Saturday, April 02, 2011

‘Magic herb’ LOLIONDO TREE is well known to scientists

The ‘magic herb’ that has made thousands of people flock to remote Loliondo village in Tanzania was identified by Kenyan scientists four years ago as a cure for a drug-resistant strain of a sexually transmitted disease.


An expert on herbal medicine also said yesterday the herb is one of the most common traditional cures for many diseases. It is known as mtandamboo in Kiswahili and it has been used for the treatment of gonorrhoea among the Maasai, Samburu and Kikuyu.

The Kamba refer to it as mukawa or mutote and use it for chest pains, while the Nandi boil the leaves and bark to treat breast cancer, headache and chest pains.

Four years ago, local researchers turned to the plant for the treatment of a virus that causes herpes. Led by Dr Festus M Tolo of the Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kemri), the team from the University of Nairobi and the National Museums of Kenya found the herb could provide alternative remedy for herpes infections.

“An extract preparation from the roots of Carissa edulis, a medicinal plant locally growing in Kenya, has exhibited remarkable anti-herpes virus activity for both wild type and drug resistant strains,” they reported in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology.






2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Na nyie wakenya mbona hamkupublicise findings zenu fire years ago kwa watu wote hata tu hapo Afrika mashariki,mambo mengine bwana??

Anonymous said...

kwa kuwa kila mala wakenya wanatuonaga tatanzania wajinga,kila kitu mkenya akivumbua ndio kinajulikana,kwanza ilianza mlima kilimanjaro uko kenya,sasa na babu watasema loliondo iko kenya tusubili tu