Does the so-called miracle tree live up to the hype? Do I recommend it?
Friday Favorites: The Benefits and Side Effects of Moringa Leaf Powder
Below is an approximation of this video’s audio content. To see any graphs, charts, graphics, images, and quotes to which Dr. Greger may be referring, watch the above video.
Intro: Does moringa live up to the hype? Check out this video to find out.
Moringa (Moringa oleifera) is a plant commonly known as the “miracle tree” due to its purported healing powers across a spectrum of diseases. If “miracle” isn’t hyperbolic enough for you, on the internet it’s also known as “God’s Gift to Man.” Is moringa a miracle or just a mirage? “The enthusiasm for the health benefits of [moringa] is in dire contrast with the scarcity of strong experimental and clinical evidence supporting [the claims]. Fortunately, the chasm is slowly being filled.” There has been a surge in scientific publications on moringa, and in the last ten years the number of articles is closer to a thousand.
What got my attention was the presence of glucosinolates, compounds that boost our liver’s detoxifying enzymes. I thought they were only found in cruciferous vegetables like cabbage, broccoli, kale, collards, and cauliflower. But no, it turns out they’re also found in the moringa family, with potency comparable to broccoli. That’s exciting, but why not just eat broccoli, rather than mail-ordering some exotic moringa powder? Is there anything special about moringa?
It’s “been described as the most nutritious tree yet discovered.” How much is that saying, though? Who eats trees? Supposedly moringa “contains higher amounts of … nutrients than most conventional … sources”––10 times the vitamin A of carrots, 12 times the vitamin C of oranges, 17 times more calcium than milk, 15 times more potassium than bananas, 25 times more iron than spinach, and 9 times more protein than yogurt. First of all, even if all this were true, this is for 100 grams of dry moringa leaf. That’s like 14 tablespoons—almost a whole cup of leaf powder. Researchers have had trouble getting people to even eat 20 grams, and so anything more would likely “result in excessively unpleasant taste, due to the bitterness of the leaves.”
And secondly, the nutritional claims in these papers are “adapted from Fuglie,” which evidently is just some lay publication. If you go to the USDA nutrient database, and enter a more doable dose, like the amount you might get in a smoothie (about one tablespoon for instance), a serving of moringa powder has as much vitamin A as a quarter of one baby carrot, and as much vitamin C as one one-hundredth of an orange. So, an orange has as much vitamin C as a hundred tablespoons of moringa. A serving of moringa powder only has the calcium of half a cup of milk, the potassium of not fifteen bananas, but a quarter of one banana, the iron of a quarter cup of spinach, and the protein of a third of a container of yogurt. So yeah, maybe nutritious, but not off the charts, and certainly not what’s commonly touted. So again, why not eat broccoli? It’s got the A-C-Calcium-potassium-iron-and-protein of broccoli!
Moringa does seem to have anticancer activity—in a petri dish—against cell lines of breast cancer, lung cancer, skin cancer, and fibrosarcoma, while tending to leave normal cells relatively alone, But there haven’t been any clinical studies. What’s the point in finding out that “[Moringa] … enhances [the] sexual performance [of] stressed rats.” What are you supposed to do with that?
Studies like this one, though, started to make things a little interesting. Researchers were testing the effects of a tablespoon of moringa leaf powder once a day for three months on antioxidant status, and saw a drop in oxidative stress, as one might expect from eating any healthy plant food. But they also saw a drop in fasting blood sugars, from prediabetic levels over 100 to more normal levels. Now, that’s interesting. Should we start recommending a daily tablespoon of moringa powder to diabetics? Was it just a fluke? Moringa and blood sugar control: A review of the current evidence next.
“Clearly, in spite of the widely held ‘belief’ in the health benefits of [moringa], the interest of the international biomedical community in the medicinal potential of this plant has been rather tepid”—“spectacularly hesitant[, in fact,] in exploring its nutritional and medicinal potential. … other “superfoods” such as garlic and green tea have enjoyed better reception,” but they also have more scientific support. There are thousands of human studies on garlic and more than 10,000 on green tea, but only a few hundred on moringa.
The most promising appears to be the effects of moringa on blood sugar control. If you have people eat about five cookies, this is the kind of blood sugar spike you get. Add about two teaspoons of moringa leaf powder into the cookie batter, and even with the same amount of sugar and carbs, the blood sugar surge is dampened.
Just having having people drink one or two cups of moringa leaf tea before a sugar challenge “suppressed the elevation in blood [sugar] in all cases compared to [those who drank plain water instead].” Here’s the spike after sugar with no moringa, and here’s the reaction to the same amount of sugar 30 minutes after drinking moringa tea. No wonder moringa is used in traditional medicine practice for diabetes. But you don’t really know if it can help until you put it to the test.
Diabetics were given about three-quarters of a teaspoon of moringa leaf powder every day for 12 weeks and got significant improvements in measures of inflammation as well as long-term blood sugar control. But the reason they call it a quasi-experimental study is because there was no control group. The researchers just took measurements before and after, and we know just being in a dietary study can lead some people to consciously or unconsciously eat more healthfully, so we don’t know what effect the moringa itself had. Even in moringa studies with a control group, it’s not clear if the subjects were randomly allocated. And in this study, the researchers didn’t specify how much moringa people were even given. What does one tablet’s worth mean? No significant improvement in this study; maybe they didn’t give enough? This study used a tablespoon a day, and not only saw a significant drop in fasting blood sugars, but a significant drop in LDL cholesterol as well. Two teaspoons a day didn’t seem to help, so was it just that a whole tablespoon is needed? Apparently not, since finally, a randomized placebo-controlled study using a tablespoon of moringa a day failed to show any benefit on blood sugar control in type 2 diabetics.
So, we’re left with a few studies showing potential, but most failing to show benefit. Why not just give moringa a try to see for yourself? That’s a legitimate course of action in the face of conflicting data when we’re talking about safe, simple, side effect-free solutions. But is moringa safe? Probably not during pregnancy, as about 80 percent of “women folk” in some areas of the world use it to abort pregnancies, and its effectiveness for that purpose has been confirmed, at least in rats––though breastfeeding women may get about a half-cup boost in milk production based on “six randomized, placebo-controlled, blinded, clinical trials”.
Just because moringa has “long been used in [folk medicine traditions]” in no way proves that the plant is safe to consume. Lots of horribly toxic stuff, like mercury and lead for instance, have been used in traditional medical systems the world over. But hey, at least “no major harmful effects of [moringa] … have been reported by the scientific community”, or more accurately, “no adverse effects were reported in any of the human studies that [had] been conducted to date.” In other words, no harmful effects had been reported, until now.
“Stevens-Johnson syndrome … following [moringa leaf] consumption”: Stevens-Johnson syndrome is probably the most dreaded drug side effect, a rare but potentially fatal condition characterized by “epidermal detachment.” In other words, it can make your skin fall off. Fourteen hours after consuming moringa, a guy broke out. The same thing had happened three months earlier, the last time he had eaten moringa, causing him to suffer “extensive lesions with blister formation over [his] face, mouth, chest, abdomen, and genitalia.”
“This case report suggests that consumption of Moringa leaf is better avoided by individuals who are at risk of developing [Stevens-Johnson].” Although it can happen to anyone, HIV is a risk factor.
My take on moringa is that the evidence of benefit wasn’t compelling enough to justify shopping online for something special when you can get healthy vegetables in your local market like broccoli, which has yet to be implicated in any genital blistering.
Please consider volunteering to help out on the site.
- Tshabalala T, Ncube B, Madala NE, et al. Scribbling the Cat: A Case of the “Miracle” Plant, Moringa oleifera. Plants. 2019;8(11):510.
- Mbikay M. Therapeutic Potential of Moringa oleifera Leaves in Chronic Hyperglycemia and Dyslipidemia: A Review. Front Pharmacol. 2012;3:24.
- Förster N, Mewis I, Glatt H, et al. Characteristic single glucosinolates from Moringa oleifera: Induction of detoxifying enzymes and lack of genotoxic activity in various model systems. Food Funct. 2016;7(11):4660-74.
- Fahey JW, Olson ME, Stephenson KK, et al. The Diversity of Chemoprotective Glucosinolates in Moringaceae (Moringa spp.). Sci Rep. 2018;8(1):7994.
- Abdull Razis AF, Ibrahim MD, Kntayya SB. Health Benefits of Moringa oleifera. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev. 2014;15(20):8571-6
- Leone A, Bertoli S, Di Lello S, et al. Effect of Moringa oleifera Leaf Powder on Postprandial Blood Glucose Response: In Vivo Study on Saharawi People Living in Refugee Camps. Nutrients. 2018;10(10):1494.
- Posmontier B. The Medicinal Qualities of Moringa Oleifera. Holist Nurs Pract. 2011;25(2):80-7.
- Jung IL. Soluble Extract from Moringa oleifera Leaves with a New Anticancer Activity. PLoS One. 2014;9(4):e95492.
- Prabsattroo T, Wattanathorn J, Iamsaard S, et al. Moringa oleifera extract enhances sexual performance in stressed rats. J Zhejiang Univ-Sci B. 2015;16(3):179-90.
- Kushwaha S, Chawla P, Kochhar A. Effect of supplementation of drumstick (Moringa oleifera) and amaranth (Amaranthus tricolor) leaves powder on antioxidant profile and oxidative status among postmenopausal women. J Food Sci Technol. 2014;51(11):3464-9.
- Ahmad J, Imran K, Renald B. Moringa oleifera and glycemic control: A review of current evidence and possible mechanisms. Phytother Res. 2019;33(11):2841-8.
- Mbikay M. Therapeutic Potential of Moringa oleifera Leaves in Chronic Hyperglycemia and Dyslipidemia: A Review. Front Pharmacol. 2012;3:24.
- Alegbeleye OO. How Functional Is Moringa oleifera? A Review of Its Nutritive, Medicinal, and Socioeconomic Potential. Food Nutr Bull. 2018;39(1):149-70.
- Ahmad J, Imran K, Renald B. Moringa oleifera and glycemic control: A review of current evidence and possible mechanisms. Phytother Res. 2019;33(11):2841-8.
- Ahmad J, Khan I, Johnson SK, Alam I, Din ZU. Effect of Incorporating Stevia and Moringa in Cookies on Postprandial Glycemia, Appetite, Palatability, and Gastrointestinal Well-Being. J Am Coll Nutr. 2018;37(2):133-9.
- Fombang EN, Saa RW. Antihyperglycemic Activity of Moringa oleifera Lam Leaf Functional Tea in Rat Models and Human Subjects. Food Nutr Sci. 2016;7(11):1021-32.
- Lunyera J, Wang D, Maro V, et al. Traditional medicine practices among community members with diabetes mellitus in Northern Tanzania: an ethnomedical survey. BMC Complement Altern Med. 2016;16:282.
- Mozo RN, Caole-Ang I. The Effects of Malunggay (Moringa oleifera) Leaves Capsule. Philipp J Intern Med. 2015;53(4):1-10.
- Giridhari VA, Malathi D, Geetha K. Anti Diabetic Property of Drumstick (Moringa oleifera) Leaf Tablets. Int J Food Sci Nutr. 2011;2(1):1-5.
- Kumari DJ. Hypoglycemic effect of Moringa oleifera and Azadirachta indica in type-2 diabetes. Bioscan. 2010;5(2):211-4.
- Nambiar V, Guin P, Parnami S, Daniel M. Impact of antioxidants from drumstick leaves on the lipid profile of hyperlipidemics. J Herb Med Toxicol. 2010;4(1):165-72.
- Taweerutchana R, Lumlerdkij N, Vannasaeng S, Akarasereenont P, Sriwijitkamol A. Effect of Moringa oleifera Leaf Capsules on Glycemic Control in Therapy-Naïve Type 2 Diabetes Patients: A Randomized Placebo Controlled Study.Evid Based Complementary Altern Med. 2017;2017:6581390.
- Vargas-Sánchez K, Garay-Jaramillo E, González-Reyes RE. Effects of Moringa oleifera on Glycaemia and Insulin Levels: A Review of Animal and Human Studies. Nutrients. 2019;11(12):2907.
- Sethi N, Nath D, Shukla SC, Dyal R. Abortifacient Activity of A Medicinal Plant “Moringa oleifera” in Rats. Anc Sci Life. 1988;7(3-4):172-4.
- Nath D, Sethi N, Singh RK, Jain AK. Commonly used Indian abortifacient plants with special reference to their teratologic effects in rats. J Ethnopharmacol. 1992;36(2):147-54.
- Raguindin PFN, Dans LF, King JF. Moringa oleifera as a Galactagogue. Breastfeed Med. 2014;9(6):323-4.
- Karim NAA, Ibrahim MD, Kntayya SB, Rukayadi Y, Hamid HA, Razis AFA. Moringa oleifera Lam: Targeting Chemoprevention. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev. 2016;17(8):3675-86.
- Ernst E. Heavy metals in traditional Indian remedies. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 2002;57(12):891-6.
- Tshabalala T, Ncube B, Madala NE, et al. Scribbling the Cat: A Case of the “Miracle” Plant, Moringa oleifera. Plants. 2019;8(11):510.
- Stohs SJ, Hartman MJ. Review of the Safety and Efficacy of Moringa oleifera. Phytother Res. 2015;29(6):796-804.
- Witharana EWRA, Wijetunga WMGASTB, Wijesinghe SKJ. Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) following Murunga leaf (Moringa oleifera) consumption. Ceylon Med J. 2018;63(4):188-9.
- Lerch M, Mainetti C, Terziroli Beretta-Piccoli B, Harr T. Current Perspectives on Stevens-Johnson Syndrome and Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis. Clin Rev Allergy Immunol. 2018;54(1):147-76.
Video production by Glass Entertainment
Motion graphics by Avo Media
Below is an approximation of this video’s audio content. To see any graphs, charts, graphics, images, and quotes to which Dr. Greger may be referring, watch the above video.
Intro: Does moringa live up to the hype? Check out this video to find out.
Moringa (Moringa oleifera) is a plant commonly known as the “miracle tree” due to its purported healing powers across a spectrum of diseases. If “miracle” isn’t hyperbolic enough for you, on the internet it’s also known as “God’s Gift to Man.” Is moringa a miracle or just a mirage? “The enthusiasm for the health benefits of [moringa] is in dire contrast with the scarcity of strong experimental and clinical evidence supporting [the claims]. Fortunately, the chasm is slowly being filled.” There has been a surge in scientific publications on moringa, and in the last ten years the number of articles is closer to a thousand.
What got my attention was the presence of glucosinolates, compounds that boost our liver’s detoxifying enzymes. I thought they were only found in cruciferous vegetables like cabbage, broccoli, kale, collards, and cauliflower. But no, it turns out they’re also found in the moringa family, with potency comparable to broccoli. That’s exciting, but why not just eat broccoli, rather than mail-ordering some exotic moringa powder? Is there anything special about moringa?
It’s “been described as the most nutritious tree yet discovered.” How much is that saying, though? Who eats trees? Supposedly moringa “contains higher amounts of … nutrients than most conventional … sources”––10 times the vitamin A of carrots, 12 times the vitamin C of oranges, 17 times more calcium than milk, 15 times more potassium than bananas, 25 times more iron than spinach, and 9 times more protein than yogurt. First of all, even if all this were true, this is for 100 grams of dry moringa leaf. That’s like 14 tablespoons—almost a whole cup of leaf powder. Researchers have had trouble getting people to even eat 20 grams, and so anything more would likely “result in excessively unpleasant taste, due to the bitterness of the leaves.”
And secondly, the nutritional claims in these papers are “adapted from Fuglie,” which evidently is just some lay publication. If you go to the USDA nutrient database, and enter a more doable dose, like the amount you might get in a smoothie (about one tablespoon for instance), a serving of moringa powder has as much vitamin A as a quarter of one baby carrot, and as much vitamin C as one one-hundredth of an orange. So, an orange has as much vitamin C as a hundred tablespoons of moringa. A serving of moringa powder only has the calcium of half a cup of milk, the potassium of not fifteen bananas, but a quarter of one banana, the iron of a quarter cup of spinach, and the protein of a third of a container of yogurt. So yeah, maybe nutritious, but not off the charts, and certainly not what’s commonly touted. So again, why not eat broccoli? It’s got the A-C-Calcium-potassium-iron-and-protein of broccoli!
Moringa does seem to have anticancer activity—in a petri dish—against cell lines of breast cancer, lung cancer, skin cancer, and fibrosarcoma, while tending to leave normal cells relatively alone, But there haven’t been any clinical studies. What’s the point in finding out that “[Moringa] … enhances [the] sexual performance [of] stressed rats.” What are you supposed to do with that?
Studies like this one, though, started to make things a little interesting. Researchers were testing the effects of a tablespoon of moringa leaf powder once a day for three months on antioxidant status, and saw a drop in oxidative stress, as one might expect from eating any healthy plant food. But they also saw a drop in fasting blood sugars, from prediabetic levels over 100 to more normal levels. Now, that’s interesting. Should we start recommending a daily tablespoon of moringa powder to diabetics? Was it just a fluke? Moringa and blood sugar control: A review of the current evidence next.
“Clearly, in spite of the widely held ‘belief’ in the health benefits of [moringa], the interest of the international biomedical community in the medicinal potential of this plant has been rather tepid”—“spectacularly hesitant[, in fact,] in exploring its nutritional and medicinal potential. … other “superfoods” such as garlic and green tea have enjoyed better reception,” but they also have more scientific support. There are thousands of human studies on garlic and more than 10,000 on green tea, but only a few hundred on moringa.
The most promising appears to be the effects of moringa on blood sugar control. If you have people eat about five cookies, this is the kind of blood sugar spike you get. Add about two teaspoons of moringa leaf powder into the cookie batter, and even with the same amount of sugar and carbs, the blood sugar surge is dampened.
Just having having people drink one or two cups of moringa leaf tea before a sugar challenge “suppressed the elevation in blood [sugar] in all cases compared to [those who drank plain water instead].” Here’s the spike after sugar with no moringa, and here’s the reaction to the same amount of sugar 30 minutes after drinking moringa tea. No wonder moringa is used in traditional medicine practice for diabetes. But you don’t really know if it can help until you put it to the test.
Diabetics were given about three-quarters of a teaspoon of moringa leaf powder every day for 12 weeks and got significant improvements in measures of inflammation as well as long-term blood sugar control. But the reason they call it a quasi-experimental study is because there was no control group. The researchers just took measurements before and after, and we know just being in a dietary study can lead some people to consciously or unconsciously eat more healthfully, so we don’t know what effect the moringa itself had. Even in moringa studies with a control group, it’s not clear if the subjects were randomly allocated. And in this study, the researchers didn’t specify how much moringa people were even given. What does one tablet’s worth mean? No significant improvement in this study; maybe they didn’t give enough? This study used a tablespoon a day, and not only saw a significant drop in fasting blood sugars, but a significant drop in LDL cholesterol as well. Two teaspoons a day didn’t seem to help, so was it just that a whole tablespoon is needed? Apparently not, since finally, a randomized placebo-controlled study using a tablespoon of moringa a day failed to show any benefit on blood sugar control in type 2 diabetics.
So, we’re left with a few studies showing potential, but most failing to show benefit. Why not just give moringa a try to see for yourself? That’s a legitimate course of action in the face of conflicting data when we’re talking about safe, simple, side effect-free solutions. But is moringa safe? Probably not during pregnancy, as about 80 percent of “women folk” in some areas of the world use it to abort pregnancies, and its effectiveness for that purpose has been confirmed, at least in rats––though breastfeeding women may get about a half-cup boost in milk production based on “six randomized, placebo-controlled, blinded, clinical trials”.
Just because moringa has “long been used in [folk medicine traditions]” in no way proves that the plant is safe to consume. Lots of horribly toxic stuff, like mercury and lead for instance, have been used in traditional medical systems the world over. But hey, at least “no major harmful effects of [moringa] … have been reported by the scientific community”, or more accurately, “no adverse effects were reported in any of the human studies that [had] been conducted to date.” In other words, no harmful effects had been reported, until now.
“Stevens-Johnson syndrome … following [moringa leaf] consumption”: Stevens-Johnson syndrome is probably the most dreaded drug side effect, a rare but potentially fatal condition characterized by “epidermal detachment.” In other words, it can make your skin fall off. Fourteen hours after consuming moringa, a guy broke out. The same thing had happened three months earlier, the last time he had eaten moringa, causing him to suffer “extensive lesions with blister formation over [his] face, mouth, chest, abdomen, and genitalia.”
“This case report suggests that consumption of Moringa leaf is better avoided by individuals who are at risk of developing [Stevens-Johnson].” Although it can happen to anyone, HIV is a risk factor.
My take on moringa is that the evidence of benefit wasn’t compelling enough to justify shopping online for something special when you can get healthy vegetables in your local market like broccoli, which has yet to be implicated in any genital blistering.
Please consider volunteering to help out on the site.
- Tshabalala T, Ncube B, Madala NE, et al. Scribbling the Cat: A Case of the “Miracle” Plant, Moringa oleifera. Plants. 2019;8(11):510.
- Mbikay M. Therapeutic Potential of Moringa oleifera Leaves in Chronic Hyperglycemia and Dyslipidemia: A Review. Front Pharmacol. 2012;3:24.
- Förster N, Mewis I, Glatt H, et al. Characteristic single glucosinolates from Moringa oleifera: Induction of detoxifying enzymes and lack of genotoxic activity in various model systems. Food Funct. 2016;7(11):4660-74.
- Fahey JW, Olson ME, Stephenson KK, et al. The Diversity of Chemoprotective Glucosinolates in Moringaceae (Moringa spp.). Sci Rep. 2018;8(1):7994.
- Abdull Razis AF, Ibrahim MD, Kntayya SB. Health Benefits of Moringa oleifera. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev. 2014;15(20):8571-6
- Leone A, Bertoli S, Di Lello S, et al. Effect of Moringa oleifera Leaf Powder on Postprandial Blood Glucose Response: In Vivo Study on Saharawi People Living in Refugee Camps. Nutrients. 2018;10(10):1494.
- Posmontier B. The Medicinal Qualities of Moringa Oleifera. Holist Nurs Pract. 2011;25(2):80-7.
- Jung IL. Soluble Extract from Moringa oleifera Leaves with a New Anticancer Activity. PLoS One. 2014;9(4):e95492.
- Prabsattroo T, Wattanathorn J, Iamsaard S, et al. Moringa oleifera extract enhances sexual performance in stressed rats. J Zhejiang Univ-Sci B. 2015;16(3):179-90.
- Kushwaha S, Chawla P, Kochhar A. Effect of supplementation of drumstick (Moringa oleifera) and amaranth (Amaranthus tricolor) leaves powder on antioxidant profile and oxidative status among postmenopausal women. J Food Sci Technol. 2014;51(11):3464-9.
- Ahmad J, Imran K, Renald B. Moringa oleifera and glycemic control: A review of current evidence and possible mechanisms. Phytother Res. 2019;33(11):2841-8.
- Mbikay M. Therapeutic Potential of Moringa oleifera Leaves in Chronic Hyperglycemia and Dyslipidemia: A Review. Front Pharmacol. 2012;3:24.
- Alegbeleye OO. How Functional Is Moringa oleifera? A Review of Its Nutritive, Medicinal, and Socioeconomic Potential. Food Nutr Bull. 2018;39(1):149-70.
- Ahmad J, Imran K, Renald B. Moringa oleifera and glycemic control: A review of current evidence and possible mechanisms. Phytother Res. 2019;33(11):2841-8.
- Ahmad J, Khan I, Johnson SK, Alam I, Din ZU. Effect of Incorporating Stevia and Moringa in Cookies on Postprandial Glycemia, Appetite, Palatability, and Gastrointestinal Well-Being. J Am Coll Nutr. 2018;37(2):133-9.
- Fombang EN, Saa RW. Antihyperglycemic Activity of Moringa oleifera Lam Leaf Functional Tea in Rat Models and Human Subjects. Food Nutr Sci. 2016;7(11):1021-32.
- Lunyera J, Wang D, Maro V, et al. Traditional medicine practices among community members with diabetes mellitus in Northern Tanzania: an ethnomedical survey. BMC Complement Altern Med. 2016;16:282.
- Mozo RN, Caole-Ang I. The Effects of Malunggay (Moringa oleifera) Leaves Capsule. Philipp J Intern Med. 2015;53(4):1-10.
- Giridhari VA, Malathi D, Geetha K. Anti Diabetic Property of Drumstick (Moringa oleifera) Leaf Tablets. Int J Food Sci Nutr. 2011;2(1):1-5.
- Kumari DJ. Hypoglycemic effect of Moringa oleifera and Azadirachta indica in type-2 diabetes. Bioscan. 2010;5(2):211-4.
- Nambiar V, Guin P, Parnami S, Daniel M. Impact of antioxidants from drumstick leaves on the lipid profile of hyperlipidemics. J Herb Med Toxicol. 2010;4(1):165-72.
- Taweerutchana R, Lumlerdkij N, Vannasaeng S, Akarasereenont P, Sriwijitkamol A. Effect of Moringa oleifera Leaf Capsules on Glycemic Control in Therapy-Naïve Type 2 Diabetes Patients: A Randomized Placebo Controlled Study.Evid Based Complementary Altern Med. 2017;2017:6581390.
- Vargas-Sánchez K, Garay-Jaramillo E, González-Reyes RE. Effects of Moringa oleifera on Glycaemia and Insulin Levels: A Review of Animal and Human Studies. Nutrients. 2019;11(12):2907.
- Sethi N, Nath D, Shukla SC, Dyal R. Abortifacient Activity of A Medicinal Plant “Moringa oleifera” in Rats. Anc Sci Life. 1988;7(3-4):172-4.
- Nath D, Sethi N, Singh RK, Jain AK. Commonly used Indian abortifacient plants with special reference to their teratologic effects in rats. J Ethnopharmacol. 1992;36(2):147-54.
- Raguindin PFN, Dans LF, King JF. Moringa oleifera as a Galactagogue. Breastfeed Med. 2014;9(6):323-4.
- Karim NAA, Ibrahim MD, Kntayya SB, Rukayadi Y, Hamid HA, Razis AFA. Moringa oleifera Lam: Targeting Chemoprevention. Asian Pac J Cancer Prev. 2016;17(8):3675-86.
- Ernst E. Heavy metals in traditional Indian remedies. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 2002;57(12):891-6.
- Tshabalala T, Ncube B, Madala NE, et al. Scribbling the Cat: A Case of the “Miracle” Plant, Moringa oleifera. Plants. 2019;8(11):510.
- Stohs SJ, Hartman MJ. Review of the Safety and Efficacy of Moringa oleifera. Phytother Res. 2015;29(6):796-804.
- Witharana EWRA, Wijetunga WMGASTB, Wijesinghe SKJ. Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) following Murunga leaf (Moringa oleifera) consumption. Ceylon Med J. 2018;63(4):188-9.
- Lerch M, Mainetti C, Terziroli Beretta-Piccoli B, Harr T. Current Perspectives on Stevens-Johnson Syndrome and Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis. Clin Rev Allergy Immunol. 2018;54(1):147-76.
Video production by Glass Entertainment
Motion graphics by Avo Media
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Friday Favorites: The Benefits and Side Effects of Moringa Leaf Powder
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Content URLDoctor's Note
I previously mentioned moringa in Best Foods for Lead Poisoning: Chlorella, Cilantro, Tomatoes, Moringa?—one of the videos in my series on lead.
How Not to Die from Diabetes is a good introduction to the dozens of videos I have on safer ways to improve blood sugar control.
The original videos aired on July 7 & 12, 2021
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