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Maca has been used since pre-Incan times for both nutritional and medicinal purposes. This remarkable root vegetable grows in areas where few other crops can survive, at altitudes above 14,000 feet. Ours is the only certified-organic, wild harvested maca available in the world. It is characterized by its different color, size and appearance, and for its denser concentrations of rare phytonutrients, many of which can not be found at all in cultivated maca. Read on to learn more about this versatile plant.
1. Maca is an annual plant that is native to Peru. It is a cruciferous vegetable that produces a root similar to a turnip or potato and is a staple and versatile food product. Peruvians use it as Americans use potatoes and also to make cookies, cakes, chips, and various flavored drinks. Maca is an important food in the Peruvian diet with a rich nutrient profile. - James Occhiogrosso, N. D., Your Prostate, Your Libido, Your Life
2. Maca has been used traditionally by native Peruvians as both a food and medicine. It has historically been used for a variety of purposes, including hormone balancing, thyroid function, sexual function, PMS, menopause, and as a tonic for healthy aging. A recent study proved maca's effectiveness in treating women with amenorrhea due to hypoestrogenic states, and especially premature ovarian failure. - Tori Hudson, N.D., Women's Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine: Alternative Therapies and Integrative Medicine for Total Health and Wellness
3. Kilham, investigating maca in Peru on one of his frequent "Medicine Hunter" expeditions, asked a number of people why they used maca. "One woman stands out in my mind," he says. "She smiled at my question and replied, 'Well, for the sex, of course.'" - Jonny Bowden, Ph.D., C.N.S., The Most Effective Natural Cures on Earth: The Surprising, Unbiased Truth about What Treatments Work and Why
4. Maca grows in the Andes Mountains of Peru's Junin Plateau at elevations exceeding 10,000 feet. Its reputation comes from a history of folklore of several hundred years. - James Occhiogrosso, N. D., Your Prostate, Your Libido, Your Life
5. Maca has been used in Peru for five thousand years. Alkaloids from the root of the plant act upon the two key glands in the brain, the hypothalamus and the pituitary, supporting and boosting energy levels and encouraging the production of ovarian hormones such as estrogen and testosterone. - Tori Hudson, N.D., Women's Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine: Alternative Therapies and Integrative Medicine for Total Health and Wellness
6. Histamine causes dilation of blood vessels and capillaries, helps constrict smooth muscle, and is ultimately a primary player in ejaculation and orgasm. Although maca generally has a high amino acid content, it is relatively low in the amino acid methionine, which, coincidentally, is a strong antihistamine. Thus, this unique combination of amino acids and other nutrients might be what gives maca its reputed powers." - James Occhiogrosso, N. D., Your Prostate, Your Libido, Your Life
7. Traditional In the Andes, as much as a pound of fresh and/or dried maca root is eaten as preparation a food in a single day. - Leslie Taylor, ND, The Healing Power of Rainforest Herbs: A Guide to Understanding and Using Herbal Medicinals
8. Native Peruvians traditionally have utilized maca since pre-Incan times for both nutritional and medicinal purposes. It is an important staple in the diets of these people and is eaten daily by the Andean people, much like beans, rice, and potatoes. It has the highest nutritional value of any food crop grown there. It is rich in sugars, protein, starches, and essential nutrients (especially iodine and iron). The tuber or root is consumed fresh or dried. The fresh roots are considered a treat and are baked or roasted in ashes (in the same manner as sweet potatoes). The dried roots are stored and, later, boiled in water or milk to make a porridge." - Leslie Taylor, ND, The Healing Power of Rainforest Herbs: A Guide to Understanding and Using Herbal Medicinals
9. Maca has been used for centuries in the Andes to enhance fertility in humans and animals. - Leslie Taylor, ND, The Healing Power of Rainforest Herbs: A Guide to Understanding and Using Herbal Medicinals
10. Chemical research shows maca root contains a chemical called p-methoxybenzyl isothio-cyanate, which has reputed aphrodisiac properties. - Leslie Taylor, ND, The Healing Power of Rainforest Herbs: A Guide to Understanding and Using Herbal Medicinals
11. Fresh maca root contains about 1 percent glucosinolates — plant chemicals found in many plants in the family brassicaceae (broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower, and other cruciferous vegetables). - Leslie Taylor, ND, The Healing Power of Rainforest Herbs: A Guide to Understanding and Using Herbal Medicinals
12. While no novel glucosinolates have been reported in maca yet, several of the chemicals found in this group of known plant chemicals are documented to be cancer-preventive. - Leslie Taylor, ND, The Healing Power of Rainforest Herbs: A Guide to Understanding and Using Herbal Medicinals
13. The marketing claim made that maca actually increases testosterone or sex hormones has been clinically disproved. In a 2003 double-blind placebo human trial, men taking a maca root extract (1.5-3 g daily) evidenced no changes in any reproductive hormonal level tested, including testosterone (which actually showed a slight decrease!). - Leslie Taylor, ND, The Healing Power of Rainforest Herbs: A Guide to Understanding and Using Herbal Medicinals
14. Sperm count and semen volume were increased with maca at either dose. Why the effects? Who knows? Maca contains two novel groups of compounds— macamides and macaenes, which may be responsible for its effects. Maca also contains the amino acid L-arginine (see below), which has been shown to increase sperm production and motility and is necessary for the creation of nitric oxide, a molecule that is necessary for erections. - Jonny Bowden, Ph.D., C.N.S., The Most Effective Natural Cures on Earth: The Surprising, Unbiased Truth about What Treatments Work and Why
15. In herbal medicine in the United States, dried maca root tablets, capsules, and powders are generally recommended at dosages of 5-20 g daily. The dried root powder (a more economical choice than tablets or capsules) can be stirred into juice, water, or smoothies (2 tsp. of root powder are about 5.5 g). For standardized and concentrated extract products, follow the labeled instructions. - Leslie Taylor, ND, The Healing Power of Rainforest Herbs: A Guide to Understanding and Using Herbal Medicinals
16. According to the Tropical Plant Database website, a prohistamine like maca might have exactly the opposite effect of a tfTzr/histamine. It might make it easier for men and women who have trouble reaching orgasm to achieve it.
- Jonny Bowden, Ph.D., C.N.S., The Most Effective Natural Cures on Earth: The Surprising, Unbiased Truth about What Treatments Work and Why
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