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- Feb 12, 2010
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- 129
So I was doing some reading and came across an ancient native and Russian
folk remedy called Chaga, a fungus which grows on white birch trees.
Since many modern drugs are derived from discoveries of chemicals in plants and fungi and then synthesized, could there be something to it?
We've got tons of white birch around here, so this weekend I'm going for a walk in the forest.
From wiki:
"Since the 16th century, there are records of chaga mushroom being used in folk medicine and the botanical medicine of the Eastern European countries as a remedy for cancer, gastritis, ulcers, and tuberculosis of the bones.[citation needed] In 1958, scientific studies in Finland and Russia found Chaga provided an epochal effect in breast cancer, liver cancer,uterine cancer, and gastric cancer, as well as in hypertension and diabetes.[citation needed] Herbalist David Winston maintains that it is the strongest anti-cancer medicinal mushroom.[1]. Russian Literature Nobel Prize laureate Alexandr Solzhenitsyn wrote two pages on the medicinal use and value of chaga in his famous book on his life in the Gulag "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich"."
folk remedy called Chaga, a fungus which grows on white birch trees.
Since many modern drugs are derived from discoveries of chemicals in plants and fungi and then synthesized, could there be something to it?
We've got tons of white birch around here, so this weekend I'm going for a walk in the forest.
From wiki:
"Since the 16th century, there are records of chaga mushroom being used in folk medicine and the botanical medicine of the Eastern European countries as a remedy for cancer, gastritis, ulcers, and tuberculosis of the bones.[citation needed] In 1958, scientific studies in Finland and Russia found Chaga provided an epochal effect in breast cancer, liver cancer,uterine cancer, and gastric cancer, as well as in hypertension and diabetes.[citation needed] Herbalist David Winston maintains that it is the strongest anti-cancer medicinal mushroom.[1]. Russian Literature Nobel Prize laureate Alexandr Solzhenitsyn wrote two pages on the medicinal use and value of chaga in his famous book on his life in the Gulag "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich"."
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