| Hoodia
Gordonii Review
How
Hoodia Gordonii Plus Works
Hoodia gordonii (pronounced HOO-dee-ah) is also called hoodia, xhooba,
khoba, Ghaap, hoodia cactus, and South African desert cactus. Hoodia
is a cactus that's causing a stir for its ability to suppress appetite
and promote weight loss. 60 Minutes, ABC, and the BBC have all done
stories on hoodia. Hoodia gordonii
can be found in the semi-deserts of South Africa, Botswana, Namibia,
and Angola. Hoodia grows in clumps of green upright stems and is
actually a succulent, not a cactus.
It takes about 5 years before hoodia's
pale purple flowers appear and the cactus can be harvested. Although
there are 20 types of hoodia, only the hoodia gordonii variety is
believed to contain the natural appetite suppressant.
Although hoodia was "discovered"
relatively recently, the San Bushmen of the Kalahari desert have
been eating it for a very long time. The Bushmen, who live off the
land, would cut off part of the hoodia stem and eat it to ward off
hunger and thirst during nomadic hunting trips. They also used hoodia
for severe abdominal cramps, hemorrhoids, tuberculosis, indigestion,
hypertension and diabetes.
In 1937, a Dutch anthropologist
studying the San Bushmen noted that they used hoodia to suppress
appetite. But it wasn't until 1963 when scientists at the Council
for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), South Africa's national
laboratory, began studying hoodia. Initial results were promising
-- lab animals lost weight after taking hoodia.
The South African scientists,
working with a British company named Phytopharm, isolated the active
ingredient in hoodia, a steroidal glycoside, which they named p57.
After getting a patent in 1995, they licensed p57 to Phytopharm.
Phytopharm has spent more than $20 million on hoodia research.
How does Hoodia Gordonii Plus
work?
Simply put, the brain is tricked into thinking there is enough energy
(blood sugar) and doesn't need to eat, so it shuts down the hunger
mechanism.
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