Synsepalum Dulcificum for Cancer Patients (Pt. 2)

By Steven Tarlow, your miracle fruit news source

Dr. Cusnir needs more study patients

This continues the tale of synsepalum dulcificum, like a cash advance to the human race from nature. CLICK HERE if you missed the beginning of the article.

Dr. Cusnir has filed for an investigative new drug application with the FDA, who had labeled the berries a food additive back in 1974. For the necessary study, he will need at least 40 cancer patients. If results help patients maintain healthy body weight and appetite, bigger studies will be undertaken over there will be bigger studies over the next several years.

Outside of cancer patients, synsepalum dulcificum has more uses. Carmen Duporte of Fort Lauderdale, Florida “integrated the miracle fruit into her routine drinks of aloe vera juice,” writes Park. Duporte drinks this to cleanse her digestive system. The aloe alone is thick and bitter, definitely an acquired taste. “When I drink it with the fruit, there’s no taste in my mouth,” says Duporte.

Even more health benefits?

In the 1970s, researchers like Linda Bartoshuk of U.S. Navy and Army labs (and now the University of Florida’s Center for Smell) studies the miracle fruit. It contains miraculin, a natural protein which binds sugar molecules to the tongue rather than allowing it to dissolve and disappear. When acidic substances enter the mouth, the sugar molecules press on the sweet spots of the tongue.

This process could be used to help people with conditions ranging from diabetes to obesity. It can help to combat cravings for sweet and regulate excess consumption. And unlike sugar itself, synsepalum dulcificum berries have few calories. Unlike artificial sweeteners, the berries are all-natural.

Bartoshuk tells Park that claims of health benefits are now premature. “Any real claims for health benefits are going to have to be supported by good research,” says the researcher.

A cash crop

Yet farmers like Fort Lauderdale’s Curtis Mozie know people are interested. He raises the berries and ships them to online customers. He still wonders why the berry isn’t more well-known. “Why was it kept hush-hush? I wanted people to enjoy the fruit and enjoy the experience and any edible item that doesn’t taste good with the help of the miracle fruit.”

Richard Campbell of Fairchild Tropical Fruit Garden wishes he’d been more forward thinking about the berries. “No offense meant to people who want to pay money to eat miracle fruit and weird things. We used to do that every Friday. We grew up with miracle fruit. People came over, ate miracle fruit and sat around eating limes. I feel stupid I didn’t think of charging anyone.”

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Discussion of Synsepalum Dulcificum for Cancer Patients (Pt. 2)

This post has one comment

  1. Kris Speiser says:

    I’d just like to support that this does help. My Grandpa took Miracle Frooties from http://www.theworldsbestfruit.com while he was going through chemo everytime he ate. You should have heard the ruckus when we ran out.

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