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The History of Hoodia
For the last 25,000 years, the indigenous
people of the Kalahari desert region have been
using Hoodia Gordonii as an appetite suppressant
. Its main function was to quell the thirst
and hunger that would affect warriors during
long hunting trips. These warriors even fed
their dogs slices of the plant to keep them
from having interest in their food supplies.
To this day these African natives still chew
the leaves of the plant to stave off starvation
and exhaustion.
The plant was also of some assistance during
periods of famine when groups of 100 or so people
suddenly found themselves on the move without
much food or water. Two to three slices
of the plant of the day were enough to stave
of starvation. The plant itself is native to
the Kalahari Desert and it was readily abundant
in rocky and sandy areas in Botswana, Namibia,
Angola and other areas of South Africa. As a
matter of interest, the hoodia plant looks like
a cactus even though botanically it is not a
cactus and often marketed as one.
Even today the plant is still used
as an appetite suppressant during times of famine.
The Anikhwe of northern Botswana feed children
who are hungry pieces of hoodia during times
of famine to conserve food. However many
children have died from consuming hoodia after
three months of making this the main part of
their diet. Keep this in mind in case you have
any misconceptions about hoodia being a long
term substitute for food.
The taste of the plant is actually very acrid
and can be compared to a very dry bitter cucumber.
This is why it is sold in North American and
European countries in capsule form rather than
as a food substance in dried form.
Hoodia's appetite suppressant properties
were only discovered about thirty years ago
when certain species were included in a scientific
research project established by the South African
Council. The council was looking for indigenous
plants that could be a source of food. Among
the plants screened were Hoodia and experiments
on animals confirmed the plant's ability to
cause weight loss without side effects.
Shortly after this study it was licensed
to the drug company Phytopharm that has spent
over $20 million dollars to conduct clinical
trials of the plant. The subjects given hoodia
ate a thousand calories less a day then the
usual 2,600 calories a day for males and 1,900
calories for women.
.The giant pharmaceutical company Pfizer,
which had teamed up with Phytopharm, and funded
much of the research abandoned the venture when
making a pill out of the active ingredient seemed
to costly to develop. For now it is sold in
weight loss formulations, usually accompanied
by green tea extract to accelerate the weight
loss results even more.
Hoodia gordonii is very rare and is protected
by national conservation laws in South Africa
and Namibia. It can only be collected or grown
with a permit. This is why it is so expensive.
HoodiThin
contains 100% Pure South African Hoodia Gordonii Liquid
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