
experiment on human cancer cells (outside the body) found
that high doses of aloe significantly suppressed the growth
of these cancer cells. Researchers writing in Cancer Immunology
and Immunotherapy found that a compound (lectin) from aloe,
when injected directly into tumors, activated the immune system
to attack the cancer. Killer T cells, white blood cells that
bind to invading cells and destroy them, began to attack the
tumor cells injected with lectin.
Aloe turns
on the immune system by activating macrophages (white blood
cells which "swallow" antigens), causing the release of immune-activating
(and anticancer) substances such as interferons, interleukines,
and tumor necrosis factor. In addition, aloe promotes the
growth of normal (non-cancerous) cells, researchers said.
Benefits
Lung Cancer
Aloe's
protective effect was confirmed in a study of 673 lung cancer
patients in Okinawa, Japan, published in the Japanese Journal
of Cancer Research. This survey looked at the connection between
smoking, comparative amounts of 17 plant foods in the diet,
and the occurrence of lung cancer over a five-year period.
Aloe was the only one of the plant foods that was protective
against cancer. "The results of plant epidemiology suggests
that aloe prevents human pulmonary carcinogenesis [lung cancer],"
stated the researchers. Further, aloe is "widely preventive
or suppressive against various human cancers."
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