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Hoodia Gordonii: It's Effect On Hunger and Weight-loss

By Peter Youngwood
Nov 8, 2009
Hoodia Gordonii is a cactus-like plant which grows in the countries of Southern Africa and the Kalahari Desert. Recently, the plant has gained considerable amounts of exposure for its reported effect on hunger and weight-loss.

For thousands of years the San tribe's people of the Kalahari region have eaten Hoodia Gordonii. They established that the Hoodia helped to suppress their appetite and thirst for long periods of time. At the same time, it helped boost their energy levels when they were out on hunting trips in the desert.

As the Hoodia Gordonii is a spiky cactus-like plant, the San prepare it by cutting off the spines to eat the inner parts and then drink the white latex inside.

Hoodia's reported effects have intrigued countries in the Western world who face a spiralling problem of obesity. Clinical trials have been conducted to establish exactly what effect Hoodia has on the body (if any at all) and to find the active component of Hoodia Gordonii.

South African scientists reported Hoodia to have a unique molecule present in its composition, which was later called P.57. British firm Phytopharm then conducted tests on the molecule, to see how it behaved in the human body.

They found that Hoodia Gordonii affected the part of the brain that senses glucose sugar levels, called the hypothalamus. Every time food is eaten, blood sugar levels increase, and a signal is sent to the brain to indicate that you are full. According to Dr Richard Dixey; a scientist from Phytopharm, Hoodia seemed to contain a molecule (P.57) which is 10,000 times more active than glucose; meaning your brain sends a signal which makes you feel full - even when you have not eaten .

Mangold, Tom. BBC News: May 30, 2003. Sampling the Kalahari Hoodia diet.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/correspondent/2947810.stm

Further trials on Hoodia Gordonii are still being carried out to try and assess its full potential and acknowledge any side effects or drug interactions, which are as yet unknown.
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