Monday, 14 November 2011

I'M GONNA EAT MORE POMEGRANATES FROM NOW ON



There is a Pomegranate plant in the school herb garden and it has borne fruit over the years. However, I have not tasted any of the fruit so far as I don't really like pomegranates.  I find it a bit bothersome to suck the flesh from the small seeds.  However, all that has changed after I read the following article about it being able to make one look youthful.

Fruit boosts sex life, hailed as elixir of youth

It can help to prevent heart disease, relieve stress and has even been shown to improve your sex life.

And if that was not enough to convince you to try pomegranate, the fruit is now being hailed as the elixir of youth.

A £2million (RM10.1million) study has found a daily dose could slow the ageing process of DNA.

An extract of the whole fruit - including pith, peel and seeds - was given to 60 volunteers every day for a month in the form of a capsule.

The pomegranate is now being hailed as the elixir of youth

Researchers monitored the activity of chemicals in their bodies compared with those who took a placebo.

They found a significant decrease in a marker associated with cell damage, which can cause impaired brain, muscle, liver and kidney function as well as ageing effects on the skin.

This decrease - a hitherto unknown benefit of consuming pomegranate - is thought to slow down the oxidation, or ‘rusting’, of the DNA in cells which naturally occurs over time, according to researchers at the private ProbelteBio laboratory in Murcia, Spain.

They are found in small quantities in the juice but mainly in the inedible rind, husk and white pith which has been harnessed into a pill and a drink.

Dr Sergio Streitenberger, who led the study, funded by Pomegreat PurePlus, said: "We are very excited about this study which we believe demonstrates that regular consumption of this pomegranate extract can slow down the process of DNA oxidation".

"One way to look at ageing is to think of it as rusting, or oxidising, a damaging process. Being able to guard against this process would be a significant breakthrough."
Source: Daily Mail, UK

Published Nov 13 2011

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