Guinea hen weed is a cancer remedy used by the Maroons of Jamaica. It is native to Africa, the Caribbean and also South and Central America. The common names are Anamu and Gully root.
According to the Jamaica Observer issued June 11, 2006, under the topic «Local scientist on brink of cancer cure breakthrough» by Petre Williams, an Observer staff reporter, reported that, a local scientist Dr. Lawrence Williams, intent on finding a cure for cancer, believes that he is on the brink of a breakthrough as he and his counterparts in Germany have been able to produce the anti-cancer compound, dibenzyl trisulphide (DTS). Guinea hen weed (Petiveria alliacea) medicinal herb is a plant from the Phytolaccaceae family. It is from the guinea hen weed (petivera alliacea) which grows wild across Jamaica. Due to this discovery, this medicinal herb is now widely used in Jamaica for every ailment you can think of, including prostate problems, as well as fibroid problems. Therefore, it is a good prostate remedy as well as a good fibroid remedy. According to the report there are people who have heard of the healing properties of the guinea hen weed and who have indicated an interest in participating in any clinical trial that may be set up. At least five of them have been taking the DTS compound, which Williams said was also synthetically produced by the German firm Aldrich Chemical. The reports filtering in from those people, he added, have been positive.The Observer continued by saying that the DTS compound, produced through three years of work at the University of Hohenheim in Germany, has, when applied to cancer cells in vitro (outside a living organism), been found effective in the cure of various types of cancer. Among them: brain (neuro blastoma), bladder (primary bladder carcinoma), breast (mammary carcinoma), fibrous (sarcoma), skin (melanoma), and small cell lung cancer.
«Despite the fact that people are using it (guinea hen weed), we still need to do the toxicological work on the pure compound to validate safety,» said Dr Williams. «Also, in terms of patenting the data, we would need to have that data too.
Dr. Williams’s counterparts in Germany are professors Harold Rosner and Wolfgang Kraus. They intend, Williams said, to create DTS tablets for the human testing phase of the research.
«It is a promising project,» said Williams. «I am very positive about the work and I think also that one day it will come off as a curative agent for cancer. It may be that we should look at the effects of DTS in combination with radiation therapy and see if they can enhance each other.» Williams’s positive outlook is based in large part, he said, on the fact that the compound was drawn from a plant and that there was need for a cancer drug with limited side effects, if any.
«Cancer is one of the most challenging diseases to mankind, and anything that can work against cancer with minimum side effects is worth the while developing,» he said. «Most of the drugs they use to treat cancer now have too many side effects. We are hoping that because the compound is natural, it will have less side effects. That is one of the beliefs.»
Cancer is among the leading causes of death in Jamaica and the Caribbean. According to data received from the Cancer Registry at the University of the West Indies, in 1999 there were 2,697 cancer deaths in Jamaica. Music: Mountain Dub by Gunnar Olsen from YouTube music library.
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Please watch: «Guinea Hen Weed Update Cancer Antidote»
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Quite interesting actually
Dr Lawrence Williams, adjunct professor in the College of Health Sciences at the University of Technology, says he and his business partner have obtained a United States patent for an anti-cancer formulation based on the guinea hen weed.
The Jamaican scientist says he now expects to make headway on a buyout offer that he has spoken of for at least three years, but is yet to finalise with business partner PG Pharma LLC, based in Michigan, United States.
The patent is the end stage of 28 years of research into the indigenous guinea hen weed plant of Jamaica, scientifically known as petiveria alliacea. It is shared with co-researcher Dr H. George Levy, who owns PG Pharma.
drank it for the first yesterday; will check it out
Update: I continue to take one guinea hen weed capsule each day and my recent PSA test was 1.23.