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Fabled 'Vegetable Lamb' Plant may Hold Potential Cure for Osteoporosis

by VR Sreeraman on Apr 3 2010 3:32 PM

A new study has shown that fabled "Vegetable Lamb of Tartary, " a plant once believed to ripen into a baby sheep, produces substances that show promise in laboratory experiments as new treatments for osteoporosis.

The study has been published in ACS' monthly Journal of Natural Products.

Young Ho Kim and colleagues point out that osteoporosis is a global health problem. Doctors know that the secret to strong bones involves a delicate balance between two types of bone cells: Osteoblasts, which build up bone, and osteoclasts, which break down bone.

Seeking potential medications that might tip the balance in favor of bone building, the researchers turned to the "vegetable lamb" plant as part of a larger study plants used in folk medicine in Vietnam.

In the 16th and 17th centuries, some of the world's most celebrated scientists believed the plant (Cibotium barmoetz) fruited into a newly born lamb, which then grazed on nearby grass and weeds. Kim's group isolated compounds from C. barmoetz and showed that they blocked formation of bone-destroying osteoclasts formation in up to 97 percent of the cells in laboratory cultures without harmful effects on other cells.

The substances "could be used in the development of therapeutic targets for osteoporosis," the article notes.

Source-ANI
SRM


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