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Graviola A.K.A. Soursop (Annona muricata) is a small, tropical tree with large dark green leaves which bears a large, heart-shaped fruit that is a yellow-green color with white flesh inside. This plant grows in most warm areas in North and South America, including the Amazon. This fruit is also known as guanabana and Brazilian paw paw in most Spanish-speaking countries. Soursop is native to a few countries, one its most found country being Peru in South America. It is also native to some tropical parts of Africa, Southeast Asia and the Pacific. It is in the same genus,Annona,as cherimoya and is in the Annonaceae family.
Watch this video explaining the benefits of Graviola
In the Peruvian Andes, the leaf tea is used for catarrh (inflammation of mucous membranes) and the seeds crushed is used to kill parasites. In the Peruvian Amazon, the bark, roots, and leaves are used for treatment with
diabetes and as a sedative and antispasmodic.
Indigenous tribes in Guyana use the leaf tea as a sedative and heart tonic. In the Brazilian Amazon the leaf tea is used for liver systems and complications. In Jamaica, Haiti, and the West Indies the fruit pulp/fruit powder is used for fevers, parasites and diarrhea.
The leaf or bark is used as an antispasmodic, sedative, and a calming agent for heart conditions, coughs, flu, difficult childbirth, asthma, hypertension, and parasites.
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Graviola has a long, deep history of use in herbal medicine as well as a extensive recorded indigenous use. Soursop (or graviola when speaking about the medicinal aspects) is one of the most popular medicinal plants because of its supposed anti-cancer effects due to its natural component called acetogenin. It is especially *effective against pancreatic, prostate and lung cancer*.
One study revealed that graviola selectively targets the
cancer cells while leaving the healthy cells unharmed.
Unlike chemo drugs, soursop has no significant side effects. A study completed at Purdue University recently discovered that the tree bark and leaves could actually kill cancer cells on six human cell lines.