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Buy Nauclea latifolia (Tremadol producer!)

Nauclea latifolia For Sale




Ezekiel 47:12 "And by the river upon the bank thereof, on this side and on that side, shall grow all trees for meat, whose leaf shall not fade, neither shall the fruit thereof be consumed: it shall bring forth new fruit according to his months, because their waters they issued out of the sanctuary: and the fruit thereof shall be for meat, and the leaf thereof for medicine."
Nicknames: African Peach Tree;[1]
Ethnobotany: In Cameroon Africa, the root of Nauclea latifolia is the preferred part of the plant to be utilized in medical preparations used for treating pain and fever.[8] The root is harvested, sun dried and then pulverized into a powdered form.[8] They use about 100 grams of the powdered root material to make a potent decoction using about 500 ml of water.[8] The indigenous locals there use it medicinally for: fever, pain, dental caries, septic mouth, malaria, dysentery, diarrhea, and diseases of the central nervous system such as epilepsy.[8] O.G. Observation: Ethnobotanicals that produce controlled substances have a medicinal side to them that's often over-looked. They can be used as a medicine in ways that don't produce a high, and their historic applications among locals is proof of this, as well as the phytochemical research into their benefits and pharmacology. An aqueous extract made from the leaves of the African Peach Tree(Nauclea latifolia) has been used as a remedy for diabetes in northern Nigeria.[8]
Classification: It's a shrub, a.k.a. a small spreading tree;[8] opioid analgesic;[x] Affects the CNS(Central Nervous System);[x]
Plant Family: Rubiaceae;[x] Genus: Nauclea;[x] Species: N. latifolia;[x]
Phytochemicals: Tremadol;[2][3][4][5] Question: What is Tremadol? Tremadol is a naturally occuring opioid drug that is classified as a class IV controlled substance.[6] According to the National Library Of Medicine, "Similar to other opioids, tramadol selectively binds to various opiate receptors in the central nervous system due to its opioid nature"[6] The potency of Tremadol is about ten times lesser than morphine.[7]
What is Phytochemistry? What are Phytochemicals? In the past, losers in the SRCSO, Pensacola FBI & DEA defamed millionaires across the country, including Bouncing Bear Botanicals, Edens Ethnos(the guy who kept kratom legal for all of us), and helped the socialist destroy my BotanicalGuides.com operation before I could get it off the ground, and a guy up in Ohio's business(DadsGreenHouse) too, and then hurt phytoextractum's business as well when they sabotaged our business relationship and further defamed me. All of the men they defamed and let down worked hard, built something from the ground up, and have accomplished things these losers could only dream of. They pretended to be the hero's however, and like they won. Because of this, I'm adding this phytochemistry/phytochemical section to every page. Phytochemicals are not "research chemicals", nor are they "laced onto plants". Phytochemicals are pharmacological chemicals produced BY plants.[9][10] Phytochemistry is the academic branch of science that studies herbal remedies, and the pharmacological phytochemicals that they produce.[9][10] Despite telling the "authorities" these facts numerous times(for years), and requesting that they fact check them at the college, they continued to spread defamation and disinformation, making false claims that "ethnobotanicals are laced with research chemicals", and while pretending like I was the one spreading "fake news". Phytochemistry is how we know that Nauclea latifolia produces the drug Tremadol, which is also known as a phytochemical.
Pharmacological / Medicinal Properties: antipyretic;[8] antinociceptive;[8] antihypertensive;[8] laxative;[8] anticonvulsant;[8] anxiolytic;[8] sedative[8] The Nauclea latifolia species has been tested in the lab in rats to determine its pharmacology.[8] The results of one such study tells us that: "The extract remarkably decreased both the acute and delayed phases of formaline-induced pain in rats and also caused a significant reduction in both yeast-induced pyrexia and egg albumin-induced edema in rats"[8]
Mixes well with:
OG Observations:
Related Ethnobotanicals:
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Academic citations:
[1] Odeniyi, Michael Ayodele; Okumah, Vivian Chikodiri; Adebayo-Tayo, Bukola Christianah; Odeniyi, Olubusola Ayoola (2020-03-01). "Green synthesis and cream formulations of silver nanoparticles of Nauclea latifolia (African peach) fruit extracts and evaluation of antimicrobial and antioxidant activities". Sustainable Chemistry and Pharmacy. 15: 100197. doi:10.1016/j.scp.2019.100197. ISSN 2352-5541. S2CID 214142534.
[2] Hamilton's Pharmacopiea Season 3, Episode 4
[3] Boucherle, Benjamin, et al. "Nauclea latifolia: biological activity and alkaloid phytochemistry of a West African tree." Natural product reports 33.9 (2016): 1034-1043.
[4] Agostini, Mathieu. "Contribution to the study of the natural origin of tramadol and phytochemical study of two alpine plants." (2020).
[5] Boumendjel, Ahcène, et al. "Occurrence of the synthetic analgesic tramadol in an African medicinal plant." Angewandte Chemie International Edition 52.45 (2013).
[6] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK537060/
[7] Muna Subedi, Shalini Bajaj, Maushmi S. Kumar, Mayur YC, An overview of tramadol and its usage in pain management and future perspective, Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy, Volume 111, 2019, Pages 443-451, ISSN 0753-3322, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopha.2018.12.085. (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0753332218373694)
[8] https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3317381/
[9] Burrell, R. C. "Phytochemistry. What it is and how it has developed." Journal of Chemical Education 14.11 (1937): 520.
[10] Balick, Michael J., and Paul Alan Cox. Plants, People, And Culture : The Science Of Ethnobotany. New York, Garland Science, 2020.
Encyclopedia Sources:
Other resources:
M.A.P.S. Ethnobotanical Studies By Scholars
PubChem - pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov