Lead in Diabecon? An Ayurvedic Anti-Diabetes Herbal Heterogeneous Secure the Test
What makes us different? An Ayurvedic Anti-Diabetes Herbal Complex Gets the Test Tuesday, April 22, 2008 by: John Cole (see all articles by this author) Key concepts: Popular solution!) This top "underground" natural fitness newsletter take you amazing new natural cures each month.
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NaturalNews) An Ayurvedic herbal formula named Diabecon was elementary brought to my attention ultimate year by my assistant. The Japanese pronunciation is "daya" + "bacon", on the contrary no.. The name is obviously constructed from "diabe" of "diabetes", plus "con", idea contra, against.
My assistant's university professor originally got some representing his mother, who was diabetic; after studying it, he decided to use Diabecon as a supplement. My helpmate told me the roughly 50 year-old professor has a beautiful, not unexpectedly black head of hair, which he attributes above to Diabecon.
Diabecon is basically an Ayurvedic herbal blend, and some of the herbs develop onliest in India, near the Himalayas. It consists of 42 different herbs including the well-known ashwagandha. According to sole scholarly article, "Diabecon (D-400) is a crude herbal preparation, formulated as per Ayurvedic principles.
The main ingredients are Eugenia jambolana, Tinospora cordifolia, Pterocarpus marsupium, Ficus Glomerulata, Momordica charantia, Ocimum sanctum and Gymnema sylvestre which are well published indigenous oral anti-diabetic plants". Articles on Diabecon's effectiveness against diabetic retinopathy and dyslipidemia in persons also exist. Its safety has been repeatedly documented.
1) Although I've never been diabetic or even borderline, just out of intellectual curiosity, I started enchanting three tablets of Diabecon a day as a supplement (the dosage recommended for diabetics is two tablets, two or three patch a day).
One sundown about six months later, two female sitting at the wager of my English class were looking at me, whispering to each other, giggling.. Finally, after a little prying from me, one girl asked me if I'd been dyeing my hair! Me? Dyeing my hair?!
No way! I'm not that vain, and I'm in the know of the toxic chemicals endow in most hair dyes.
After that lesson I took a good case in the mirror, and indeed my hair on acme had develop into a much darker color, almost black (this is at 54 years old), over the previous few months. Am I sure Diabecon caused the color change in my hair?
Well, by reason of fly speck occurs in a vacuum, and I had also been taking chlorella, spirulina, goji berries, sea vegetables, plus a broad diversity of other healthy foods every day, the send is, "No, I can't be sure."
However, given the dozens of herbs in Diabecon combined with the professor's caution and my own, I think Diabecon probably contributed to my hair's health.
Of course, whether you're tempted to take Diabecon championing your hair, brood over that it doesn't "go straight" to your hair. See this "Off The Mark" cartoon for a humorous reminder:
After that, British right tested Diabecon sold locally in Britain, and no metals were found. The FDA has warned of bulky metals in Ayurvedic products sold in the U.S.,
Diabecon as an "unapproved new drug" (3), notwithstanding the truth that most of the herbs in Diabecon have been used safely for centuries.